Asides

Something to watch tonight: Monday 15 July

By July 15, 2024No Comments

Generation Kill (Burns/Simon, 2008)

Editor’s note

No new release sum­mary this week as the ongo­ing dis­rup­tion caused by my get­ting an actu­al job con­tin­ues. I only saw one film in cinemas last week – you can hear me talk about with Emile Donovan on RNZ Nights here – out of four new ones. This week is going to be equally chal­len­ging as I’ve also com­mit­ted to pre­view­ing five films in this year’s New Zealand International Film Festival for a column next Monday!

Meanwhile, if you’d like to know more about who I’m work­ing for and what we do, here’s an inter­view with co-founder Joel Baxendale on RNZ’s Culture 101 show from Sunday. This inter­view is a great intro­duc­tion to a plat­form that has so much pos­sib­il­ity for cre­at­ors, museums, gal­ler­ies, fest­ivals, attrac­tions, etc. It’s tech­no­logy that makes cre­at­ing exper­i­ences and activ­at­ing audi­ences access­ible to any­one. (Yes, one of my respons­ib­il­it­ies is busi­ness devel­op­ment, why do you ask?)

Early this morn­ing news came through of the passing (at his own hand) of journ­al­ist and screen­writer Evan Wright. He was 59. He wrote for Rolling Stone for a while and here is their obit­u­ary.

I want to take the oppor­tun­ity to recom­mend the TV pro­ject he was most closely asso­ci­ated with, Generation Kill from 2008.

It was based on his non-fiction book of the same name, in turn based on his dis­patches for Rolling Stone as he was an embed­ded report­er with a Marine Corps bat­talion dugout the 2003 inva­sion of Iraq.

The adapt­a­tion was led by David Simon with Ed Burns and it was the follow-up to the acclaimed Baltimore drug and detect­ive show, The Wire.

In sev­en epis­odes of Generation Kill, we fol­low a large cast of char­ac­ters – 28 core cast! – as they pre­pare for Operation Iraqi Freedom, make their per­il­ous way across coun­try and then dis­cov­er that main­tain­ing their grip on Baghdad will be much more dif­fi­cult than they had been eld to believe.

A theme of both shows is the dam­aging impact on mas­culin­ity of work­ing in and around viol­ence while at the same time hav­ing no per­son­al agency. The stor­ies of the foot­sol­diers on both sides in The Wire are not a mil­lion miles away from the ali­en­a­tion exper­i­enced by the enlis­ted men on the ground in Iraq. Pawns being moved around a chess­board by lead­ers who are well insu­lated from the trauma inflic­ted on the front lines.

And, as Wright’s untimely passing sug­gests, that trauma casts a long shadow.


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Where to watch Generation Kill

The con­tent below was ori­gin­ally paywalled.

Aotearoa: Streaming on Neon

Australia: Streaming on Binge

Canada: Digital purchase

Ireland and UK: Streaming on Sky

USA: Streaming on Max