Daily Mirror

RETROGRADE

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Cert 15 ★★★★★ In cinemas now

Six years ago, Matthew Heineman was Oscar nominated for Cartel Land, a fascinatin­g documentar­y that showed both sides of America’s drug war.

And he could go even further with this astonishin­g film, which provides candid access to the final days of America’s 20-year war in Afghanista­n.

Retrograde is bookended with artfully composed footage shot from both sides of the barricade at Kabul Airport. In the opening, Heineman and his hi-definition camera film terrified Afghans desperate to leave the country as the Taliban close in. American soldiers fire haphazardl­y into the air in a desperate attempt to disperse the crowds.

After the panic subsides, Heineman focuses on the defeated faces of those contemplat­ing torture and execution by the new regime. These are portraits we are more used to seeing in art galleries than in gritty documentar­ies.

The film then jumps eight months back in time to January 2021 to show the growing threat of US withdrawal from the point of view of the last US Army Special Forces supporting Lieutenant General Sami Sadat’s Afghan army.

Heineman’s mind-boggling access allows him entry to high-level meetings and he even eavesdrops on Sadat’s officers as they cast doubt on his upbeat briefings.

His previous film was A Private War, a biopic of war correspond­ent Marie Colvin starring Rosamund Pike, and that drama seems to have inspired him.

Heineman has the ear of a great reporter and the eye of a truly great photojourn­alist.

 ?? ?? ABANDONED Cameras follow Sadat’s army in Afghanista­n
ABANDONED Cameras follow Sadat’s army in Afghanista­n

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