Meg Smaker

Last updated

Meg Smaker (born c. 1980) is an American documentary filmmaker, editor, and producer known for the documentary shorts Boxeadora (2015) and Methel Island (2014) and especially for her feature documentary Jihad Rehab (2022), (later retitled The UnRedacted), and the controversy surrounding it. [1] [2] Her films have won several awards. [3]

Contents

Biography

Smaker was a firefighter for six years in California, during which time the September 11 attacks occurred. In her desire to understand the attack, she left the United States about six months after the attacks at the age of 21, hitchhiked by herself through Afghanistan and settled in Sanaa, Yemen. She spent five years in Yemen, learning Arabic, studying Islam, and teaching firefighting. All together she spent "over a decade living and working in the Middle East". [1] [3] [2]

She also traveled in the Western hemisphere. When she was 23 years old she was kidnapped for ten days by the AUC, an anti-Marxist paramilitary group, while traveling from Panama to Colombia. The AUC was known for disemboweling and decapitating their victims in front of their families and burning villages to the ground to "send a message" to anyone thinking of cooperating with its Marxist enemies. [2] 1:46:43 Smaker survived the kidnapping "pretty unscathed", but left her shaken by "how normal these people were" (some of them teenage girls), and their ability to go from disemboweling human beings "to talking about makeup and their favorite football team". [2] 1:54:30 "It was unnerving to think that the people in the world who did the worst deeds were no different than me", [2] 1:53:10 and the experience sent her on a "trajectory" to try to understand "the other", "the evil doers" of the world, that led to the making of The UnRedacted.

She has an MFA in documentary film from Stanford University. Among the awards her short films have won include Best Short Documentary at SXSW and a Student Academy Award. [3]

Controversy over Jihad Rehab

Smaker's documentary Jihad Rehab/The Unredacted centers on four former Guantánamo detainees who were sent to a Saudi rehabilitation center for accused terrorists, and is based on 16 months of filming inside the rehab center. The film was invited to the 2022 Sundance Festival -- "one of the most prestigious showcases in the world". [1] According to The New York Times , "film critics warned that conservatives might bridle" at the sympathetic portrayals of the inmates "but reviews after the festival's screening were strong". [1] However, it was Arab and Muslim filmmakers and their white supporters, not conservatives, who denounced the film, leading Sundance to apologize for having ever accepted it. According to one Arab documentarian, Assia Boundaoui, "to see my language and the homelands of folks in my community used as backdrops for white savior tendencies is nauseating". [1]

By September 2022, The New York Times reported

Ms. Smaker's film has become near untouchable, unable to reach audiences. Prominent festivals rescinded invitations, and critics in the documentary world took to social media and pressured investors, advisers and even her friends to withdraw names from the credits. She is close to broke. [1]

Smaker laments that the attacks on her film began before the critics had had a chance to see it, and that in their eagerness to separate themselves from her, people she considered friends and who had praised the film to her personally, now refused to speak to her, and/or told falsehoods about her and the film. [2]

The Times reported her fear that "I don’t have the money or influence to fight this out", having "maxed out credit cards and, at age 42, borrowed money" from her working class parents. [1] Smaker created a GoFundMe to attempt to fund self-distribution of the film. She told her story in interviews and podcasts [4] and requested donations from the public. Her efforts were successful -- by October 26, 2022 she had raised more than $600,000 from more than 8,000 individual donors. [5] She is now working to make the film publicly available. [2]

Related Research Articles

<i>Boxing Helena</i> 1993 US mystery thriller-horror film by Jennifer Lynch

Boxing Helena is a 1993 American mystery thriller and body horror film directed by Jennifer Lynch and starring Sherilyn Fenn, Julian Sands, and Bill Paxton. Before its release, the film's production was hampered by legal battles with Madonna and Kim Basinger, who both backed out of playing Helena. The film debuted at the Sundance Film Festival in January 1993, where it was both dismissed and praised in equal measure by critics. After receiving an NC-17 rating from the MPAA, the film was given an R rating on appeal and released in the United States in September 1993. It was a critical and financial failure.

