The Hamburg Cell (2004 TV Movie)
6/10
Eerie, fact based terrorism account dryly parlayed
11 November 2006
Controversial docudrama explores the murky relationships and preparations all of the hijacker's underwent leading up to September 11th, as well as the numerous times they were being watched by US intelligence before that date. Centering around the most conflicted and perhaps westernized of the bunch, Ziad Jarrah, the movie makes good use out of Jarrah's moral dilemmas, his marriage to his wife, and his families pressuring to return back to civilized society, but in turn takes much of the focus away from articulating the heart of the enemy. Karim Salah in the role unfortunately comes of as a slightly tanner version of a Jason Scwartzman which proves distracting from the otherwise Muslim perspectives. While Jarrah may provide interesting counterpoints to his fanatical and less educated brothers-in-arms, the movie needed some better casting to truly punctuate these characters. Instead, The Hamburg Cell deals with the specific, factually based training that led to the suicide attacks while peering into the mentalities these bold pawns relegated themselves to by accepting this task whole heartedly, with mixed results. The acting and direction may lack the spark that is needed to truly ignite this film past an interesting docudrama, but the information and perspectives stay nonetheless fascinating and offer plenty of counter patriotism for thought in yet another attempt to bridge this gap of hatred the massive rift between our two cultures have formed by showing the inherent struggles we all go through to fight for what we believe is right.
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