The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Looking for answers

Hulu asks: ‘Is it time to examine how 911 happened?’

- BY MARK KENNEDY

Not too long ago, Peter Sarsgaard felt he had to have a difficult conversati­on with his oldest daughter about 9-11.

He and Ramona, then nine, were in a car on the anniversar­y of the terror attacks and the twin light beams above ground zero were switched on. The girl declared them “pretty.’’ That’s when her dad realized he needed to explain what they were, right then and there. She’s not alone.

“There is a whole generation of people that are in their late teens — that are 20 even, if they were three at the time — who I think need to start learning about this in some way,’’ he said.

This month, Sarsgaard is doing that, teaching on a massive scale as one of the stars of “The Looming Tower,’’ Hulu’s powerful look at the events that led up to the al-Qaida-led 2001 attacks, a series that is as much a thriller as a geo-political education.

The 10-episode miniseries, adapted from Lawrence Wright’s Pulitzer Prize-winning book of the same title, sent film crews to eight countries, including Morocco and South Africa. It signals Hulu’s deepening effort to offer complex, interestin­g offerings following its success with “The Handmaid’s Tale.’’

“The Looming Tower’’ starts in 1988 and charts key figures in the CIA and FBI as they chase down clues — and often jostle each other — to uncover Osama bin Laden’s plot and stop it. The series is brutal about the missed opportunit­ies and rivalries between the agencies and doesn’t flinch at showing violence to innocents, both at home and abroad.

“I wonder if because 17 years have past almost, whether we’re ready for it now,’’ said Jeff Daniels, who stars as hard-charging FBI agent John O’Neill. “Closer to the actual attack of 9-11, no one wanted to hear if there was someone to blame. We knew who to blame — it was bin Laden and al-Qaida.’’

Sarsgaard, who plays a reptilian CIA anti-terrorism chief, knows all too well how dangerous wading into the subject of 9-11 blame can be. His wife, Maggie Gyllenhaal, created a firestorm in 2005 when she suggested that U.S. foreign policy might have had some role in the attacks.

“The backlash was so massive — it was on CNN, it was on everywhere — we had to leave the country,’’ said Sarsgaard. “Presumably enough time has passed now that we can start thinking about what went wrong, right?’’

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