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No
End in Sight
• by director Charles Ferguson
Making No End in Sight, my first film, was unquestionably one of the
most rewarding experiences of my life.
I first had the idea in 2004, and asked some senior people in the media
what they thought. Almost unanimously, they said: don’t do it
because you’ll be competing with many other people backed by
large organizations. But a year later, nobody was making this film
and I decided to do it.
I made mistakes and I would have made many more were it not for two
things. First, filmmaker Alex Gibney (Enron: The Smartest Guys
in the Room) agreed to consult. Alex was invaluable. And second, my crew taught
me my job. They were incredibly patient in working with someone who
frequently knew much less about filmmaking than they did.
After 50 interviews in the U.S., I went to Iraq. The Defense Department
refused to help; we were on our own. I talked to many people, gathering
advice and contacts. We hired Nir Rosen, a journalist with three years
of experience in Iraq, and trained him to use our high definition cameras.
I also hired a Kurdish personal bodyguard. We flew to Istanbul, but
the Baghdad airport was closed (which happens often). So Nir and I
drove through Southern Turkey, then through Iraqi Kurdistan to Erbil,
where Nir arranged a convoy of armored trucks which drove us overnight
to Baghdad. The Washington Post generously let me stay with them, in
a fortified compound outside the Green Zone. In Baghdad, I used a personal
security detail of ten men in three armored cars. We also hired an
Iraqi translator, whose father was recently kidnapped and killed by
the Mahdi Army.
We started editing in June 2006, and worked insanely hard. It was a
very pure, intense, emotional time. But we made it. As a first time
filmmaking experience, one could not hope for more.
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