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Bearing Witness | |
---|---|
Written by | Maryam d'Abo |
Directed by | Bob Eisenhardt Barbara Kopple Marijana Wotton |
Starring | Molly Bingham Marie Colvin Janine di Giovanni Mary Rogers May Ying Welsh |
Theme music composer | Joel Goodman |
Country of origin | United States |
Original language | English |
Production | |
Producer | Marijana Wotton |
Cinematography | Joan Churchill Richard Connors Luke Geissbuhler |
Editor | Bob Eisenhardt |
Running time | 90 minutes |
Production company | Cabin Creek Films |
Original release | |
Network | A&E Network |
Release | 2005 |
Bearing Witness is a 2005 documentary by Barbara Kopple and Marijana Wotton. [1]
It follows five women reporters and the challenges they face as they work in Iraq during the Second Gulf War. Molly Bingham is an experienced photographer who was held for several days at Abu Ghraib prison at the start of the war. Marie Colvin was a reporter who lost her eye to a grenade while working in Sri Lanka. Janine di Giovanni has to deal with the difficulties of becoming a mother and still working to fulfill her duties as a journalist. Mary Rogers is a camerawoman who continues to put herself in harm's way in an effort to get the proper footage to cover her stories. [1]
Bearing Witness was made for and premiered on the A&E television network on May 26, 2005. [1] The film was invited to open the 2005 Full Frame Documentary Film Festival in Durham, North Carolina, with the subject that year being on "Why War?". [2] [3]
Alessandra Stanley of The New York Times was critical of the documentary, calling it a "beautifully shot feminist film with an oddly old-fashioned, Ladies Home Journal approach". [4] Stanley was critical of the film boxing women into a sub-category of "women war correspondents" and the film's lack of focus on male and non-Western voices while also acknowledging the role that gender plays in their work. [4]
Rory Elizabeth Katherine Kennedy is an American documentary filmmaker. Kennedy has made documentary films that center on social issues such as addiction, nuclear radiation, the treatment of prisoners-of-war, and the politics of the Mexican border fence. Her films have been featured on many television networks. She is the youngest child of U.S. Senator Robert F. Kennedy and Ethel Skakel.
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Alessandra Stanley is an American journalist. As of 2019, she is the co-founder of a weekly newsletter "for worldly cosmopolitans" called Air Mail, alongside former Vanity Fair editor-in-chief Graydon Carter.
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