Skip over navigation

Battle For Haditha

When politicians talk about the battle for hearts and minds in a conflict situation, they are usually talking about winning over the support of the local citizens caught in the war zone, though it could also apply to their own constituents, whose tacit approval allows the fighting to continue.

In The Vietnam War, the phrase was a favourite of Lyndon Johnson, who believed that by supplying the Vietnamese with electricity and hope for a better future, the US could undermine support for the Communists.

In the end, though, it was the hearts and minds of the American people that insisted the war must end, a popular groundswell that was undoubtedly influenced by the graphic images of violence and suffering that became a regular feature on the nightly news.

The US military (and our own) learned its lesson, and we get far less of that kind of coverage from Afghanistan or Iraq - which is why it's fallen to filmmakers to show us what these conflicts really look like on the ground.

Like Brian De Palma's Redacted (due for release in March), Nick Broomfield's Battle for Haditha is based on a documented war atrocity you could easily have missed.

On November 19, 2005, 24 Iraqi civilians were massacred by the Marines' Kilo Company, apparently in retribution for a roadside bombing that had claimed the life of a comrade.

Broomfield made his name in first person documentaries, but has recently shifted towards cinema veritée style dramatic reconstructions, as in his last feature, Ghosts.

In this case his strategy resembles the one Paul Greengrass adopted for Bloody Sunday and United 93. It involves documenting the run up to the violence from three different perspectives: Corporal Ramirez (Elliot Ruiz), a sympathetic Marine who is showing the strain of his prolonged tour of duty; a typical Haditha family preparing for a large gathering to celebrate a wedding; and two Sunni insurgents, neither of whom is a religious extremist, but who agree to plant a roadside bomb (IED) for personal profit, self-protection, and because they want the Occupiers out of their country.

Broomfield isn't as gifted a filmmaker as Greengrass (let alone Gillo Pontecorvo, whose classic The Battle Of Algiers set the template for this kind of movie), and Haditha takes a while to exert its grip. Even so, the film affords a fascinating glimpse of what Iraq must look and feel like - Jordan standing in for its near neighbour - and supplies credible insights into the psychology of those who are stuck there.

His smartest choice was to cast non-professional actors. The Marines are played by Iraq veterans, for example. Their behaviour and protocol rings very true. Unlike De Palma, Broomfield doesn't demonise any of his characters - all of whom are to some extent at the mercy of larger forces. This only makes the subsequent turn of events even more harrowing and depressing.

Broomfield obviously cares passionately about this movie - apparently he bought it back from the original UK distributors out of his own pocket to organize the release more to his liking and get the film out there as soon as possible. (At present it is still waiting for a US distribution deal.) It deserves to be widely seen and isn't easily forgotten.

Tom Charity
tom.charity@lovefilm.com

View Details

More information about Battle For Haditha »

Members' Reviews

Reviews Voted Most Helpful

Rated - 1 starShocking reality of what the Americans are doing!!!

poz81 from Cheshire, England [Highly rated reviewer] , 17/03/2008

This film is bad news for the Americans, shows truely how dumb there army is!!!

Watch the film and see what you think!!

  61 out of 69 people found this review helpful

Read all reviews

Rated - 0 starsbad taste

A customer from Bournemouth , 17/04/2008

Well i have to admit i switched this film off after a while, i just didnt like the story line it was too much to sit and watch. Too much killing of innocent people because of american soliders loosing the plot. this film sickened me. I love shoot em`ups but this one came in bad taste. 0/10

  32 out of 36 people found this review helpful

Read all reviews

Rated - 4 starsEven Handed Account

A customer from Worcester , 21/03/2008

Nick Broomfield provides the antidote to Michael Moore's one sided rants in this gripping and moving account of the events at Haditha.

There is no getting round the fact that it happened, the film makes no judgements or excuses, just shows you a fair account.

The real villains of the piece are shown to be the insurgents, and the real victims the ordinary Iraqis trying to live their lives.

  24 out of 25 people found this review helpful

Read all reviews

Rated - 4 starsNo-one can judge.

pEst31 from London [Highly rated reviewer] , 14/05/2008

A very good exercise in showing the reasons that led to the actions of the people on all sides of this war. It shows you that you can't really judge anyone. These people (on both sides) are being pushed to limits that YOU, seating on your comfortable sofa in Great Britain, can't even begin to imagine, let alone say that you wouldn't commit similar atrocities if found in the same situation. If you, as a constantly terrified marine saw pieces of your friend scattered after a road side explosion that near killed you too, or as an Iraqi saw your husband and son just killed for absolutely no reason, or your children starving after your life job was taken away and given to an American corporation, with the added humiliation of having to let American soldiers into your house to turn it upside down looking for insurgents... who knows what you'd end up doing...

In the end, despite their crimes, all these people (BOTH insurgents and US soldiers) are victims! They all committed monstrosities they would never have committed if they hadn't been put in such a terrible extreme situation by the REAL criminals who, for one, are the ONLY ones gaining from the situation, and shamefully (and this makes me bitterly angry) will go to the grave without ever facing a court of law for their crimes of war...

Away from this and more into the actual movie, the beginning is not very good... it just shows US soldiers hanging out, improvising rubbish conversations like I guess they'd have in real life, the dialogues are quite poor. Of course it all gets very powerful after the action kicks in.

Elliot Ruiz has a powerful performance, conveys the authority of a leader with impressive realism and knowledgeability. The fact that all soldiers are actual veterans of Iraq and all Iraqis are actual exiled Iraqis was very important to add to the realism. Whenever they cry, it's quite harrowing because many times they're actually crying for their past experiences and for their dead loved ones...

A must see, will hopefully make you realise more clearly that it's not us 'liberators' (good) versus them insurgents (evil), but it's actually THEM people in power (evil) versus ALL of us (good). And 'ALL of us' should get together and put these criminals in jail.

  14 out of 15 people found this review helpful

Read all reviews

Most Recent Reviews

Rated - 3 starsbattle for haditha

witty from Belper , 16/05/2008

Good film, seems pretty true to life.

  2 out of 2 people found this review helpful

Read all highest rated reviews

Rated - 3 starsHum drum

A customer from OXON , 27/01/2009

Usual fare really. Americans incenced by the killing of one of their own go on a killing spree. Tries to take a documentary style with the US marines but then as a normal film with the Iraqis. Tells it as it is, but no-one is acting the part of the viewer and asking 'why?' Disappointing

  1 out of 1 person found this review helpful

Read all highest rated reviews