Review: Collateral damage of drones has consequences in the documentary âNational Birdâ
For her first feature documentary, âNational Bird,â director Sonia Kennebeck puts a face on the victims of drone warfare who are both in the United States and abroad. Part of the technologyâs appeal is the distance â both physical and emotional â between the U.S. armed forces and their targets, but the film argues that military personnel are affected, even if they are never in the same country as the people considered collateral damage.
At the heart of âNational Birdâ are three whistle-blowers. Heather is a former drone imagery analyst who struggles with PTSD and takes her story to the Guardian. Daniel is a former government contractor and signals intelligence analyst who worries about what he can and cannot share with everyone in his life. Lisa was a technical sergeant whose work helped in missions that affected more than 120,000 lives.
For the record:
4:39 p.m. Nov. 30, 2024An earlier version of this review stated that âNational Birdâ is director Sonia Kennebeckâs second feature. It is her first.
All three live with guilt and want to expose the wrongs theyâve witnessed and participated in. The documentary also follows Lisa to Afghanistan, where she talks with the survivors of a 2010 American airstrike that killed 23 people, including children.
Executive produced by genre masters Errol Morris and Wim Wenders, âNational Birdâ is powerful cinematic journalism. From its intimate interviews to its thematically appropriate â and visually striking â aerial shots, it exposes a form of warfare that may keep American troops physically safe in the present but cause danger here and internationally for the future.
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âNational Birdâ
Not rated
Running time: 1 hour, 32 minutes
Playing: Laemmle Monica Film Center, Santa Monica
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