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National Features >
Village Voice
How Andrew Cuomo gave birth to the subprime-mortgage crisis that
threatens to bring down Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.
By Wayne Barrett
Houston Press
Inside the world of "stash houses," where smugglers use torture to extort illegal immigrants.
By Chris Vogel
Phoenix New Times
Here's the John McCain some Arizonans know--and loathe.
By Amy Silverman
Taxi Driver
Published on February 06, 2008
Staying on the current-events beat after his 2005 Enron: The Smartest Guys in the Room, filmmaker Alex Gibney aims to make ripped-from-the-headlines j'accusations that are also durable documents with Taxi to the Dark Side. The title refers to the cab driven by an Afghan man named Dilawar. Picked up as a suspect in a rocket attack in 2002, he was placed in the custody of U.S. soldiers at the Bagram "Collection Point." Within five days, he was dead from the injuries he sustained from beatings to the legs, complicated by the trauma of being left spreadeagled and handcuffed to the ceiling of his cell. Dilawar's story is used as the entryway into a larger discussion of systems, as his prison cell opens onto a broad study of American interrogation tactics as theyve developed in the years following 9/11. Gibney's experts answer the central question "Does torture ever work?" with something close to a pat "no." But maybe Taxi has to cut messy issues clean, so they'll fit as building blocks in its splendid polemic architecture? When you step back, it is something to admire: Without cheapening the suffering of American or Afghan, the film retrieves the torture issue from the realm of the abstract and gives the plain facts of this world right now.
Feb. 8-14, 2008