Standard Operating Procedure (2008)
Director: Errol Morris
Movie review
From Time Out Chicago
A hooded man standing on a box. A prisoner cowering from a barking dog. A grotesque pyramid of naked Arab men; behind them, you can see a smiling American soldier. This is what happens, these images tell us, when power is abused and any semblance of morality gets snuffed out.
You only need to hear the words Abu Ghraib to start the slide show in your mind’s eye, yet Morris’s recycling of the photos isn’t gratuitous. Their reappearance is key, since it sets the context for the bigger picture of how and why. Like his other investigative looks into the evil that men (and women) do, Standard Operating Procedure never offers concrete answers; it lets the perpetrators explain themselves straight into the camera, and we’re left to sift through the testimonies. The more someone like snapshot superstar and former PFC Lynndie England—she of the dangling cigarette and deadened gaze—speaks about “following orders,” the more we see the filmmaker’s impressive balancing act at work. He makes England seem sympathetic even as she verbally ties her own noose, then holds the camera on her silent face just long enough to inspire pity.
But what do torture re-creations accomplish, other than pushing the movie onto the wrong side of the aesthetics-of-representation argument? Is there anything that arty, slo-mo pantomimes of people in pain can make us feel that real-life counterparts can’t? For a film like Morris’s The Thin Blue Line, staged moments can fill in a gap. Here, these mockeries of suffering are nothing but a cheap false move, in every sense of the phrase.
Author: David Fear
Time Out Chicago Issue 166: May 1–7, 2008
User reviews of this film
-
- Paul said...
- Posted on May 18 2008 11:53 Great film examining pictures that need more explanation than a sound blurb on the news.
- Report as inappropriate
Most popular on this site
Features
The Goode news
Matthew Goode springs to the defense of the new Brideshead Revisited like a superhero-in-the-making.
Roll 'em
A forerunner of Bollywood spectacles gets its overdue U.S. premiere.
The (really) big picture
The Music Box kicks hi-def old school with a week of 70mm films.
Freeze frame
Werner Herzog finds cold comfort in Antarctica.
Hit machine
WALL-E director Andrew Stanton explains how to make a trash-collecting robot into a lovable hero.
Czech pleases
Milos Forman’s early films capture the spirit of the 1960s.
Onion soup
Chicago's experimental film festival offers a balance of the stately and the schizophrenic.



What do you think?
Post your review now