Episode #917

Morris, Abu Ghraib, Film Club

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Friday, April 25, 2008

The aftershocks of Abu Ghraib. In “Standard Operating Procedure,” filmmaker Errol Morris tells the story of the soldiers who posed and photographed abuses of prisoners at Abu Ghraib. In a strange twist of timing, U.S. military prisons are the subject of another movie being released this weekend; this one, however, is a comedy. “Harold & Kumar Escape from Guantanamo Bay” details the misadventures of two White Castle-loving potheads who find themselves the subjects of racial profiling.

Studio 360 Episode 917, Morris, Abu Ghraib, Film Club Errol Morris (Nubar Alexanian)

Errol Morris

In his new film, “Standard Operating Procedure,” filmmaker Errol Morris explores one of the darkest chapters of recent history: the shocking photos that emerged from the U.S. military prison at Abu Ghraib four years ago. He explains to Kurt why those photos were not just ...

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Depicting Abu Ghraib

Studio 360’s Lu Olkowski talked to artists (including painter Fernando Botero), writers, and a former soldier who have spent years trying to figure out what the Abu Ghraib photos really mean, and how seeing torture changes us.

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The Return of Harold and Kumar

They say “tragedy plus time equals comedy,” and another film opening this weekend takes unjustly imprisoned terror suspects as its focus. This one is a comedy about two bong-loving stoners: “Harold and Kumar Escape from Guantanamo Bay.” Arun Rath explains why Harold and ...

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Father-Son Film Club

When film critic David Gilmour's son Jesse Gilmour was flunking out of school, he let him drop out -- on the condition that Jesse would watch movies with him. In his memoir, The Film Club, David describes the curriculum he devised. Father ...

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