Fahrenheit
9/11 Plays
Cairo
Garay Menicucci
(Garay
Menicucci is assistant director of the Center for Middle East
Studies at the University of California-Santa Barbara and an editor
of Middle East Report.)
September
16, 2004
The cinema
was crowded but not full when, at the end of August, Michael Moore’s
documentary Fahrenheit 9/11 opened in a theater in Cairo’s
leafy southern suburb of Maadi. An audience made up of expatriate
employees of UN agencies and well-heeled Egyptians snickered at
each of Moore’s jabs at the ineptitude of George W. Bush and his
coterie. Though Egyptian audiences, unlike their American counterparts,
are accustomed to graphic pictures of the effects of shrapnel
and phosphorus on the human body, women openly sobbed during the
clips taken from al-Jazeera television that show Iraqi children
who had been shot and burned in the course of the US invasion
and occupation. When Neil Young’s anthem “Rockin’ in the Free
World” boomed from the theater sound system as the credits rolled,
the audience rose to its feet and applauded.
Since his
scathing indictment of the Bush administration won first prize
in the Cannes film festival in May, both Moore and his right-wing
critics have made much of the reaction to the film abroad. The
right-wingers have considered it sufficient to point out that
Cannes is in France. Moore has cited warm receptions like the
applause in Maadi as evidence that foreigners would like Americans
again if they threw Bush out of office. But the fleeting run of
Fahrenheit 9/11 in the Egyptian capital suggests a more
ambiguous reception for the film that variously dazzled, disgusted
and depressed American movie audiences in late June and July.
HAVES AND
HAVE-NOTS
Although
Fahrenheit 9/11 has been screened in Lebanon, Jordan, Israel
and Turkey, Egyptian censors apparently felt some trepidation
about the long-term bookings at multiple venues that went on throughout
the summer of 2004 in European countries. In the first week of
its Cairo release, Moore’s latest documentary championing the
downtrodden was shown in only four small upscale cinemas in suburban
shopping malls in Maadi and Nasr City, miles away from the bustling
downtown area and nowhere near affordable public transportation.
At the Osman Group Cinema on Palestine Street in Maadi, there
was valet parking for filmgoers arriving in sport utility vehicles
and Mercedes sedans. Tickets in the cinemas in malls and luxury
hotels cost double what Cairo's popular downtown venues charge.
Several of
these cinemas were packed to the gills with people who came to
see Matt Damon playing the memory-challenged and misunderstood
CIA agent in The Bourne Supremacy. Otherwise, patrons of
the cheaper theaters were stuck with Groom from General Security,
starring Egypt’s beloved, if aging comic actor Adel Imam as a
doting and overly protective father who is reluctant to have his
daughter marry an agent in the mukhabarat (secret police).
Of course, the hated mukhabarat win his grudging admiration
in the end. In Fahrenheit 9/11, Moore mocks the American
upper crust in a clip where the tuxedoed Bush jokes with a crowd
he calls “the haves and the have-mores.” “Some call you the elite,”
Bush continues. “I call you my base.” In Cairo, it was the haves
who had the privilege of viewing Moore’s socially critical cinema
and chuckling at his in-your-face bashing of Bush and the Saudis,
while the have-nots made do with mediocre movies whose messages
reinforce the status quo.
SOMETHING’S
MISSING
For otherwise
appreciative Egyptian audiences, there was something missing from
Moore’s strange narrative of how the Bush administration came
to react to the September 11, 2001 attacks by launching an invasion
of Iraq. In Moore’s geography of the US foreign policy power structure,
it is the Saudi royal family with its personal ties to the Bush
dynasty that is the implied culprit, presumably to deflect attention
from the fact that 15 of the 19 September 11 hijackers were citizens
of Saudi Arabia. Moore recycles -- without stating it directly
-- the canard that members of Osama bin Laden’s family were flown
out of US airports when all other planes were grounded after the
attacks. As more evidence, the film adduces a private White House
dinner for the Saudis’ ambassador in Washington, as well as the
web of Bush oil interests and a montage of images of the elder
Bush shaking hands with a succession of Saudi princes.
