DVD: The Unknown Known

A fog of words from an unrepentant Donald Rumsfeld, in Errol Morris's doc

Early in The Fog of War, Errol Morris’s first, Oscar-winning documentary about a former US Secretary of Defense, Robert McNamara admits that, if the USA had lost World War Two, he would have been convicted as a war criminal for his part in the fire-bombing of Japan. “Some things work out, and some things don’t,” Donald Rumsfeld observes with contrasting breeziness in Morris’s new film. This is as near to a critical perspective as the Iraq catastrophe’s principal architect cares to get.

The cunning and humane Morris, who spent 33 hours interviewing Rumsfeld, only presses his subject once, on the treatment of prisoners at Abu Ghraib. That “didn’t create injuries that were permanent,” Rumsfeld responds. This dismissive failure of sympathetic imagination may be the main flaw lurking beneath his avalanche of folksy, combative and hollow words here. Later, he chokes up as he tells a sentimental anecdote about a soldier who survived the war. He shows no interest in the bloody reality of the thousands who didn’t.

This feels unusually unsatisfactory for a Morris film. There is no pay-off. Just a grinning, impregnable fool talking, interspersed with reminders of his astonishing durability at the heart of American power (Rumsfeld was Nixon’s Secretary of Defense, too), and footage of the camera panning across placid blue water. The director hopes this coheres into a true picture of a man he calls “the quintessential Errol Morris character”: a Secretary of self-defence and self-deception, who never delves beneath the surface of his own ideas, handed the power to start terrible wars.

The extras include a commentary and on-stage Q&A from Morris, essential in a film which has some of its subject’s opaqueness. The incisively thoughtful director teases out meanings which are anything but clear while listening to his aggressively blank interviewee.   

Add comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.

Plain text

  • No HTML tags allowed.
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
  • Web page addresses and email addresses turn into links automatically.
Failure of sympathetic imagination may be the main flaw lurking beneath his avalanche of folksy, combative and hollow words

rating

3

explore topics

share this article

more film

Joachim Lang's docudrama focuses on Goebbels as master of fake news
The BFI has unearthed an unsettling 1977 thriller starring Tom Conti and Gay Hamilton
Estranged folk duo reunites in a classy British comedy drama
Marianne Elliott brings Raynor Winn's memoir to the big screen
Living off grid might be the meaning of happiness
Tender close-up on young love, grief and growing-up in Iceland
Eye-popping Cold War sci-fi epics from East Germany, superbly remastered and annotated
Artful direction and vivid detail of rural life from Wei Liang Chiang
Benicio del Toro's megalomaniac tycoon heads a star-studded cast
Tom Cruise's eighth M:I film shows symptoms of battle fatigue
A comedy about youth TV putting trends above truth
A wise-beyond-her-years teen discovers male limitations in a deft indie drama