today
9 a.m. T-ball Registration Boys and Girls Club Teen Center
read >9 a.m. Historic Archaeology Lab Opportunity HSU Behavior and Social Sciences Building
read >noon Joe Garceau Unplugged Has Beans
read >noon Fixed Income Investments Edward Jones
read >4 p.m. EPIC Brews and Views Humboldt Brews
read >6 p.m. Sci-fi Movie Night Arcata Theater Lounge
read >6 p.m. Wiyot Language Class in Arcata Arcata High School
read >6 p.m. Latino Film Festival Minor Theater
read >7 p.m. Dharma Dojo Blondies Food And Drink
read >7 p.m. Green Party of Humboldt County 7th Generation Fund
read >7 p.m. North Coast Water Garden Club Wharfinger Building
read >8 p.m. Karaoke w/ Chris Clay Boiler Room
read >9 p.m. Reggae & Dancehall Jambalaya
read >9 p.m. '80s Night w/ DJ Leonard Blue Lake Casino
read >9 p.m. Seth and May Six Rivers Brewery
read >9 p.m. Whomp Whomp Wednesdays Nocturnum
read >10 p.m. Weirdo Wednesdays Alibi Lounge and Restaurant
read >previous columns
April 10, 2008
Massive Conspiracy Against All Life
CD by Leviathan. Moribund Records. Leviathan, aka Wrest, is a ...
read >April 3, 2008
Rip it Off
CD by Times New Viking. Matador. The lo-fi rebellion has ...
read >March 27, 2008
The Real Dirt on Farmer John
DVD, directed by Taggart Siegel Good Times Video John Peterson ...
read >Photos
Terror's Advocate
By Japhet Weeks
DVD, directed by Barbara Schroeder.
Magnolia Home Entertainment
Terror's Advocate opens with a bucolic scene of the Cambodian countryside, followed by patient shots of a pastel-colored temple amidst the trees and carefree monks strolling barefoot down a dirt path.
Cue the soft, tired voice of Pol Pot, the notorious leader of the Khmer Rouge, responsible for the death of some 1.5 million Cambodians. He is recalling his long-time friend, and the subject of the film, French lawyer Jacques Vergès. Vergès, Pol Pot says, once described him as someone "polite, discreet and smiling." It doesn't take us long to realize that Vergès was never one to judge a book by its cover — or a dictator by his killing fields, for that matter.
And so it is that we are thrown headlong into an Alice in Wonderland-like rabbit hole that is the irreverent, mysterious, and always-quirky life of Vergès, famous for having defended clients others refused to represent: Nazi war criminals, Palestinian airline hijackers, Algerian freedom fighters. Barbet Schroeder's film — which spans half a century, and bounces between an archipelago of different characters, all related in some way to Verges and his wanderings, physical, intellectual and amorous — is at times hard to follow, especially if you've never seen The Battle of Algiers, or can't recall pre-9/11 acts of global terrorism with encyclopedic clarity.
Still, even though the film doesn't try very hard situate the neophyte viewer within a historical context, it functions on a higher level as a kind of ethical yoga, forcing the viewer into often uncomfortable moral positions. In Algeria and in Palestine, we are asked to reexamine the difference between terrorism and liberation struggles, between cold-blooded murderers and freedom fighters. The film provides no easy answers, and Vergès, to the director's credit, comes across neither as a monster nor a saint.
Most of the time he just exudes arrogance. A fat cigar often pinched between his fingers, he talks into the camera from behind his solid-wood desk in a dark Old World-style office. Though he has defended revolutionaries, he seems more than content with the privileges of having ended up in the establishment.
The film's greatest strength — its ability to talk about and around Vergès without judging his actions — is also its major flaw. The story's lack of a thesis causes it to fray at the edges. The only real structure the film has is that it's loosely chronological. It begins where Vergès' career did, at a green 30 years of age defending anti-French Algerian guerrilla Djamila Bouhired, who he later married.
Along its meandering path, it dives into side stories, like trying to figure out where Vergès disappeared to in the 1970s, and whether or not he was criminally involved with a former client, the terrorist Carlos the Jackal. Vergès also defended Carlos' girlfriend Magdalena Kopps, who he was involved with sexually after she was released from prison. He may have even corroborated in an earlier plan to spring Kopps from jail, but we'll never know. Vergès' lips are sealed, capped with a sly little smile.
What is most fascinating about Vergès' life is that this son of a French diplomat and a Vietnamese mother used his clients as a way of putting France on trial, or so the film asserts. It was only inside the halls of justice that Vergès, a David-like character, could take on the French colonialist Goliath. Ultimately, it was his intimate knowledge of what it meant to be an outsider in French society that was both his greatest weapon and his Achilles heel.


















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