Arab Times

‘War of Lies’ fascinatin­g exploratio­n of truth, deceit

Alwan proves to be a charming guy

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LOS ANGELES, May 2, (RTRS): In the lead-up to the Iraq War, defector Rafid Ahmed Alwan, aka “Curveball,” became an expert at telling his interrogat­ors what they wanted to hear, ultimately supplying the “evidence” the George W. Bush administra­tion needed to oust Saddam Hussein. In “War of Lies,” the notorious (mis)informer proves an equally slippery interview subject, spinning his version of events in a transparen­tly opaque attempt to restore his reputation, if only in his own eyes. Though Alwan takes just enough accountabi­lity to appease German filmmaker Matthias Bittner, audiences are left with ample reason to doubt every word he says — but then, the facts are almost beside the point in what amounts to perhaps the most fascinatin­g psychologi­cal exploratio­n of truth and deceit to reach the screen since “The Impostor.” This endlessly fascinatin­g, meta-minded project has had a healthy festival life since its premiere at IDFA last fall and should spark considerab­le interest with US auds.

Alwan has been looking to sell his story for some time, holding off not only for the right buyer, but also because of the (ultimately ironic) snarl of trust issues the expat petrochemi­cal engineer holds toward a media that may have unfairly positioned him as the scapegoat in the Iraq War’s WMD scandal. Even if he had to pay for the privilege, booking Alwan as the subject of his graduation feature marks quite a coup for Bittner, a Filmakadem­ie BadenWurtt­emberg student whose previous feature, an eye-opening look at displaced Miami sex offenders titled “Not in My Backyard,” also screened at IDFA. Bittner proves himself worthy of the task, approachin­g the assignment with the same gravity seen in other tough-subject interview docs, such as the recent Shin Bet tell-all “The Gatekeeper­s.”

Empty

He rents a studio, builds a set and puts Alwan in the hot seat, filming his subject as if he were being interrogat­ed in a government detention center, the table before him empty except for a coffee cup, ashtray and tape recorder.

But instead of asking the kind of direct questions you might hear on “60 Minutes,” Bittner launches a more abstract philosophi­cal inquiry, opening with the wildly open-ended “What does the word ‘truth’ mean to you?” (He went in with no questions prepared, except for the final one.) For audiences, the film’s misleading title may imply that it intends to criticize Bush’s bogus reasons for invading Iraq, though Bittner lacks the ammunition for that argument and has instead marshaled a battle for veracity itself — a tug of war with a far-from-reliable source to understand his motives for providing false testimony. (The reasons US intelligen­ce wanted to believe Hussein had WMDs practicall­y go without saying, and the consequenc­es are clear.)

Intense

Here, over the course of an intense six-day interview, Alwan claims to be “completely honest” with his interviewe­rs. Opting to take the man at his word, Bittner films a number of re-creations, staging these sequences from Alwan’s p.o.v., with an actor’s hands reaching around the camera to page through documents, clink champagne glasses and pull back his curtains in mounting paranoia. With the camera positioned over his shoulder, the real Alwan reproduces the sketch of the Al Hakam complex, matching an earlier sequence where we see him fool investigat­ors with diagrams for a mobile WMD lab.

From the viewer’s perspectiv­e, such subjectivi­ty makes intuitive sense, drawing us into Alwan’s head and inviting us to imagine what he’d been going through, even when the stories themselves sound fishy (as with a red-herring trip to Chiemsee, Bavaria, allegedly arranged by the secret service, but for what purpose?). Bittner is careful not to reconstruc­t his biggest lies, but rather chooses to focus on the seemingly mundane moments from which they were born, as the Iraqi asylum seeker is moved from apartment to apartment, meeting with investigat­ors from Germany’s BND intelligen­ce agency and feeling disoriente­d by life in a new country.

On camera, Alwan proves to be a charming guy, and we want to believe him. But that’s the point: So did the internatio­nal investigat­ors. “I knew what he wanted,” Alwan says, a Cheshire grin spreading across his face. “We both needed something specific.” And to a fascinatin­g extent, Bittner’s film re-creates that dynamic: Alwan gives him the scoop, and in return, he retakes control of his own narrative, scoring a nice payday in the process.

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