Film

What's on at the cinema plus reviews of the latest movie and DVD releases


Taxi to the Dark Side (2007)

Director: Alex Gibney

Time Out rating

Average user rating
No reviews

Movie review

From Time Out London

December 2002. An innocent Afghani taxi driver named Dilawar was taken to the US base at Bagram on suspicion of involvement in a rocket attack. Five days later, he was dead from beatings so severe his legs would have to have been amputated had he survived. Just one more casualty in a murky conflict with no shortage of them, yet it’s also the starting point for this troubling, impassioned, elegantly framed documentary.

Following evidence from a New York Times reporter, filmmaker Alex Gibney (‘Enron: The Smartest Guys in the Room’) traces this case and pulls back to reveal the bigger picture. The Bagram interrogators were reassigned to Abu Ghraib in Iraq, from which photos emerged to expose errant military personnel’s abuse of detainees and highlight the Bush administration’s concerted attempt to skirt international law on torture by devising new terms and techniques under the rubric ‘enhanced interrogation’. So, vice-president Dick Cheney’s post 9/11 declaration that ‘we have to work the dark side’ slides into the excesses of ‘extraordinary rendition’ and Guantanamo Bay’s detention without trial.

Those with war on terror fatigue could claim that they’ve heard it all before, yet Gibney’s film puts hard evidence onscreen to render the doublespeak of Rumsfeld and cohorts truly chilling, concentrating the arguments to prompt us to reaccess our outrage (and indeed ponder British standards of conduct). Angry but never hectoring, this Oscar-winning account of a nation’s moral haze is arguably the single most significant film to emerge from the Iraq conflict. Don’t be so blasé that you miss it.

Author: Trevor Johnston

Time Out London Issue 1973 June 10-18, 2008


What do you think?
Post your review now

clear rating
Min 1 star. Zero stars will be treated as unrated.

*mandatory fields


Cast & crew

Director: Alex Gibney

Rated: 15

Duration: 108 mins

UK Release: Jun 13 2008
US Release: Jan 18 2008

Related articles




Top Stories

Ridley Scott interview

Ridley Scott interview

Director Ridley Scott tells Cath Clarke why he's making a science fiction comeback

Cannes Film Festival 2012: half-time report

Cannes Film Festival 2012: half-time report

Dave Calhoun reports on the hits, misses and a shocking new masterpiece from Michael Haneke

Wes Anderson interview

Wes Anderson interview

Cath Clarke talks to the director of Cannes's opening film

Open-air movies in London

Open-air movies in London

Cath Clarke rounds up this summer's crop of outdoor film screenings

The 100 best French films

The 100 best French films

In honour of Cannes, we reveal the best French films of all time

Ken Loach interview

Ken Loach interview

Ken Loach talks to us about his Cannes Film Festival entry 'The Angels' Share'