Film Gets Strong Reviews
The Los Angeles Times called the film “one of the most important pieces of nonfiction to hit the screen in years,” while the Hollywood Reporter said it was a “potent cry for a drastic rethinking of America's War on Drugs” and that the film “should connect solidly with viewers at a moment when it seems possible to change public attitudes.”
Pitt, who like his partner Angelina Jolie is no stranger to humanitarian and social causes, said that after seeing Jarecki's documentary, coupled with his own involvement with aiding the victims of Hurricane Katrina, he realised the US government's war on drugs may not just be about drugs alone.
“That was an interesting premise for me,” the “Moneyball” star told Reuters. “I hadn't thought about it in that matter (before seeing the film), but certainly what we witnessed after Katrina proved the idea had validity.”
Some critics have attributed the slow response of the US government to Katrina in 2005, and the devastating flooding of poor areas of New Orleans, to race and class issues.
Now, Pitt believes the War on Drugs is the greatest obstacle for impoverished parts of society, including African Americans, from getting ahead.
“It's a never-ending cycle. But then when you look at it after what we experienced with Katrina - this is Eugene's point and what he wanted to investigate - it is actually being used to cap a portion of our society and holding them back, shackling them,” the actor said, adding that he signed on as executive producer to help promote the documentary.
Jarecki contrasted the justice system's attitude to bankers in the 2008 financial meltdown of Wall Street, who “got a slap on the hand,” with its stance toward young drug-takers.
“A kid right now a block from here is going to have a cop find an ounce of something on his person and he's going spend 10 years in jail. These are all indicators of a society that has lost its way - and it has lost its way in the direction of injustice and unfairness,” Jarecki told Reuters.