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Product description: Screenwriter-director Steven Silver aspires to pose, if not exactly answer, some serious questions in his 2010 film The Bang Bang Club. What is the role of photographers during a time of war? Are they merely journalists and observers whose only duty is to use their cameras to let the world see what they have witnessed in the flesh? Or, when they see violence and suffering, do they have a responsibility to get involved and try to help those in need? The titular "club" refers to four photographers--Greg Marinovich (Ryan Phillippe), Kevin Carter (Taylor Kitsch), Ken Oosterbroek (Frank Rautenbach), and Joao Silva (Neels Van Jaarsveld)--who, in the early to mid '90s, when the South African system of apartheid was in its death throes, worked together to chronicle the violence and upheaval leading up to the 1994 election of Nelson Mandela as president (the film is based on a memoir written by Marinovich and Silva). This isn't quite The Hurt Locker for shutterbugs--they're taking photos, not defusing bombs--but their work is risky and dangerous, potentially fatally so, as they thrust themselves into the middle of chaotic clashes between forces backed by the government (including Inkatha Zulu warriors) and those in support of Mandela's African National Congress. Pulitzers are won, but not without accompanying criticism. One black character describes their work as "white photographers making money off the blood of South Africa," while one of Marinovich's prize-winning shots is derided as "a white man's photo taken for white men's purposes"; they also have to defend their decisions not to intervene in some of the more horrific scenes they recorded, while attempting to keep the police's hands off their work as well.
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