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Today's Stories

June 5 -7, 200

Alexander Cockburn
High Words, Low Truths

Paul Craig Roberts
Obama in Cairo

Jennifer Loewenstein
How Much Really Separates Obama and Netanyahu?

Franklin Lamb
Watching Obama's Speech in Lebanon

Missy Comley Beattie
Peace Be Upon You?

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Walk Like an Egyptian: the Oprahfication of Obama

Stanley Heller
Obama's Non-Starter

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GM: the Path Not Taken

Dave Lindorff
What a State-Run GM Could Do

William Blum
The Great, International, Truly Demonic Iran Threat

Ernest Callenbach /
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A Green-Powered Trip Through Ecotopia

June 4, 2009

Arno J. Mayer
The Future of Israel and the Decline of the American Empire

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Bond Market Blowout

Gareth Porter
Report Ties Dubious Iran Nuke Documents to Israel

Ayesha Ijaz Khan
Clearing Misconceptions on Pakistan's War in Swat

Mouin Rabbani
Paradigmatic Progress?

Jordan Flaherty
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Is Card Check Dead?

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Iran's Elections: the Latin America Factor

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Obama's Double Standard

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Pink Floyd's Roger Waters Slams Israel

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As the Dollar Falls Off the Cliff...

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A Weaver's Welcome to Pakistan

Alan Farago
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Israeli Spies and Fake IDs

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Why Congressman Cardoza Stiffed Michelle Obama

Nadia Hijab
A Stifling Embrace

Dean Baker
Reporters With Pom-Poms: Cheerleading the Recovery

Binoy Kampmark
Whither GM?

Manuel Garcia, Jr.
What Happened to Air France Flight 477?

Remi Kanazi
Oslo Redux?

Behzad Yaghmaian
The End of Idealism in China?

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June 2, 2009

Uri Avnery
Racists for Democracy

Robert Weissman
Bankrupt Thinking

Conn Hallinan
Shadow Wars

Gideon Spiro
Obama and Israel's Nuclear Arsenal

Roger Burbach
US-Cuba Policy: "Still Stuck in the Past"

Dylan Quigley
My Experience with Dr. Tiller

Dave Lindorff
The American Taliban Claim Another Victim

Ray McGovern
Navy Vet Honored, Foiled Israeli Attack

Belén Fernández
Israel's Newfound Concern for UNIFIL

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Give It Up, Wyeth

Willie L. Pelote, Sr.
GOP: California's for the Rich (Poor People Should Move)

Website of the Day
You Bet Your Health

June 1, 2009

Pam Martens
Wall Street Braces for New Cops on the Beat

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Washington's Mirror

Mark Weisbrot
More Stimulus, Not Deficit Reduction

Ramzy Baroud
Netanyahu's New Quest

Saul Landau
Dancing the Afghan Jig

Eugenia Tsao
Smug Toronto Seethes as Tamils "Go Too Far"

Afshin Rattansi
Women in Darfur: "We Saw No Evidence of Genocide"

Debra Sweet
The Murder of Dr. Tiller

Abdul Malik Mujahid
Obama's Trip Egypt and American Muslims

Bill Quigley
Haiti's Revolutionary Priest Gerard Jean-Juste: Presente!

John Wright
The Tragedy of Susan Boyle

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Young Neo Con Anthem

May 29-31, 2009

Alexander Cockburn
Sotomayor and the Last of the WASPs

Patrick Cockburn
Iraq: The Mother of All Corruption Scandals

Vijay Prashad
Reeling Republicans

Gary Leupp
The Destabilization of Pakistan

Ray McGovern
The Impossible Rehab of Colin Powell

Rannie Amiri
Spies, Lies and Mr. Lebanon's Demise

Bill Hatch
The Mechanic's Tale: a Short Chapter in the History of Foreclosures

Chellis Glendinning, Stephanie Mills and Kirkpatrick Sale
Three Luddites Talking ... on a Computer!

