The Daily Show
is considered primarily a comedy program finding it’s provenance in That Was the Week That Was
and the media parodies on SNL.
However, there’s undoubtedly a substantial segment of The Daily Show’s audience for whom the program’s satire is their
primary news source. And if the satire about seemingly sacrosanct news items seems
tasteless, the argument can be made that the grotesquery of what is going on in
Iraq and Syria, in the Ukraine and to the Ozone layer is what’s truly lacking
in taste. Rosewater,, the movie about
the imprisonment of Newsweek journalist
Maziar Bahari (Gael Garcia Bernal) in Teheran’s notorious Evin prison (based on his memoir Then They Came For Me: A Family’s Story of Love, Captivity and Survival), was directed
by Jon Stewart, of Daily Show fame. However, as a director Stewart’s persona is a far cry from that of the television host.
Instead of treating Bahari’s story as a comic strip or subject of satire (in
the way Argo partially did in its tale of a notorious escape from Iran), Stewart tackles his subject with deadly seriousness. If
there are humorous elements like one in which Bahari entices the
film’s eponymous interrogator (Kim Bodnia) with stories about massage excursions in the exotic
New Jersey city of Fort Lee, they’re intrinsic to the reality of what’s going on.
The movie is curiously complex and a far cry from the kind of homiletics that are often the dark side of the satirist’s trade. The association between Rosewater and Rosebud is not serendipitous
when one considers that one of the main axes Bahari’s tormentors have to grind
is the link between journalism and spying. Whether Stewart or Bahari intended
it, it’s hard not to fault the Iranian hardliners their insinuation of collusion (however one
might detest their methods). The movie points to layers upon layers of
connections rather than disconnects between the journalist and his captors,
including the fact that Bahari’s father had been a prisoner of a common enemy
the Shah—whose rise to power had come about due to the CIA’s machinations
against the democratically elected Mosaddegh back in l953. There’s a scene
where Bahari is about to be executed in the prison courtyard. His interrogator
pulls the trigger, but there are no bullets in the gun. It’s a replication of
an event in Dostoevsky’s early life. One wonders if the character, whose novelistic sensibility Stewart so vividly paints in Rosewater (personal/historical flashbacks are interspersed throughout the film), will someday turn the
nightmare he lived into a great work of fiction.
Monday, November 24, 2014
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