Why We Fight / Roy Ackerman, (Producer); Nicholas Fraser; Hans Robert Eisenhauer; Eugene Jarecki; Susannah Shipman. Videorecording.
Material type: TextPublication details: Culver City, CA : Sony Pictures Home Entertainment, c2006.Description: 1 videodisc (approximately 99 min.) : sound, color with black and white sequences ; 4 3/4 inISBN:- 142480356
- Storyville (Television program)
- DS79.76
- Executive producers, Roy Ackerman, Nick Fraser, Hans Robert Eisenhauer ; camera, Etienne Sauret, May Ying Welsh, Brett Wiley ; music, Robert Miller ; editor, Nancy Kennedy.
Current library | Collection | Call number | Vol info | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Judith Thomas Library Audio-Visuals | Audio-Visual | HB118 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | AV369 | Available |
Browsing Judith Thomas Library shelves, Shelving location: Audio-Visuals Close shelf browser (Hides shelf browser)
Premiered January 2005 at the Sundance Film Festival. Limited release in the United States January 20, 2006.
Special features include: extra scenes; extended character featurettes; filmmaker TV appearances : The Daily Show with Jon Stewart, Charlie Rose; audience Q & A with filmmaker; filmmaker audio commentary with Colonel Lawrence Wilkerson; theatrical trailer
Special features: Anamorphic widescreen --
Extra scenes --
Extended character featurettes --
Filmmaker TV appearances: The Daily Show with Jon Stewart ; Charlie Rose --
Audience Q & A with filmmaker --
Filmmaker commentary with Colonel Lawrence Wilkerson --
Theatrical trailer --
Language: English 5.1 Dolby digital --
Subtitles: French, Spanish, Portuguese.
Executive producers, Roy Ackerman, Nick Fraser, Hans Robert Eisenhauer ; camera, Etienne Sauret, May Ying Welsh, Brett Wiley ; music, Robert Miller ; editor, Nancy Kennedy.
Interviews with Senator John McCain, Gore Vidal, John S.D. Eisenhower, Dan Rather ; field correspondents, Mary Jane Robinson, May Ying Welsh.
Explores a half-century of U.S. foreign policy from World War II to the Iraq War, revealing how, as Dwight Eisenhower had warned in his 1961 Farewell Address, political and corporate interests have become alarmingly entangled in the business of war. On a deeper level, what emerges is a portrait of a nation in transition--drifting dangerously far from her founding principles toward a more imperial and uncertain Read more...