Phyllis Pollack
Dosed, But Not Spiked: an Interview with Grace Slick

David Yearsley
Eros and Susan Boyle; Fakery and Simon Cowell

Jean-Christophe Servant
A River of Acid: Mined Out in Zambia

Dave Lindorff
Sotomayor's Problem Isn't That She's Too Latina

James McEnteer
Straw Dogs: the Media and Sonia Sotomayor

Missy Beattie
A Place Called Despair

James C. Faris
On Evolution: a Critique of Darwinism

David Macaray
When Workers' Rights Go Unenforced

Harvey Wasserman
The Catastrophic Economics of Nuclear Power

Adam Federman
Drilling the Marcellus Shale Through the Halliburton Loophole

David Ker Thomson
Turtle Island: Adventures in Recycling

Mark Seth Lender
Great Egrets Return

Stephen Martin
Big Trouble in Little Britain

Joseph Nevins
Sin Nombre is Only Part of the Border Story

Sophia Mihic
Star Trek and the Continuing Mission of American Imperialism

Lorenzo Wolff
Dylan Kelehan Gets What He Needs

Poets' Basement
Fleming, Shields and Greer

Website of the Weekend
Petition: Grant Parole to Leonard Peltier

May 28, 2009

Joan Roelofs
The Philanthropies and the Economic Crisis

Paul Craig Roberts
Torture and the American Conscience

Ralph Nader
Corporate Frankensteins

Mouin Rabbani
The Dangers of False Optimism in the Middle East

Joe Bageant
Plain Truths From Appalachia: a Redneck View of Obamarama

James McEnteer
America Held Hostage

Dedrick Muhammad
Obama and the Harsh Racial Reality

Richard Morse
On Speaking Out in Haiti

David Macaray
Have We Turned Into Sheep?

Harvey Wasserman
The 8 Green Steps to Solartopia

Website of the Day
Col. Peters: Just Kill the Gitmo Detainees

May 27, 2009

Joanne Mariner
Military Commissions, Round Three

Paul Craig Roberts
Doublespeak on North Korea

Walden Bello
Can China Save the World From Depression?

Dave Lindorff
Recidivism and Guantánamo

Brian M. Downing
Along the Durand Line

Carlos Villarreal
Separate But Equal Just Fine in California?

Nadia Hijab
Israel's Next Move: Armageddon Now?

Adam Federman
The PCBs of the Hudson River

Laray Polk
RadWaste and Texas' Future

Isabella Kenfield
The Fall of a Brazilian Financier

David Michael Green
Overcoming the Poverty of Ambition

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The Case Against Shell

May 26, 2009

Manuel Garcia, Jr.
Fearful Pride: North Korea's Second Nuclear Test

Mike Whitney
The Next Leg Down: When Deflation Becomes Entrenched

Sharon Smith
Obama and Abortion Rights: What We Learned at Notre Dame

Marjorie Cohn
The Gitmo Appeasment Plan: Obama Buckles on the Constitution

Dean Baker
Waterboard the Fed

Deepankar Basu
Was the Indian Election a Debacle for the Left? If So, Why?

Fred Gardner
The Vindication of Sgt. Northcutt

Jordan Flaherty
New Orleans for Sale

Josh Ruebner
Rethinking the Costs of Peace

Brian Cloughley
The Man Who Murdered Count Foulke Bernadotte

Website of the Day
The Montana Town That Wants to Become the New Gitmo

May 25, 2009

Diane Christian
Looking at Torture

John Ross
Mexico's Shock Doctrine

Kenneth Hartman
The Trouble With Prison

Uri Avnery
Netanyahu Goes to Washington

Fred Gardner
"War on Pot" Overrides "Support Our Troops": the Punishment of Sgt. Northcutt

Cindy Sheehan
Day of the Dead

Sen. Russell Feingold
Prolonged Detention and the Rule of Law: a Letter to Barack Obama

Sibel Edmonds
Two Sides of the Same Coin: From State Secrets to War to Wiretaps

Franklin Lamb
Der Spiegel Tries Again

Dave Lindorff
Memorial Day in the Land of the Weak and Wussy

Daniel Wolff
Learning to Read in the Pacific Northwest

Website of the Day
Decoration Day

May 22-24, 2009

Alexander Cockburn
How Long Does It Take?

