Become a Member
Film

Film review: City of Ghosts

Matthew Heineman’s exceptional, award-winning documentary reveals Isis's cruelty and others’ bravery

July 21, 2017 12:48
cog.jpg
1 min read

The plight of the Syrian city of Raqqa, the “capital” of the so-called Islamic State is rarely out of the news. Matthew Heineman’s exceptional, award-winning documentary examines, with unflinching intimacy, the power and resolve of grassroots journalism in the midst of this war against terror and twisted ideology.

City of Ghosts tells the story of RBSS (Raqqa is Being Slaughtered Silently), a small group of extraordinarily brave Syrian citizen journalists who risk their lives to document and expose the realities of life in their once “simple” city that was taken over by Isis in 2014.

Since its establishment, RBSS has been a vital source of video and photographic images and written testimony about the horrors of Isis rule. The group, made up of young, previously apolitical men — none of whom had been a journalist before — maximises social media to transmit its message. The approach is less a war fought with guns and more a battle waged with laptops and mobile phones.

But City of Ghosts is not a detached recounting of brave activism. Heineman has clearly gained the members’ trust and this personal access and the men’s candour makes the film compassionate and compulsive viewing.