|
Weather
Underground, The
(2003)
Starring:
Bill Ayers,
Bernardine Dohrn,
Mark Rudd
Director:
Sam Green, Bill
Siegel
Rating: NR
Studio:
Shadow Distribution
Release Date:
08.23.03
Review
Posted: 03.04.04
Spoilers:
Minor
By
Howard Schumann
By the late 1960s, the
undeclared war in Vietnam had dragged on for four years, despite
assurances from our political leaders that we had turned the corner.
While massive protest marches brought the issue to the attention of
millions, they did little to stop the war. By the early 70s, Richard
Nixon was President, the war had escalated to Laos and Cambodia,
protesting students were shot dead at Kent State, over 30,000
Americans and countless more Vietnamese were dead, and there was no
end in sight. Impatient with non-violence and radicalized by the
continually escalating casualty count and the deafness shown by
political leaders, more militant groups such as The Weathermen and
Black Panthers began to emerge.
The Weathermen (later
The Weather Underground), a radical faction of the SDS (Students for a
Democratic Society), waged a small-scale war against the US government
during the 1970s that included bombings of the Pentagon and the
Capitol buildings, breaking Timothy Leary out of prison, and evading a
nationwide FBI manhunt. Nominated for an Academy Award, directors Sam
Green and Bill Siegel's compelling documentary, The Weather
Underground, candidly explores the rise and fall of the protest
group over a six-year period, as former members speak about what drove
them to "bring the war home" and landed them on the FBI's ten most
wanted list. Though tough questions were not asked, it is nonetheless
a balanced and engrossing documentary that puts the last serious
student movement in this country into historical perspective without
either romanticizing or trivializing it.
Using FBI photographs,
news accounts, archival war footage and interviews with Weathermen,
SDS leaders, and FBI agents, the documentary explores the limits of
protest in a free society and the odds faced by those confronting
state and corporate power. Included are scenes of napalm bombing in
Vietnam, the murder of black leaders Fred Hampton and George Jackson,
and excerpts of talks by President Nixon. The documentary contains
interviews with seven of the original Weathermen, all white, middle
class, and well educated: Mark Rudd, Bernardine Dohrn, Bill Ayers,
Brian Flanagan, Naomi Jaffe, Laura Whitehorn and David Gilbert. These
were not weekend hippies or armchair activists, but people so
committed they cut themselves off from family and friends for nearly a
decade.
While the movement began
by targeting all (white) Americans, after the explosion of a homemade
bomb in Greenwich Village in 1970 killed three of their members, the
group decided that no one should die as a result of their direct
action, and no one did. In spite of their belief that civil
disobedience was the only alternative, the radicalism of the group
alienated many of the people they were trying to convert and forced
them to go underground, with everyone eventually surrendering to the
FBI. Today most are still active in professional capacities in support
of these ideals, and still convinced of the evils of the capitalist
system and the need for genuine democracy.
While their acts can be
understood on the basis that it was a time of worldwide revolution,
and by the failure of marches on Washington to stop the escalation of
the war, questions as to whether or not their tactics were effective
are still being debated. If nothing else, they exposed the FBI's
sinister CointelPro program, an attempt to infiltrate and destroy left
wing organizations. Though today the goal of a truly just and humane
society seems farther away than ever, as director Siegel pointed out
referring to The Weather Underground, "It's clear they didn't have the
entire answer, but their impulse that the world can be a more
progressive, humane place is worth considering. They made huge
mistakes but also had an impulse that things needed to change." The
impetus for that change is still alive.
Film
Grade: A-
Home | Back to Top |