Michael Teitelman
Obama, Torture and John Walker Lindh

Mike Whitney
Credit Default Swaps: the Poison in the System

Ray McGovern
Cheney Breaks the Taboo: Support for Israel Feeds Terrorism

Sonia Cardenas /
Andrew Flibbert
Why We Love to Hate Pirates

Clive Hamilton
Biblical Prophesy and the Iraq War: Bush, God, Iraq and Gog

Conn Hallinan
Swine Flu Fallout

Fred Gardner
Sgt. Northcutt's Homecoming

Carlo Cristofori
The Latest AfPak War

Dean Baker
A Friendly Financial Intervention

Rannie Amiri
King Abdullah's 57-State Solution

Andy Worthington
A Message to Obama: No Military Commissions; No Preventive Detentions

David Macaray
Democrats Betray Labor: Card Check is Pronouced Dead

Nadia Hijab
What Kind of State?

Franklin Lamb
How Not to Win Votes for Team USA

Ted Newcomen
The Forgotten Casualties

David Ker Thomson
Joy (Or How Hope, the Thing With Feathers, Gets Plucked)

David Rosen
Porn Wars

Mark Weisbrot
Climate Change and Intellectual Property Rights?

Robert Fantina
Gitmo, Democrats and Business as Usual

Heather Gray
Some Positive Directions in Public Health?

Farzana Versey
The Myth of Manmohan Singh

Chris Genovali
A Paler Shade of Green

Ron Jacobs
His Terrible Swift Sword: the Legacy of John Brown

Jay Diamond
Why the Left Should Cheer Hannity and Limbaugh

Dr. Susan Block
The Binds That Bond

Ben Sonnenberg
"Ballast": An Endlessness of Almost Ending

David Yearsley
Handel's Ghost ... Again

Lorenzo Wolff
My Problem with Led Zeppelin

Poets' Basement
Corseri and Bohm

Website of the Weekend
Bob Graham's CIA Notebooks

May 21, 2009

Jeffrey St. Clair /
Joshua Frank
The Politics of Bait-and-Switch: Obama and the Environment

Paul Craig Roberts
Morphing Dick Cheney

Chris Floyd
In Defense of George W. Bush

Gerald Paoli
Inside Iraqi Kurdistan: Life and Death in the Qandil Mountains

Zach Mason
Something's Gotta Give: Obama and the Hustler

Uri Avnery
A Quarrel on the Titanic

Andy Worthington
Out of Guantánamo

Niranjan Ramakrishnan
India: Two Funerals and a Wedding

Norman Solomon
The Afghanistan Escalation

Dave Lindorff
A Corporate Crime Wave of Labor Law Violations

Website of the Day
Swine Flu: The Panic That Wasn't

May 20, 2009

Michael Hudson
The Toll Booth Economy

Gary Leupp
Courting Hekmatyar: Obama and the Warlord

Michael D. Yates
Work is Hell

Jonathan Cook
Netanyahu Adviser Steps Out of the Shadows

Peter Lee
The World Doesn't Have a Pakistan Nukes Problem ... It Has a David Albright Problem

Binoy Kampmark
The End of the Tamil Tigers?

Peter Zinn
Eulogizing Lawyers

William Loren Katz
Tortured Reasoning; Tortured Results

Gary Lapon
Why Women Need Single Payer

Trudy Bond
Torture, Shrinks and a Groundhog's Day Moment

Website of the Day
Meet the Climate Change Lobby

May 19, 2009

Kristoffer Rehder
Check Point Iraq: a Soldier's Tale

Mike Whitney
The Real Lesson of the Financial Crisis

Ray McGovern
How Colin Powell Got Duped by the CIA

Vijay Prashad
The Indian Elections: a Game Changer?

Mirjam Hadar Meerschwam
Intimidation and Interrogation in Tel Aviv

Mustafa Barghouthi
Is Obama Up to the Challenge of Dealing with Netanyahu?

Andy Worthington
Gitmo: A Prison Built on Lies

Binoy Kampmark
Britain's Speaker Crisis

John Walsh
John Kerry vs. Single-Payer

David Macaray
Alcohol as Metaphor: Zero Tolerance in the Workplace

Website of the Day
So You Think That Veggie Burger is Organic...

May 18, 2009

Dave Lindorff
The US is Using White Phosporous in Afghanistan

Abdul Malik Mujahid
Thirty Years of Tragedy in Afghanistan

Jonathan Cook
How Many Secret Prisons Does Israel Have?

