The Weight of Chains is a Canadian documentary film that takes a critical look at the role that the US, NATO and the EU played in the tragic breakup of a once peaceful and prosperous Europea... Read allThe Weight of Chains is a Canadian documentary film that takes a critical look at the role that the US, NATO and the EU played in the tragic breakup of a once peaceful and prosperous European state - Yugoslavia. The film, bursting with rare stock footage never before seen by West... Read allThe Weight of Chains is a Canadian documentary film that takes a critical look at the role that the US, NATO and the EU played in the tragic breakup of a once peaceful and prosperous European state - Yugoslavia. The film, bursting with rare stock footage never before seen by Western audiences, is a creative first-hand look at why the West intervened in the Yugoslav co... Read all
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From my point of view as a Serb, when i hear all of these lies, delusions, that lead to massive wars, i feel such an anger, and i'm asking myself, how can someone betray everything that we are, because of the money, and personal good, what happened to moral, what is going on with f....ng world!? Yes i know, this is happening from the beginning of the world, but still.. overall everyone who is interested why and how it really happened, just watch this, maybe not 100% objective as i read in some comments from other people view, but none the less, very informative.
I hope one day we all realize what is really going on, and turn to the right direction.
The film makers, as commented on by other reviewers, display a worrying Serbian tendency to rationalise the war without accepting even partial reponsibility. Of course it wasn't all the Serbs, or the Croats or the Bosniaks, all shared in the blame, just as the West could rightly be criticised for it's own mismanagement of the crisis. But deny even a portion of the blame to Serbia is just ridiculous.
I can understand an anti-Nato bias, a Serbian friend of mine lived two hundred yards from a Nato precision bomb on a TV station that killed his neighbour. That isn't going to endear Nato to anyone. But with delusional propaganda like this... reconciliation isn't going to be made any easier.
Not many Croats will have the willpower to watch the whole documentary but they should not because of the part about politics before the war and war itself but for the second part that talks about economy and what has happened to us all after the wars.
Pay attention to the graph of the Yugoslavia and the debt that each country accumulated.
Shame that the author was not more neutral because many people will not see it because of it.
At the end its better to be a colony then to kill each other.
There's retired Major General Lewis Mackenzie as well as many other former UN commanders that have said the same thing, and this film echoes that sentiment, which is such a refreshing change from the diatribe of propaganda that passed as news, and facts, on the Yugoslav civil wars.
It does so with the sarcasm of Michael Moore, and with great integrity. What Western media has ignored is that Serbs did not start the war. No claims are made about Milosevic being a saint, just that it was not what the Western media claimed it to be, the so-called "good guys" did worse things than the "bad guys". The involvement of the West in supporting and fuelling separatists in Yugoslavia cannot be ignored. With many shocking revelations, it keeps you interested from start to end. Ever wonder who really started the breakup? Who really tried to salvage it, and why? Well, you get to find out.
You will go from Western interference before the outbreak, to finding out why Croatia and Bosnia broke away illegally, to interference during, and how the people of Yugoslavia were better off without the country being ripped apart. The glamour of EU membership, so highly sought after by the former Yugoslav countries, is shown to not be what it seems to be when you're a small economy.
What will be found is how many sources are by people not affiliated with the Balkans. Canadians, Americans, people who only care about truth, and justice. This makes it that much harder to say that this film is propaganda when the sources are well researched, unbiased, and make heavy use of UN testimony, and the current story on what happened, according to the West, mostly falls on American government and PR company (Ruder Finn, Cohn & Wolfe, Gibbs & Soell, to name but a few) press releases. Everyone used propaganda, but the key difference is Milosevic never hired any PR companies for the world. The one faction that didn't do such a thing, and is it such a coincidence then that they are labelled as the bad guys? Not even Milosevic, but the whole people?
It combines a lot of what is readily known, but not readily reported in the West, with plenty of tidbits of information that is not so easily found. Even people who study the Balkans in university will be surprised at what they simply did not know before watching, or the lies that were thought of as truth.
And for what? Aside from letting the truth be known, this movie brings forth a message I dare say is just as important for the former citizens of Yugoslavia: reconcile, why they are much better off together than they could ever be alone, and why it is so. And that is what makes this film better than most, that message. Bring out the raw truth for all to see, and move on and work together. No anger, no bitterness. Something that the Balkans could learn a thing or two about. See this film.
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- El peso de las Cadenas
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- 2h 5m(125 min)
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