I haven't seen Brokeback yet ... maybe this week sometime.El_Gato wrote:BAC,
So, did you get to see it?
Also, did you end up seeing Syriana? If so, don't give it away but just tell me if you'd recommend it for a lifelong conservative oilman or not.
I really liked Syriana. It has a cynical (realistic?) view of virtually every player in the Middle East, including oil companies. Although, at the same time, it seems like it plays things relatively fairly. It shows the oil companies as being profit oriented (and willing to bend the rules to get ahead in the particular story followed), but also shows the Emirs being the same way, as well as every politician in D.C. and everyone hanging around the Middle East. The oil company story subplot has more to do with our national interests in securing oil resources, and the interplay with the Chinese (who also want the oil) and the Emirs.
It's not a harsh propoganda film by any means -- it makes everybody look bad (and likely deservedly so). The main complaints by people come from the way the film was done from a story telling perspective. It follows four different stories that are loosely intertwined. It doesn't spend a lot of time explaining the back story for any character, and sometimes characters come and go that you have no idea who or what they are. It's kind of like you are a fly on the wall for all of these conversations. As a result, the viewer never fully knows the full story at any given time, and they have to really pay attention to follow the story at all (kind of like "Deadwood" -- lots of very subtle plot points made that can pass you by if you aren't paying attention).
I actually thought these methods made the film better because they gave you a sense of chaos and confusion, which is a good metaphor for the entire region. It furthers the idea that anybody who thinks they know the whole story about what is going on at any given time is probably wrong. It's hard to watch the movie and then think that simple slogans are adequate for framing any discussion on the region.