Ben Rosenfeld
Police Violence: How Many Kicks to the Head Does It Take?

Patrick Cockburn
These Killings Will Only Strengthen the Taliban

Ralph Nader
They Want It All: New Tricks From the Old Energy Lobby

Stephen Soldz
Psychologist Bryce Lefever Clarifies Defense of Torture

Eugenia Tsao
On the Devaluation of Labor

Walter Brasch
Cheney's Magical Mystery Media Tour

Roberto Rodriguez
War and Torture

Charlotte Laws
Politics and American Idol

Website of the Day
Disbar the Torture Lawyers

May 15-17, 2009

Alexander Cockburn
King of the Hate Business

Jeffrey St. Clair
The Case of the Missing H-Bomb

David Rosen
Sexual Torture: What is Acknowledged and What Remains Unknown

Mike Whitney
From My Lai to Bala Baluk: Obama Picks Up Where Bush Left Off

Bruce Page
A Real History of Rupert Murdoch

Jeremy Scahill
The Black Shirts of Guantánamo

Fred Gardner
Tortured Reasoning: Judge Bybee Rules Against Brian Epis

Tom Barry
Fighting the Drug War at Homeland Security

Mats Svensson
On the Beach in Tel Aviv

Ramzy Baroud
The Drones Are Coming

Mark Engler
Science Fiction From Below

Mark Weisbrot
Stealth Move by IMF to Get $100 Billion Without Congressional Debate

Farzana Versey
Of Scapegoats and Separatists

Ron Jacobs
It's Up to You to Save Troy Davis

Hannah Wolfe
What to Tell the Children

Cal Winslow
Fresno, the New Ground Zero in the Battle Between the SEIU and NUHW

David Macaray
Labor Needs a Southern Strategy

Christopher Brauchli
Involuntary Baptism

Mark Seth Lender
The Lion Tamer's Story

Robert Fantina
Lapel Pins, Arugula and Mustard

David Ker Thomson
Last Man Walking

Stephen Martin
Lipstick Nightmare for Spin Merchant

Charles R. Larson
Double Exile

Chase Madar
"Angels & Demons" and the Extraordinary Power of Imaginary Heretics

Kim Nicolini
Vaginas From Outer Space! Boldly Sitting Through Star Trek

David Yearsley
Handel's Ghost

Lorenzo Wolff
Killer Virtues

Poets' Basement
Gibbons, Jordan and Moser

Website of the Weekend
Catch F-22

May 14, 2009

Michael Hudson
Where Russia Went Wrong

Andy Worthington
The Poisoned Mosaic: Judge Condemns Guantánamo Evidence

Paul Craig Roberts
The Impotent President

Jonathan Cook
The Pope's Pilgrimage: Legitimizing Netanyahu?

Ray McGovern
See No Evil: Ugly Questions for General Myers

Lance Selfa
The Limits of Liberalism

David Green
The Deportation of Demjanjuk

Dave Lindorff
Obama Channels Cheney

Frida Berrigan
Nuclear Options

Sue Udry
The Bybee Question

Website of the Day
Our Bombs: Tracking US Air Strikes

May 13, 2009

Brian M. Downing
The Road Out of Iraq

Gareth Porter
Gen. McChrystal and Afghanistan

Robert Sandels
Obama and Latin America: No Light, All Tunnel

Ricardo Alarcón
Cuba: Measure of a Revolution

Eric Walberg
NATO in Georgia: Fun and Games

Dave Lindorff
The Sinking of GM: When Captains of Industry Don't Go Down with the Ship

Deepak Tripathi
A Culture of Abuse

William S. Lind
Back to the Balkans: Hillary and the Sleeping Dragon

Kevin Zeese
A Populist Health Care Rebellion

Franklin Lamb
Lebanon: From Perdition to Redemption?

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Beth McIntosh: The Wild Ride

May 12, 2009

Gary Leupp
The Bomb Iran Faction

Richard Neville
The AfPak Blues: Corpses of the Kids by the Truckload

Wajahat Ali
Obama Chooses a Reliable Dictatorship

Dean Baker
The Banker Boys Are Alright! Time to End the Bailouts

Franklin Lamb
What Palestinian Refugees Need From Lebanon's Elections

Norman Solomon
A Progressive Challenge to Jane Harman

Paul Craig Roberts
Beware the Hate Crimes Bill

Lisa M. Hamilton
Let's Grow a New Crop of Farmers

Bob Fitrakis /
Harvey Wasserman:
Why Isn't Obama Turning to Credit Unions?

