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    Drama offers comprehensive look at dictator's reign

    Wed Dec 3, 2008 6:57pm EST
    Saddam Hussein reacts in court during the Anfal genocide trial in Baghdad December 21, 2006. REUTERS/Nikola Solic

    LOS ANGELES (Hollywood Reporter) - Saddam Hussein hasn't been in the news much lately. Being hanged to death two years ago will have that effect. Still, the situation in Iraq continues to bear the impact of his life and his ruthlessness, many of the details of which are not widely known.

    Entertainment  |  Television

    HBO Films' "House of Saddam" fills in enough specifics for a complete picture of this devious dictator to emerge -- but there is a catch. You've got to be willing to put aside four hours, which is asking a lot when the subject is a dead, savage, cold-hearted, brutal, megalomaniacal tyrant.

    So why do it? Because "Saddam" is as least as much drama as it is documentary. It crackles with palace intrigue, family rivalries and the unpredictability of an amoral strongman with an unquenchable thirst for power and absolutely no qualms about snuffing out the lives of friend and foe alike.

    There are a good many fascinating performances here, starting with Igal Naor's portrayal of Saddam, Philip Arditti as his mercurial and hedonistic son Uday and Amr Waked as Hussein Kamel, Saddam's cousin and eventual son-in-law.

    The telefilm, "a dramatization based on certain facts," hews closely to what is known and verified. Alex Holmes, who co-wrote and directed, ventures few opinions, preferring instead to let Saddam's actions speak for themselves. The few times Saddam actually comments on his philosophy of ruling, explaining at one point that terror is a tool and not an end in itself, the insight is profound. Unfortunately, there are not enough of these moments.

    Consequently, even after all four hours, questions remain. Why, for example, did Saddam play a cat-and-mouse game with weapons inspectors when Iraq already was weakened by U.N. sanctions and he knew he risked a U.S.-led invasion that would topple him?

    The miniseries starts with the bloody coup led by Saddam in 1979, when he seized the reins of government and installed mostly loyal family members. It ends with Saddam's capture in 2003, a broken man emerging from a rat hole. Although there is practically no reference to the chemical gas used on the Kurdish population during the 1980s (the series' largest omission), the telefilm astutely points out how ambiguous American policy statements might have led to misdirection.

    The perspective one gets from inside the "House of Saddam" is different from media reports on the outside and is, in itself, an important reason to tune in.

    Reuters/Hollywood Reporter



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