I watched
Taxi to the Darkside while at my aunt's house for easter. The conclusion of this documentary left me heated towards those soldiers who inflicted such pain upon mostly innocent people. After watching the film I had to drive to back to school and I am thankful for those four hours because it gave me time to think on the matter.
At first I was angry as I had mentioned earlier but then I began to question every aspect of the film. It was disturbing. These questions ran through my head over and over again: How could soldiers treat prisoners the way they did? Why did they do it? Why didn't they refuse to do what was clearly inhumane? I could not stop. But then, I pondered...
What if I was put into their position? Would I commit the same horrific crimes they had if I had been in their shoes?
The conclusion that I came to over that four hour drive changed my perspective on the entire film. It is very easy for people to judge the actions of the soldiers as they are comfortably watching
Taxi to the Darkside from their house safe and sound from any possible danger. But think about what the soldiers have to go through, day after day. They risk their lives to bring justice to those who have wronged the United States. They must follow a specific chain of command. The military police in the film must follow their leaders orders who must then take orders from the man in charge of him who must then take orders from the man over him and so on and so forth....Keep in mind that you are trained from the very beginning of your enrollment that you are to respect your leaders, no matter the circumstance. They are given a task and expected to complete it. That is the end of the matter.

With all those thoughts in mind, coming up with the answers to the many questions that I asked myself became almost impossible to answer because I was afraid of the answers. I am not saying in any way that I excuse the actions of the soldiers in the film but I am saying that after thinking more and more about it I have found some serious perspective on the issue. The situation that they were put into was an extremely tough one and I could not imagine the emotional toll that it took on them, nonetheless what the prisoners had to experience.
It was an emotional documentary that I believe was meant to fill the viewers with animosity toward the government. But for me, it did much more that that; it opened my eyes to the reality of war and made me question the purpose of the film from the beginning. Do you think Alex Gibney, the director of the documentary, would have done anything different than the soldiers he was exploiting if he were put in their situation?