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Wading Through the Grassroots

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Electronic Police States

May 11, 2009

Andrea Peacock
No Justice for Libby

Michael Hudson
Gordon Brown Spills the Beans on the IMF

Patrick Cockburn
Who Killed 120 Civilians?

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The Single-Payer Taboo

John Kelly
Pseudoscience and Wrongful Convictions in the War on Drugs

Saul Landau
Cuba's Biggest "Crime"

Dave Lindorff
Blaming the Dead Victims

David Michael Green
Get Obama

Anthony Papa
Gov. David Paterson Does the Right Thing

Paul Krassner
Jon Stewart and Truman, the War Criminal

Website of the Day
Generational Homelessness

 

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Weekend Edition
June 5 -7, 2009

Steve McQueen's "Hunger"

Art With a Punch

By KIM NICOLINI

I’ve been waiting to see Steve McQueen’s Hunger for nearly a year. From everything I read about the movie, I knew that it would be the kind of movie I love more than any other. But that also means that it would be the kind of film that never gets wide distribution and that very few people will have the opportunity to see, much less want to see. Why? Because it’s a film more interested in creating an aura than telling a narrative story full of character and plot development. Sure, Hunger is about very real historical events – British dominance, the Irish Republican Army, and the Bobby Sands hunger strike – but it presents them in a way that isn’t remotely mainstream. In a sense, the film is as avant-garde and rebellious in its style as the Maze prisoners protests were in their actions.

I finally had an opportunity to see the film this week and was absolutely blown away. Hunger is a magnificent work, one that deserves every accolade it has received. From the very opening shot and strains of music to the final closing credits, every inch of this film is art that packs a punch. Though based on real historical and political events, it transposes these real exceptionally politically charged events into an abstract meditation on fascistic domination and rebellious protest that transcends political specificity while also maintaining its historical authenticity. The film is extremely political without ever reducing itself to a cut-and-dried message. It achieves this nuanced bridge between abstraction and historical documentation by exploiting the medium of film to show us the circumstances of the specific historical time rather than telling us the overt story and polemicizing. Relying on the tools of form – sound design, cinematography, and lighting – rather than character development and plot, the film delivers the abstract feel of the time and place in which it is set and creates an avant-garde cinematic space carved out of specific events.

The amazing thing is that the film ends up being even more real in its abstraction than a straight political-historical drama would have been. It’s more real because it gives us the gut level human impression of the circumstances. We are asked to feel the situation on screen through our senses rather than just passively being told a story. McQueen distills the environment into a sensory poem that operates on a much more experiential visceral level than direct narrative, and we are immersed into the Maze prison with every sensory core of our being, thereby giving us the opportunity to experience all oppressive prisons.

Certainly the movie’s revolutionary approach to a revolutionary story is connected to the fact that Steve McQueen is an artist first. He happens to use film as his medium, but not in the way an insider in the movie industry would have. At the time of the Bobby Sands’ hunger strike, McQueen was 11-12 years old, and Sands was an enigmatic figure in his life who dominated the television screen and the newsstands. Because of the power of the specter of Bobby Sands in McQueen’s own life, his film concentrates on the subjective impression of the historical events’ aura rather than their journalistic story. Sure, McQueen did a ton of research on the actual events and incorporated those historical facts into the film, but it’s because they get filtered through his specific personal vision that the picture is so profoundly powerful.

Whether a conscious move or not, McQueen’s framing of the story in relation to a critical moment in Bobby Sands’ own adolescent life seems to connect it to the intense impression Sands had on McQueen when he was an adolescent. Bobby’s character is ultimately defined by an incident in which he killed a faun by drowning it and therefore put the animal out of its misery. This was a violent act of sacrifice and mercy just like the act that Sands ultimately will perform on his own body. Certainly this adolescent incident centered on a moment of sacrifice is all the more beautifully charged and poignant since it reflects the time in McQueen’s own adolescent life when the image of Sands was ever-present. Experiencing that kind of bodily protest through the medium of mass culture must have been profoundly meaningful for an adolescent boy confronting the conflicts that came with growing into his own body. Ultimately, it is this dimension to the film, its saturation by the tension between body and mind, hunger and the will to transcend it, that make the film so much more than a simple political story. When Bobby Sands dies at the end of the film and follows the vision of his adolescent self into the woods, in a way we are also following McQueen into his vision. When Bobby Sands looks at us over his shoulder, Steve McQueen also is looking at us through his eyes.