<i>Committed</i> (2000 film) 2000 film directed by Lisa Krueger

Committed is a 2000 comedy film directed and written by Lisa Krueger and stars Heather Graham, Casey Affleck, and Luke Wilson.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ondi Timoner</span> American film director

Ondi Doane Timoner is an American filmmaker and the founder and chief executive officer of Interloper Films, a full-service production company located in Pasadena, California. Timoner is a two-time recipient of the Sundance Film Festival's Grand Jury Prize for her documentaries Dig! (2004) and We Live in Public (2009). Both films have been acquired by New York's Museum of Modern Art for their permanent collection.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Debra Granik</span> American film director, screenwriter and cinematographer (born 1963)

Debra Granik is an American filmmaker. She is most known for 2004's Down to the Bone, which starred Vera Farmiga, 2010's Winter's Bone, which starred Jennifer Lawrence in her breakout performance and for which Granik was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Adapted Screenplay, and 2018's Leave No Trace, a film based on the book My Abandonment by Peter Rock.

<i>Just Another Girl on the I.R.T.</i> 1992 film by Leslie Harris

Just Another Girl on the I.R.T. is a 1992 American drama film written, produced, and directed by Leslie Harris. The film follows Chantel, a Black teenager living in the New York City projects. The film addresses a variety of contemporary social and political issues including teenage pregnancy, abortion, racism, poverty, and HIV/AIDS. Just Another Girl on the I.R.T is Harris' first and only feature film to date. The film premiered at the 1992 Toronto International Film Festival and later screened at the 1993 Sundance Film Festival, where it won the Special Jury Prize. Ariyan A. Johnson earned an Independent Spirit Award nomination for Best Actress.

<i>Redacted</i> (film) 2007 film directed by Brian De Palma

Redacted is a 2007 American war film written and directed by Brian De Palma. It is a fictional dramatization, loosely based on the 2006 Mahmudiyah killings in Mahmoudiyah, Iraq, when U.S. Army soldiers raped an Iraqi girl and murdered her along with her family. This film, which is a companion piece to an earlier film by De Palma, Casualties of War (1989), was shot in Jordan.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Liz Garbus</span> American film director and producer

Elizabeth Freya Garbus is an American documentary film director and producer. Notable documentaries Garbus has made are The Farm: Angola, USA,Ghosts of Abu Ghraib,Bobby Fischer Against the World,Love, Marilyn,What Happened, Miss Simone?, and Becoming Cousteau. She is co-founder and co-director of the New York City-based documentary film production company Story Syndicate.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Kirsten Johnson</span> American film director

Kirsten Johnson is an American documentary filmmaker and cinematographer. She is mostly known for her camera work on several well-known feature-length documentaries such as Citizenfour and The Oath. In 2016, she released Cameraperson, a film which consists of various pieces of footage from her decades of work all over the world as a documentary cinematographer. Directed by Johnson herself, Cameraperson went on to be praised for its handling of themes about documentary ethics interwoven with Johnson's personal reflection on her experiences.

<i>Catfish</i> (film) 2010 documentary film

Catfish is a 2010 film directed by Henry Joost and Ariel Schulman. It involves a young man, Nev, being filmed by his brother and friend, co-directors Ariel and Henry, as he builds a romantic relationship with a young woman on the social networking website Facebook. The film was a critical and commercial success. It led to an MTV reality TV series, Catfish: The TV Show. The film is credited with coining the term catfishing: a type of deceptive activity involving a person creating a fake social networking presence for nefarious purposes.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Nina Menkes</span> American filmmaker

Nina Menkes is an independent filmmaker. Her films include The Great Sadness of Zohara (1983), Magdalena Viraga (1986), Queen of Diamonds (1991), The Bloody Child (1996), "Massacre (Massaker)" (2005), Phantom Love (2007), Dissolution (2010), and Brainwashed: Sex-Camera-Power (2022). Dissolution (2010) was filmed in black and white and is set in Israel. Nina Menkes' sister Tinka appears as an actress in many of them. Menkes teaches at the California Institute of the Arts in Santa Clarita, California. She has donated copies of several of her works to the Academy Film Archive.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Diana El Jeiroudi</span>

Diana El Jeiroudi, is a Berlin-based, Syrian independent film director and producer. El Jeiroudi’s films as director were celebrated at many festivals, including the Venice Film Festival, IDFA, DokLeipzig, Visions du Réel, CPH:DOX… among others. Her producing credits include the Sundance 2023 film 5 Seasons of Revolution, the Cannes Film Festival 2014 selection Silvered Water, the IDFA 2013 selection The Mulberry House, among others. She was the first Syrian to be a juror in Cannes Film Festival in 2014, when she was part of the first Documentary Film Award jury in the festival. Together with her partner Orwa Nyrabia, El Jeiroudi was also the first Syrian known to be invited to become a member of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences in 2017. El Jeiroudi was also a co-founder of DOX BOX International Documentary Film Festival in Syria and DOX BOX e.V. non-profit association in Germany.

