A Film that Honors the Heroism Of Daniel Ellsberg and Connects to the Current Wars…

I found the following story about the film that chronicles the life and times of Daniel Ellsberg this morning and was very moved by its ideas.  I have known that Mr. Ellsberg is one of the major players in bringing down the dreadful presidency of Richard Nixon and that his courageous exposure of the Pentagon Papers was a key development in getting us out of Vietnam.  I did not know as much about his on-going activism and the film is apparently enabling its audience, which is cutting across many dividing lines, to see parallels between the war he protested against in the ’60’s and the current wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.  Subterfuge and lies are at the root of all three wars and this is apparently made abundantly clear in this film, which has been nominated for an Academy Award for best documentary.  The article reveals that we shall all have numerous opportunities to see the film in theaters and on television, so it is my hope that at least some who view it will respond like the college students who wanted to know what they could do when the film ended to change the world.  Here’s the story about the film as it appeared this week on www.commondreams.org:

ELLSBERG FILM ATTRACTS WIDE AUDIENCE

by Tamara Strauss

On first impression, Judith Ehrlich and Rick Goldsmith’s “The Most Dangerous Man in America: Daniel Ellsberg and the Pentagon Papers” is the kind of documentary that no Sarah Palin-loving red stater would be caught dead seeing.

[Daniel Ellsberg is the subject of the Oscar-nominated film. (Photo: Mill Valley Film Festival) ]Daniel Ellsberg is the subject of the Oscar-nominated film. (Photo: Mill Valley Film Festival)

It is made by Berkeley lefties. It is a tribute to a man who leaked 7,000 pages of top-secret Vietnam War documents, revealing that our highest public officials were liars and essentially murderers. Its subtext is that we are awash in government deception again.

But the documentary – which follows Ellsberg’s path from Harvard wunderkind to Marine commander to White House and Defense Department consultant to political pariah – has been embraced by old and young, dove and hawk, earnest leftist and ardent right-winger as an inspiring story of patriotism and moral courage. Even stranger, the film has widely been described as entertaining.

Oscar nomination

Ehrlich and Goldsmith, who are preparing for the film’s opening in their hometown of Berkeley on Feb. 19, are both thrilled and exhausted by its initial success. “The Most Dangerous Man” has been nominated for an Academy Award for best feature documentary, and has received the Special Jury Award at the International Documentary Film Festival Amsterdam and Audience Awards at the Mill Valley and Palm Springs International Film Festivals. It will be seen around the globe this year, at festivals, in theaters and on TV.

Yet the filmmakers say they feel especially rewarded by positive reactions from young Americans. “They’re very, very savvy, and immediately get the parallels to today,” said Goldsmith. “They get as much as older audiences, maybe more so, that this isn’t a film about the past. This is a film about the present.”

Ehrlich, who recently showed the film to 1,000 students from the Palm Springs, Fla., area, said, “One hundred hands went up after the screening. They said, ‘How can I be a better citizen?’ ‘How can I change this country?’ ”

The wars in Afghanistan and Iraq are not directly addressed in the film, but Ehrlich and Goldstein say the parallels to Vietnam were the main reason they both jumped into the project. They are also tremendous fans of Ellsberg, becoming charged with emotion when they talk about the personal risks he took 40 years ago and his work since to support whistle-blowers and anti-war activists.

“What has struck me about his character is that he doesn’t give himself a break for not doing more,” said Goldsmith, noting that Ellsberg has been arrested 79 times for acts of civil disobedience. “I think he’s so personally engaged in trying to do all he can to stop injustices and wars that he’ll never rest.”

Ehrlich and Goldsmith were among a handful of award-winning documentary filmmakers who wanted to make a movie based on Ellsberg’s 2002 memoir “Secrets: A Memoir of Vietnam and the Pentagon Papers.” Errol Morris was first in line, but when he opted out the two started courting Ellsberg.

“Dan had been an adviser on my film about World War II conscientious objectors and on Rick’s film about (journalist George) Seldes,” said Ehrlich. “He knew our work, so he decided we would give him a fair shake.”

Editorial control

Among the inevitable criticisms of Ehrlich and Goldsmith’s film is that Ellsberg is the main subject, star and narrator. In other words, it’s as if Ellsberg hired the two to make the movie. But the filmmakers are quick to defend their choices and to point out that although Ellsberg was allowed to have input, they wrote the script, included 20 other people in the film and exercised full editorial control.

“For the story, we had to have someone who was on the inside, someone who was in the halls of power,” said Goldsmith. “Dan was next to McNamara. He was next to Johnson. He was attacked by Nixon. He was in the middle, so I don’t think it’s inappropriate to have him tell a lot of the story.”

Ehrlich also feels that if Ellsberg were sidelined, the movie would not tell a universal story of personal transformation – about “an individual who had this tremendous change of heart and found his conscience and did something that went against everything he was trained to do.” Plus, she said, “Dan is an amazing narrator – good as any actor I have ever worked with, if not better.”

The Most Dangerous Man in America: Daniel Ellsberg and the Pentagon Papers: Co-produced and co-directed by Judith Ehrlich and Rick Goldsmith. Opens Feb. 19 in San Francisco and Berkeley.

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