There is
little love lost between most Egyptians and the Gulf Arabs who
descend on Cairo every August to escape the scorching heat of
the Arabian Peninsula and indulge in decadent pleasures denied
them in their own countries: alcohol, gambling, prostitution and
discos. But Saudi oil wealth does not translate into sufficient
political clout in Washington for the Saudis to push the US into
war, as far as Egyptian and Arab audiences are concerned. Meanwhile,
the influence and strategic vision of another US ally in the Middle
East -- Israel -- is nowhere to be seen in Fahrenheit 9/11.
It is an odd omission for Egyptians familiar with the tales of
how an Office of Special Plans assembled by an undersecretary
of defense sympathetic to the Likud Party cherry-picked and stovepiped
intelligence on Iraq’s alleged weapons of mass destruction.
Passengers
on Cairo’s underground rail system watch television on monitors
on the platform while they wait for their train to come. On opening
night of the Moore film, the monitors featured the latest music
video by the crooner Shaaban Abd al-Rahim, made famous in the
fall of 2000 for his tribute to the Palestinian intifada entitled
“I Hate Israel.” In his latest foray into politicized pop, “The
Attack on Iraq,” Abd al-Rahim chants anti-imperialist slogans
as the accompanying cartoon depicts a map of the Middle East as
a cake being carved up by US and Israeli tanks. The message is
crude, but it resonated among the hundreds of passengers who gathered
mesmerized around the monitors.
In the new
Youssef Chahine spectacle, Alexandria-New York, one finds
a similar motif. The film is the fourth installment in Chahine's
autobiographical series that began with Alexandria...Why? In
his ongoing cinematic reminiscence, Yahya, the Chahine character,
is finally lauded with a major retrospective at New York’s Lincoln
Center after being ignored by American critics over a distinguished,
quarter-century career as a film director. Upon hearing the news,
Yahya watches televised images of Israeli soldiers shooting at
Palestinian demonstrators and the funeral procession of one of
the Palestinian victims in a white shroud. He vows not to go to
the US because of its collusion with the Israel in suppressing
Palestinian national aspirations. Chahine’s was the only film
released in the summer in Egypt that even vaguely reflected current
popular attitudes and anxieties toward the catastrophes afflicting
the region. In this atmosphere, Egyptian reviewers of Fahrenheit
9/11 noted that Moore’s single-minded focus on the Saudis
verged on a pernicious kind of anti-Arab racism.
DYNASTIC
SUCCESSIONS
By the second
weekend of its run in Cairo, Fahrenheit 9/11 was showing
on fewer screens and at less convenient times. The film finally
moved to a central Cairo location within walking distance of two
subway stops, but tickets at the Cairo Sheraton remained out of
the price range of most moviegoers. The theater at the Sheraton
showed the movie only once a day at one o’clock in the morning.
One such
showing of Fahrenheit 9/11 was filled with extended families
on vacation from the Gulf. The families bought whole rows of seats
to accommodate all the relatives. The vacationing Gulf Arab audience
was completely silent -- no sobbing or standing ovations. For
them, perhaps, Moore’s documentary was a curiosity, a form of
political pornography. They saw the Saudi royal family scorned
on screen, but perhaps they were convinced that none of the House
of Saud could suffer the consequences Moore has in mind for the
House of Bush. “Rockin’ in the Free World” got no applause, and
the somber crowd rushed out to waiting black limousines or rented
white vans.
Its political
flaws notwithstanding, Fahrenheit 9/11 is at its best when
advancing the proposition that ordinary people should have the
power to change their government when it acts in ways detrimental
to the welfare of the majority of citizens. Indeed, for Egyptians,
Michael Moore’s denigration of the dynastic succession in the
Bush family and his polemic about the “stolen” election of 2000
have not so subtle reverberations in domestic politics. Earlier
in the summer, President Husni Mubarak made a sudden trip to Germany
for an operation for a slipped disc. Upon his return, he reshuffled
his cabinet to include eight ministers who are also members of
the ruling National Democratic Party’s policy secretariat, which
is headed by his son Gamal. The opposition press has dubbed the
new council of ministers “Gamal’s shadow cabinet.” The question
of the day in Egypt is whether these steps are the prelude to
an Egyptian dynastic succession whereby Mubarak, like Hafiz al-Asad
of Syria before him, bestows the presidency of the republic upon
his son as if the country were a monarchy. Perhaps this is the
reason why Egyptian censors and theater owners treated Fahrenheit
9/11 as underground cinema, banishing it to prohibitively
expensive moviehouses and, even then, allowing it on the screen
only after midnight.