Sterlin Harjo is an American filmmaker. He has directed three feature films, a feature documentary, and the FX comedy series Reservation Dogs, all of them set in his home state of Oklahoma and concerned primarily with Native American people and content.

Amber Fares is a Lebanese Canadian filmmaker, documentarian, director and cinematographer. She co-founded SocDoc Studios. She is based in Brooklyn and Palestine.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Eliza Hittman</span> American film director

Eliza Hittman is an American screenwriter, film director, and producer from New York City. She has won multiple awards for her film Never Rarely Sometimes Always, which include the New York Film Critics Circle Award and the National Society of Film Critics Award—both for best screenplay.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Elizabeth Chai Vasarhelyi</span> American film director

Elizabeth Chai Vasarhelyi is an American documentary filmmaker. She was the director, along with her husband, Jimmy Chin, for the film Free Solo, which won the 2019 Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature. The film profiled Alex Honnold and his free solo climb of El Capitan in June 2017.

<i>Shirkers</i> 2018 documentary film by Sandi Tan

Shirkers is a 2018 British-American documentary film by Singapore-born filmmaker Sandi Tan about the making of an independent thriller featuring a teenage assassin set in Singapore. It premiered at the 2018 Sundance Film Festival in January and won the World Cinema Documentary Directing Award, making her the second Singapore-born filmmaker after Kirsten Tan to win an award at the festival. It was also nominated for the Gotham Independent Film Award for Best Documentary.

<i>On the Record</i> (film) 2020 documentary film

On the Record is a 2020 American documentary film directed by Kirby Dick and Amy Ziering. It centers on allegations of sexual abuse and harassment against hip-hop mogul Russell Simmons. Executive producer Oprah Winfrey publicly withdrew from the film shortly before it was released, citing "creative differences", severing a production deal with Apple TV+. The film premiered at Sundance on January 25, 2020, and was acquired by HBO Max, which released it digitally on May 27, 2020.

The 2022 Sundance Film Festival took place from January 20 to 30, 2022. Due to COVID-19 pandemic protocol, it was initially intended to be an in-person/virtual hybrid festival, but on January 5, 2022, it was announced that the in-person components would be scrapped in favor of a wholly virtual festival due to the SARS-CoV-2 Omicron variant. The first lineup of competition films was announced on December 9, 2021.

<i>I Didnt See You There</i> 2022 American documentary film

I Didn't See You There is a 2022 American documentary film directed by Reid Davenport, produced by Keith Wilson, and edited by Todd Chandler. It is shot entirely from Davenport's physical perspective, largely from an electric wheelchair, as he navigates downtown Oakland, California, and his hometown of Bethel, Connecticut.

The UnRedacted, first released as Jihad Rehab, is a 2022 documentary film which follows a group of former jihadists who have been released from Guantanamo Bay detention camp to the Prince Mohammed Bin Nayef Center for Advice and Care, a rehabilitation center for Islamist jihadis in Saudi Arabia. The film was conceived and directed by Meg Smaker. It premiered at the 2022 Sundance Film Festival in the U.S. Documentary Competition on 22 January 2022 and earned generally "strong" reviews, described as "humanizing" and powerful.

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Powell, Michael (September 25, 2022). "Sundance Liked Her Documentary on Terrorism, Until Muslim Critics Didn't". The New York Times . Retrieved November 7, 2022.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Harris, Sam; Smaker, Meg. "#300 - A Tale Of Cancellation A Conversation with Meg Smaker. Making Sense with Sam Harris [interview with Sam Harris". Sam Harris. Retrieved November 7, 2022.
  3. 1 2 3 "Meg Smaker Biography". IMDb. Retrieved November 7, 2022.
  4. "A Tale of Cancellation".
  5. "'Jihad Rehab' Director Battles Woke Mob (With Help From John Q. Public)". OutKick. October 26, 2022. Retrieved November 1, 2022.