Manhunt: religion and the director’s eye
One might suggest that this parallel is a mere accident, one might. And perhaps it is. In cases like this, however, my default assumption is that it is not an accident. It may not be there by conscious intent and deliberate plan; but it is not there by accident. The people who made this movie are too skilled to do such things inadvertently.
That final remark of Benzon’s makes exactly the point I was hoping to make here, before commenting on those two screen-grabs from Manhunt:
The people who made this movie are too skilled to do such things inadvertently.
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There’s actually a third shot in Manhunt with a view of a dangling rear-view-mirror ornament — let’s take a look:
This one’s from the van Peter Bergen and his cameraman, Peter Jouvenal, took in the docu’s re-enactment / flashback to their CNN interview with bin Laden, back in 1997. I don’t think this one is a rosary-like thing though it might be — I think it’s just the sort of tassel decoration you’ll find on saddle-bags, or decorating a camel or a car in Afghanistan.
The other two, however, seem clearly religious, both of them are shots of the cars in which American counter-terrorist folks would have gone to work during their efforts to track down bin Laden — and I find it significant that one features a (Christian) cross while the other very likely shows (Muslim) prayer-beads.
I say “very likely” because the beads could be (secular, Greek) worry-beads — but they look more like a tasbih to me. And why would that be interesting — why would a film-maker be interested in such a parallelism?
Besides the fact that these shots allow voice over and show us the various folk involved going to work, they specifically point up the fact that those working to defeat bin Laden were not all kuffar but included Ali Soufan of the FBI and “Roger” — the fellow described by Greg Miller in this March 2012 piece in WaPo, At CIA, a convert to Islam leads the terrorism hunt.
Am In right? I don’t know. But the subliminal message, if I am, is that the manhunt for bin Laden was indeed not a “Crusaders against Islam” affair.
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May I recommend Wm. Benzon’s Beethoven’s Anvil to all who read here who have an interest in cognition and / or music?
For more on parallelism in cinema, see David Bordwell, Julie, Julia, & the house that talked, to which Benson also pointed me.
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Bill Benzon:
June 8th, 2013 at 10:20 am
Yes, Charles, seems like a “classic” example of parallelism.
Charles Cameron:
June 8th, 2013 at 10:08 pm
Clearer tasbih image from Manhunt at the 52.11 mark.
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Suzanne Schroeder:
June 8th, 2013 at 10:58 pm
Much clearer! Yes, I am in complete agreement.
Grurray:
June 9th, 2013 at 12:58 am
Another parallel more pronounced was when they arrived at Kurtz’s camp.
After the welcome, they ascended up the steps, and Willard met Colby who was sporting a bloody broken hand.
The difference apparently was Colby reached his “breaking point” at the end of his mission which prevented him from completing it. Willard was broken all along. Sailing up the river into a den of savages to kill an officer was probably just another day at the office for him.