Hunger is a film about the body and how it can be a tool for protest. On the most immediate level, Bobby Sands uses his body as the ultimate form of protest, literally starving himself to death to protest oppression. But in addition to the final starvation sequence, the film focuses on the body throughout, from the bloody knuckles of the violent prison guard to the hair being sheared from the prisoners’ scalps, to feces and piss, to naked bodies engaging in the “blanket” protest. In fact, the hunger strike itself was the final act of the rebels’ bodies. Prior to that, they used their naked bodies, their shit, and their piss to rebel. Whether the viewer knows the specific facts of the protests is ultimately not that important, because McQueen turns them into elements of a language that goes beyond the historical to create an abstract visual poem.

The first thirty minutes of the film have barely any discernable dialogue. What we see are a number of intense moments that focus on the brutality of the body. For example, in one of the early scenes, an inmate is dragged into the prison, screaming that he refuses to wear the clothes of a prisoner. That is the extent of the dialogue. The remainder of the scene is played out in long suspended silence as the prisoner slowly strips down naked as three prison guards look on. The sense of tension and violation is extreme as he slowly unclothes himself and his body is exposed in its nakedness. As he’s dragged into his cell, the camera briefly lingers on a bloody gash in the side of this head and stream of blood running down his face, completing the vision of violation. Through his eyes, we see excrement smeared on prison walls into art, urine dumped into the halls, naked men refusing to bathe, shave, or clothe themselves. None of this is explained or commented on. It is delivered purely through image, sound, and music with minimal dialogue or explanation. The end result is a massively intense portrait of the horrors of oppression playing against the strength of the human will to protest through the most intimate parts of our humanity – our bodies – even while those parts are being violated. In one particularly effective scene toward the end of the film, a prison guard slowly works his way down the hall sweeping up the prisoners’ piss. The only sounds in the scene are the broom scraping the ground and the sloshing of the liquid as he traipses through it in his rubber boots. He is literally trying to contain the leaking bodies of the protesters, but there will always be more piss to replace what he mops up. You can try to sweep the evidence of brutality and oppression into the drain, but more will leak out. Covered with blood, shit and piss, the prison becomes the symbol of the imprisoned body itself.

The struggle to hide the evidence of brutality is also reflected in an incredible and eerie tension in the film between violence and sterility in the prison. For example, when they clean the shit off the walls and suddenly the prison is totally clean and sterile, in a way the prison is even more disturbing than the maggot, shit, and piss-infested prison of the earlier scenes. At least the horror of the prison is overt when the walls are smeared with feces. Hiding the horror by presenting it in a sterile tidy package is very unsettling. This tension also plays out in the central and brutally disturbing beating scene when all the cops in their riot gear organize themselves in the halls. Everything seems to be about systems and order as the cops line up in their uniforms with their shields in a neat line, but then the prisoners are released to a vile beating by the cops. The only sound in the scene is the cacophony of police batons beating bullet proof shields and prisoners’ bodies. It is a brilliant portrait of the violence and chaos masked by the veneer of order and law. These scenes and the tension between sterility and brutality, order and chaos, linger as we enter the final third of the film and experience the death of Bobby Sands, which is shown as a ritual of maintaining order. His body brutalized and physically deteriorating from starvation, we see his gaping wounds, bloody sores, cracked lips, and emaciated form. Yet the very system that is the cause of his protest lovingly nurtures his death. The prison doctors cater to his death in the sterile environment of his room while Bobby’s body literalizes the violence of the system that is caring for him in his death.

