Una mirada a cómo la rivalidad entre la CIA y el FBI, sin darse cuenta, preparó el escenario para la tragedia del 11 de septiembre y la guerra en Afganistán.Una mirada a cómo la rivalidad entre la CIA y el FBI, sin darse cuenta, preparó el escenario para la tragedia del 11 de septiembre y la guerra en Afganistán.Una mirada a cómo la rivalidad entre la CIA y el FBI, sin darse cuenta, preparó el escenario para la tragedia del 11 de septiembre y la guerra en Afganistán.
- Nominado para 4 premios Primetime Emmy
- 15 nominaciones en total
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Good show, but not as great as the book
When I read that there was a TV adaptation of Lawrence Wright's book I had great hopes. The result is not disappointing, the show is quite good, Jeff Daniels is perfect in his role and the story of John O'Neill is perfect for a movie.
But the writers decided to focus only on the final part of the book, which details the internal wars between CIA and FBI which allowed the 9/11 plans to proceed unchallenged. The first part of the book, which describes the history of bin Laden and al Qaeda, starting from the ideology of Qutb, would have been much more interesting to understand what is going on in the world today. But I understand that story would be perhaps more suitable for a documentary than for a TV show, but it's a story that Wright wrote beautifully at that will deserve to be put on screen someday.
Amazing
Totally engrossing series. Like an extended Zero Dark Thirty prequel. Absolutely excellent.
Made me hate Scheuer, Tenant, Freeh for their incompetence & arrogance EVEN MORE
AND A little bit O'Neill but especially. Michael Scheuer (portrayed in the series as CIA analyst Schmidt). Brilliantly, smarmily, perfectly portrayed by Peter Sarsgaard. Encapsulates the smug insular arrogance of the real (horrible) Scheuer and so many like him (today it would include Stephen Miller).
As one critic so insightfully wrote: "this TV adaption is far more interested in American failure than in the terrorist's ingenuity and ideology. Specifically, it homes in on the homogeneous mix of meaty, thick-necked white men who wittily spar over cigars and whiskey while the Al Qaeda leader plots 9/11. Daniels plays O'Neill with the same sense of baby boomer superiority he brought to The Newsroom, and Alec Baldwin, as C. I. A. Director George Tenet, effectively appears as, well, himself. Bill Camp elevates sweaty dishevelment to an art form as agent Robert Chesney, but The Looming Tower otherwise presents a group of likeminded, larded, and complacent professionals. The series suggests the failure of American intelligence in the years before 9/11 was largely one of imagination."
No I'd say it shows the absolute ARROGANCE, stultifying groupthink, refusal to listen to anyone but their own small bull-headed privileged, effete and elite boys club. Although Condoleeza Rice was an acolyte without an original perspective or any critical thinking skills as well since she epitomizes the 'token' conservative of color who toes the line so she can be part of the club (although she never was and never will be in reality).
Those people never change. They just get worse and more entrenched. They are liars, hypocrites and hoarders of information in order to keep their power over and above anything else.
This is what this series excels at showing. And it is infuriating but so necessary and so enlightening. How can people forget these systems are the same, especially under conservative authoritarianism and the capitalist 1% plutocracy that now rules it all.
Must see. Now more than ever.
As one critic so insightfully wrote: "this TV adaption is far more interested in American failure than in the terrorist's ingenuity and ideology. Specifically, it homes in on the homogeneous mix of meaty, thick-necked white men who wittily spar over cigars and whiskey while the Al Qaeda leader plots 9/11. Daniels plays O'Neill with the same sense of baby boomer superiority he brought to The Newsroom, and Alec Baldwin, as C. I. A. Director George Tenet, effectively appears as, well, himself. Bill Camp elevates sweaty dishevelment to an art form as agent Robert Chesney, but The Looming Tower otherwise presents a group of likeminded, larded, and complacent professionals. The series suggests the failure of American intelligence in the years before 9/11 was largely one of imagination."
No I'd say it shows the absolute ARROGANCE, stultifying groupthink, refusal to listen to anyone but their own small bull-headed privileged, effete and elite boys club. Although Condoleeza Rice was an acolyte without an original perspective or any critical thinking skills as well since she epitomizes the 'token' conservative of color who toes the line so she can be part of the club (although she never was and never will be in reality).
Those people never change. They just get worse and more entrenched. They are liars, hypocrites and hoarders of information in order to keep their power over and above anything else.
This is what this series excels at showing. And it is infuriating but so necessary and so enlightening. How can people forget these systems are the same, especially under conservative authoritarianism and the capitalist 1% plutocracy that now rules it all.
Must see. Now more than ever.
Fascinating insight yet tragic for the entire world
Who could ever fathom that the main reason the terrorists of al-Qaeda lead by the independently wealthy Osama bin Laden would have cost so many lives to be lost in the air attacks that occurred on September 11th, 2001, could have been neutralized only if the American CIA and FBI intelligence agencies would have shared vital information between their respective and unfortunate independent intelligence operations.
This is a well acted ten (10) part mini-series that is based on actual events and many of the key American and foreign personnel who were actively involved in the gathering of intelligence on terrorists such as al-Qaeda.
Mrs. Shullivan and I were glad to see that much of the horrific events that occurred on September 11th, 2001, were not the focus of this mini-series, but rather how the events leading up to this tragic day in the history of mankind evolved over the preceding years and by the key players responsible for fighting the terrorists organizations such as al-Qaeda.
This is most definitely a must see. A 9 out of 10 rating
This is a well acted ten (10) part mini-series that is based on actual events and many of the key American and foreign personnel who were actively involved in the gathering of intelligence on terrorists such as al-Qaeda.
Mrs. Shullivan and I were glad to see that much of the horrific events that occurred on September 11th, 2001, were not the focus of this mini-series, but rather how the events leading up to this tragic day in the history of mankind evolved over the preceding years and by the key players responsible for fighting the terrorists organizations such as al-Qaeda.
This is most definitely a must see. A 9 out of 10 rating
10jshoaf
A chance to feel
The last episode, which begins when the first plane hits (not a spoiler), brought me up against my own memories of 9/11. My son was in the city, and on that day I worried about him and listened to him on the phone. Aside from that, I was numb. It seemed utterly incomprehensible that this should have happened. Who? Why? How? Equally incomprehensible was the speed with which these questions were in fact answered, for reasons the Hulu series makes clear: the answers were already at the fingertips of various players who didn't know what to do with them (though the finale implies that various parties were prepared to exploit the bombing instantly). The series begins at the (or a) beginning, including the Kenyan embassy bombing, the USS Cole bombing, and interactions among the players on both sides. The questions have been answered, the lines drawn in such a way as to meet at this point, with the bombings. As I watched the last episode, I was able to feel for the people I love who were breathing that dust that day. I could finally weep for them, as well as for John O'Neill and Ali Soufan, whom I had not known about until now.
¿Sabías que...?
- CuriosidadesAt the Berlinale film festival showrunner Dan Futterman explains the rivalry between CIA and FBI in the late 90's. "The FBI was just starting to work as an international agency, and that was part of their problem with the CIA, who felt that was their turf, and the FBI's turf was America. They totally underestimated al-Qaeda."
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- Títulos en diferentes países
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- Morocco(Doubling for Yemen)
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