Have you seen the
movies Cabin Fever, Hostel or Hostel II?
Well, no matter what your answer, Eli Roth is the writer and
director of each of those films. Popular Underground's own
Karma Jensen had the opportunity to speak with the horror mastermind
about the war in Iraq and the media's reaction to it.
PUM: With the
war in Iraq continuing as long as it has do you feel that there is a
decline in interest by the American public, with not only the
overall matter but more importantly the military personnel involved?
I think people are
tired of hearing the same thing. It's not that we don't care about
the war, it's that nobody, and I mean NOBODY, trusts the information
that the government's sending us. We're getting first hand stories
from the people we know who are returning and who are still stuck
over there, and none of it lines up with what we were told for years
on the news. So I think people are sick of this administration and
wish there was someone in charge who had the genuine interests of
the country at hand, and not the interests of the oil companies.
It's
disgusting.
PUM: What role
do you feel the media is playing in this?
After Vietnam there
was a real clampdown on any media allowed out to the public. I saw
this when I started traveling internationally with "Cabin Fever" and
got a very, very different picture of what was going on when I saw
uncensored news. This is another reason there are violent movies,
because people are thinking of all this stuff and we know it's being
kept from us. The government is so concerned with winning a PR war
that they don't want people to see how horrific it really is or
there'd be more of a public outcry. So because they downplay it or
report statistics so we see numbers and not images, people do not
really have a realistic idea of how horrible this is. That essay by
George McGovern in the Washington Post last week said that 4,000
Americans have died and an estimated 600,000 Iraqi people. It's
genocide. And why are they over there? For what? War should be a
last resort, but we were rushed into it.
PUM: Should the
public feel responsible to be more involved and/or more
knowledgeable of the situation? If so, how?
I think people
should speak up publicly about it, and vote these people out of
office. You get what you vote for, and if you're lazy and you don't
vote, you're going to get guys like Bush and Cheney and they're
gonna bring in people like Wolfowitz and Rumsfeld. They should be
tried for war crimes.
PUM: Do you feel
after watching Redacted that we have an even bigger
responsibility to be concerned with the men and women involved in
the war and it's environment? Those involved in the true life crime
were prosecuted, however, do you think preventative measures could
have been, should have been taken to prevent the crimes in the first
place?
I cannot comment on
that because I've never been in a war zone, so I don't know what
circumstances would lead to a situation like that. But films like
Redacted are getting made in part because people just don't
trust what they're seeing on the news. People I know, intelligent
educated people, didn't believe anything we read about the Iran boat
incident because we don't trust what we're being told. It's all
done to rile us up against "the enemy." It's really frustrating.
We have all these brave soldiers risking their lives for us, and you
feel like it's all really being done for Bush and Cheney and their
big business friends.
PUM: Do you
feel that the wounded soldiers, whether physically or mentally are
being properly cared for and/or treated?
NO. NOT AT ALL.
England; other countries, they have programs for reintegration into
society. My father is a psychoanalyst so I grew up knowing all
about mental health and what people go through to integrate into
society without having gone to war. We're not even allowed to see
the bodies of
soldiers on television on Memorial Day. Think of how sick that is.
These people are damaged mentally and physically and we have no
health care system or social system to help them get on with their
lives. None. And we're the richest country in the world and we're
free, BECAUSE of these brave soldiers. It's disgraceful.
PUM: What are
your hopes for the resolution of the war?
I hope we can get
our soldiers home in a way that allows Iraq to once again flourish
as a culture. But nobody had any plan as to how we could accomplish
this. It feels like it will never end.
PUM What would
you like to say to your fans in the military who are missing the
comforts of home, family and friends to serve?
I want people to
know that I do support our troops, and I believe very strongly in
our military, and they have my deepest gratitude. Thank God for our
military, the strongest army on the planet. But I feel like our
military, like the country, like the economy, has been abused by
power hungry people who just feed their own personal interests, and
I feel for them. I want them all home safe, and I'm happy if my
films can provide a mental break and a little entertainment while
they're over there. I think the value of horror films is that it
allows people to feel terror and fear in a controlled way that
allows them to let it out, and they don't feel like a coward for
having done it. The soldiers have to bury all these feelings of
fear, and the movies are a healthy way to scream it out. These
people are brave in ways I will never know, and I admire anyone who
has the guts to get over there and defend our country. They should
also know that many people here feel the way I do, that they're
thinking of everyone over there and we want them home.
PUM: You have
traveled extensively, what do you feel are the best traits of the
United States and it's people?
Our sense of
independence. For example, in some countries their governments used
to support their movies and now no longer do, and their film
industries have dried up. They all say, "The government won't
support us anymore, it's a shame," and my reaction is, "None of us
use the government to make our movies over here." Americans depend
on themselves, and most other countries they get stuck at a certain
economic level because they depend on their governments. We show
them how it's done because they don't inherently think that way.
Our freedom and independence is an amazing quality that the rest of
the world greatly admires.
PUM: Any
additional comments?
I always have more
to say, but for now I'll just say that we're all thinking of you
guys over there, and just because we are against the war, we are not
against you. We feel for you and just hate to see your bravery
wasted defending Dick Cheney's oil. We wish we could hear your
stories personally but they censor the news from us. It's something
we should all work to change immediately, but people can only do it
with their votes.
By: By: Karma Jensen - Contributing Writer
Photos: Eli Roth's
Myspace / Scott Weiner
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