A beautifully disturbing way in which the film manipulates these kinds of tensions is in relation to the violent prison guard who gets his jollies beating the prisoners. The film opens with a pair of a man’s hands, a pink bar of soap, and a sink. We see the hands wash themselves, button a shirt, open a newspaper, eat a plate of food. Eventually the camera pulls back, and we see a man getting ready for work. He walks out the door, looks down the street each way, pauses at his car, kneels on the ground, and looks under the chassis. At this point, we understand that he is checking for a bomb, and it is amazing how much tension has been created through this sequence of actions. When he puts the key in the ignition, we are on the edge of our seats waiting for the explosion. When the car doesn’t blow up, we actually breathe a sigh of relief.

The camera then cuts to another scene of the hands in a sink. This time the knuckles are bleeding, and the water in the sink is pooling pink with blood. This mirrors the opening scene, and we realize that these are the knuckles of a violent man. Eventually we witness the extent of his violence as he violently beats Bobby Sands and other prisoners. We slowly learn that this guy is a truly sadistic fascistic fucked up asshole, a representative of everything violent, oppressive, discriminatory, and wrong with the British government or any other oppressive imperialist system. By the time the film gets to the scene where the prison guard is assassinated while visiting his mother in a nursing home, we again experience relief in relation to this character. However, this time our relief comes from the fact that he is blown to bits. After he has been shot in the head and his blood is splattered all over his catatonic mother with his dead head in her lap, we experience a sense of victory and relief at this truly horrific scene. We’re relieved that he is killed but also relieved to have the violence so viscerally brought to the surface at the expense of the guard’s body. This scene totally turns the tables on our reaction to that opening scene. On a side note, this scene masterfully segues into the scenes with Bobby Sands’ mother going to the prison to be with him through his death. This kind of interior reflection and manipulation is evidence of McQueen’s incredibly well crafted filmmaking.

Even though the film relies almost entirely on abstraction – sound, image, lighting – to deliver its story, it has one very long dialogue scene in the middle between Bobby Sands and a priest. The camera literally comes to a halt, letting us concentrate fully on a twenty-two minutes conversation/debate between Bobby and the priest. The film uses this scene to insert the political and historical back story and to give substance to Bobby Sands’ character. Interestingly, McQueen still manages to maintain an abstract distance from the material even while relying solely on dialogue. In a way, the scene is avant-garde in its own right since the way it abruptly inserts itself into the image and soundscape that precedes it seems equally extreme in its delivery. We go from one extreme – image movement with no dialogue – to another – stasis with excessive dialogue. This scene also sets up Bobby Sands as a kind of martyr/saint/Jesus figure, connecting him with the image that haunted Steve McQueen’s adolescence. Overall, Sands seems more of an apparition than a real person, yet is solidly grounded during the scene with the priest.

Every single image in this film is meticulously constructed, from a bar of soap, to a cigarette rolled with pages of the bible, to a flickering fluorescent light. While the film tells a very specific story – the story of Bobby Sands and the protests inside the Maze prison from the mid-1970s to 1981 – the way the film is put together makes it an abstract representation of all political oppression and fascistic systems of law and order and of those who dare protest those systems. Though politically and historically specific, the film’s abstract artistic approach distills these specific political events into a commentary on fascistic brutality and the protest against it that is not limited to the specific historic moment it represents. Reduced to a network of symbols, sounds, and atmosphere, the horrific state of the Maze prison could easily be transposed into Guantanamo, Abu Ghraib, or any other “containment” facility in which the maintenance of order is inseparable from the extreme violence that is performed in its name. Though Hunger tells a story that’s thirty years old, it could just as easily be a story from yesterday or tomorrow.

When I first saw Hunger, I was so overwhelmed by its brilliance that I actually felt too intimidated to write about it. I questioned how my words could ever do this film justice. But then I thought that the real injustice would be not to write about it, especially since so few people will have the opportunity to see it in a movie theater. Because McQueen’s cinematic masterpiece doesn’t fall into the traps of trying to capture history literally or of using history as a means of polemicizing, it communicates a message that will remain relevant as long as it sticks in viewers’ minds. I know it will stick in mine forever.

Kim Nicolini is an artist, poet and cultural critic. She lives in Tucson, Arizona with her daughter and a menagerie of beasts. She works a day job to support her art and culture habits. She is currently finishing a book-length essayistic memoir about being a teenage runaway in 1970s San Francisco. She can be reached at: knicolini@gmail.com.

 


 

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