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Indybay Feature

Australian Film Presents Unique View from Iraq

by Ruth Hyland
On the third anniversary of the invasion of Iraq this week, this astonishing Australian/Iraqi documentary, In The Shadow Of The Palms, the latest work by acclaimed independent Australian documentary filmmaker, Wayne Coles-Janess, won the Golden Reel for Best Documentary at its US premiere at the Tiburon Film Festival.
This is the only documentary filmed on the streets of Baghdad before, during and immediately after ‘liberation’ and it tells a fascinating tale of the lives of ordinary Iraqis. A view rarely seen in mainstream media.

A family home stands in rubble. Trapped under the wreckage of a bomb is a little girl. Crowds of neighbours have gathered, anxious, panicking, shouting in rapid Arabic. Women wail and ululate, throwing up their arms and crying out to Allah. Men desperately scramble through the wreckage. All is chaos, anarchy and violence.

This is the view of Iraq we have become immune to.

Compassion fatigue has set in and the sight of yet another injured civilian, yet another family home destroyed, yet another life reduced to rubble is somehow no longer as horrifying as it should be. News of impending civil war in Iraq barely makes the papers anymore.

We were told it was a new kind of war. The most media-covered conflict in military history. Briefings in Washington, ‘embedded’ reporters, views from Kuwait and Qatar – these were all supposed to keep the pubic informed – but did we really know what was happening in Baghdad?

On the third anniversary of the invasion of Iraq this week, this astonishing Australian/Iraqi documentary, In The Shadow Of The Palms, the latest work by acclaimed independent Australian documentary filmmaker, Wayne Coles-Janess, won the Golden Reel for Best Documentary at its US premiere at the Tiburon Film Festival in California.

This is the only documentary filmed on the streets of Baghdad before, during and immediately after ‘liberation’ and it tells a fascinating tale of the lives of ordinary Iraqis. A view rarely seen in mainstream media.

The film had been effectively censored until now – having been refused all government and industry funding in Australia – however it has been a surprise hit at film festivals around Europe and Asia.

There is a crucial difference between ‘media war’ and ‘real war’. While the ‘media war’ may have been an entirely new one in Iraq, Coles-Janess’ film demonstrates that the ‘real war’ was still about the sounds, sights, smells and emotions of fear and violence.

Any attempt to represent reality entails a number of choices: what to show, what to highlight, what to omit and these choices are intrinsically bound up with power struggles and operational constraints.

Governments have now become expert at directing the construction of the media war, to the point where it has been argued that correspondents are fast becoming merely extras in a piece of theatre.

In direct contrast to this is Coles-Janess’ film. At a time when journalists are being exposed to unprecedented government and military control of the media spectacle, he gained access to the city and people of Baghdad and documented the changes in the lives of ordinary people in the last four weeks before the invasion.

Unlike the mediated view of the mainstream media, which highlights the technological developments, or the political processes underway before the invasion, Coles-Janess offers the stories of a diverse range of everyday Baghdad residents: a professor of Arabic poetry, an Olympic Wrestling coach, a Palestinian-born translator and a Cobbler. Each of them tell their own stories and express their opinions without censorship or restraint.

It is the humanitarian, rather than the political perspective, which is foregrounded. While it is easy to become immune to the mainstream media’s war coverage, it is impossible to deny the power of the stories of these ordinary people.

In an excruciating countdown to the catastrophe, a grandmother prays to God for peace whilst her family cooks their last meal together and looks over their war supplies. An academic struggles to find a book to calm his mind whilst waiting for the bombing to begin. A young father cleans his rifle and asks for a last photo saying “I want to smile.”

A view of Iraq we have never seen before.

In the Shadow of the Palms will screen at this years Los Angeles Film Festival as well as the Inspiration Film Festival, California.

In the Shadow of the Palms Website
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Review: In the Shadow of the Palms
By Jo Scott



Truth is what gives us perspective. It can be painful, reassuring and enlightening. Wayne Coles-Janess delivers the truth in its undeniable form, without biased and within a context that we have all been denied until now. We have been saturated with the Bush administrations American policy concerning the threat of Iraq, and been spoon fed a lucid justification for a war which we see is really about control rather than terrorism.

In the Shadow of the Palms (solely funded by Ipso-facto productions) presents to us a new perspective- that of the peaceful, God fearing, hard working Iraqi civilians of Baghdad before, during and after the war. A Newsagent owner, a University Professor, a Cobbler and even an Olympic Wrestling Coach lend us their lives at work and at home to show the uninformed that they live in a regular civilized society revolving around worship, family and work. They give us their views on life in Iraq before, during and after the war, clearly stating throughout the period that the war is unwanted and merely Americas attempt to “colonized” Iraq and exploit their oil resources.

The film counts down to the attacks and air raids on Iraq, however when chaos is actually unfolding in front of our eyes we question why these peaceful and innocent people are having their lives literally shattered. It is a reality we have never been encouraged to consider by our Government. The film shows life in Iraq after the war where a broken community is now monitored under the scrutinising eyes of America’s military presence.

Coles-Janess doesn’t need to say it for we can see for ourselves, that the freedom of these people is displaced and that they now live with uncertainty in destroyed country. This film makes you assess all that you have been told and led to believe in the past. It breaks down the barrier between Easteners and Westerners, which Governments all over the world have helped to create, and shows us the true victims of war – society!


Truth is what gives us perspective. It can be painful, reassuring and enlightening. Wayne Coles-Janess delivers the truth in its undeniable form, without biased and within a context that we have all been denied until now. We have been saturated with the Bush administrations American policy concerning the threat of Iraq, and been spoon fed a lucid justification for a war which we see is really about control rather than terrorism.

In the Shadow of the Palms (solely funded by Ipso-facto productions) presents to us a new perspective- that of the peaceful, God fearing, hard working Iraqi civilians of Baghdad before, during and after the war. A Newsagent owner, a University Professor, a Cobbler and even an Olympic Wrestling Coach lend us their lives at work and at home to show the uninformed that they live in a regular civilized society revolving around worship, family and work. They give us their views on life in Iraq before, during and after the war, clearly stating throughout the period that the war is unwanted and merely Americas attempt to “colonized” Iraq and exploit their oil resources.

The film counts down to the attacks and air raids on Iraq, however when chaos is actually unfolding in front of our eyes we question why these peaceful and innocent people are having their lives literally shattered. It is a reality we have never been encouraged to consider by our Government. The film shows life in Iraq after the war where a broken community is now monitored under the scrutinising eyes of America’s military presence.

Coles-Janess doesn’t need to say it for we can see for ourselves, that the freedom of these people is displaced and that they now live with uncertainty in destroyed country. This film makes you assess all that you have been told and led to believe in the past. It breaks down the barrier between Easteners and Westerners, which Governments all over the world have helped to create, and shows us the true victims of war – society!
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