"In 2002, a young cab driver picked up a few passengers near his home in Afghanistan... He never returned."
An in-depth look at the torture practices of the United States in Afghanistan, Iraq and Guantanamo Bay, focusing on an innocent taxi driver in Afghanistan who was t... read more
Alex Gibney,
Alberto Mora,
John Yoo,
John Scott Horton,
Alfred McCoy
... see more
From the producer of Enron: The Smartest Guys in the Room and Who Killed the Electric Car? comes a documentary that takes a critical look at the Bush administration's policy on torture by investigatin... read more
DVD Release Date: September 30, 2008
Stats: 820 reviews
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Flixster Reviews (820)
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March 17, 2010
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April 27, 2009
Persuasive film about military conduct and the ideologies that led to the torturing and eventual death of one man in particular, and how his story is a microcosm for what led to the Abu Ghraib scandal. Powerful material, to be sure, and the one man's tragic tale is affecting, bu... read more
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March 14, 2009
Possibly one of the best documentaries that I've seen in a long while. well researched and not biased in anyway....and will leave you feeling a little pissed at what the Bush administration allowed to happen.
More to follow soon.... -
January 28, 2009
This is an excellent documentary built on hard facts. It shows the outrageous lengths that the US will go to and how damaging and tragic their methods can be. It's also a saddening depiction of how when the shit finally hits the fan it lands on those at the bottom of the ladder. ... read more
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December 22, 2008
Despite its name and apparent focus, this movie uses the single atrocity of an Afghani taxi driver unjustly jailed, tortured and killed as a springboard into the entire military incarceration system during in the last 10 years.
Limited yet lucid (though occasionally one-sided) i... read more -
September 29, 2008
This is a film that needs to be seen by as broad an audience as possible. The subject matter will reverberate through history. America has developed a culture of guilty-as-charged, hysterical attacks on imagined enemies.
The Bush administration continue to make themselves se... read more -
September 26, 2008
Thoughtfully provocative look at American attitudes to torture after 9/11. Rightly graphic in parts, it chases blame to the highest levels but as with Gibney's film about Enron, shows the decision makers wriggle free. Informative if a little depressing.
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September 21, 2008
deeply researched and highly disturbing look at how the american government subverted the constitution and our highest principles as well as the geneva convention and international law by condoning torture of detainees at bagram, abu ghraib and gitmo. a few front line soldiers w... read more
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June 16, 2008
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[COLOR=DarkRed][FONT=Arial]Just like he did in 2005's excellent documentary [I]Enron: The Smartest Guys in the Room[/I], filmmaker Alex Gibney is able to distill a complex topic into a cohe... read more -
May 14, 2010
"Taxi to the Dark Side" is a highly insightful documentary that starts with the relatively simple incident of an Afghan taxi driver dying in custody at Bagram Army Base on December 5, 2002. While by now we may think we know most of what we can about torture and detainee abuses i... read more
Critic Reviews
Certain to inspire both outrage and sorrow, Alex Gibney's harrowing documentary -- about the torture and abuse of suspected terrorists in U.S. military prisons -- ranks among recent cinema's more exco... Full Review
Taxi to the Dark Side is a stunning indictment of torture as policy, a brilliant documentary whose arguments are so well-supported and reasonably made that you can't ignore them. Full Review
Along with No End in Sight, this movie is one of the essential documentaries of the ongoing war. Full Review
Taxi to the Dark Side joins a growing list of outspoken documentaries that question the rationale and conduct of America's presence in Iraq and Afghanistan, and our willingness to destroy freedom in o... Full Review
The film certainly makes its case, tracing a chain of abuse from Bagram to the notorious Iraqi prison, Abu Ghraib, to the cells of Guantanamo. Full Review
Taxi to the Dark Side may not be your idea of a fun, relaxing night at the movies, but it is artful moviemaking and vital viewing for anyone interested in the issues. Full Review
So disturbing, on so many levels, that it's hard to know where to begin. Full Review
One of the most powerful, carefully researched investigations of the moral-legal side effects of current American military campaigns in Afghanistan and Iraq. Full Review
As our society searches its conscience for the correct balance between preserving American lives and upholding American values, Gibney offers a crucial perspective to counterbalance the influence of e... Full Review
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