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another saigon Donating Member (450 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Sep-11-10 11:35 AM
Original message
9/11 The Falling Man
Edited on Sat Sep-11-10 11:38 AM by another saigon
 
Run time: 71:26
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BXnA9FjvLSU
 
Posted on YouTube: October 06, 2006
By YouTube Member: fofo69
Views on YouTube: 4905332
 
Posted on DU: September 11, 2010
By DU Member: another saigon
Views on DU: 1469
 
"9/11 was one of the most pivotal events in world history. Its impact will be felt for years to come. You owe it to yourself to go beyond the sound bites and the simplified official story. This is an extremely complicated story with numerous players and motives. The 9/11 information doesn't all make sense or fit neatly together. It's a story full of espionage, deceit, and lies. But if there are forces out there tricking us, they can only succeed if we, the general public, remain ignorant and passive."


This is the most haunting and heart wrenching depiction I have seen of the victims that day.
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deutsey Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Sep-11-10 12:15 PM
Response to Original message
1. If this is the movie I saw a few months ago, I highly recommend this.
In avoiding sentimentality and jingoism, it was a very moving reminder of the human cost of that day.
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elehhhhna Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Sep-11-10 12:40 PM
Response to Reply #1
2. recap, eh?
please? not sure I can take it...
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another saigon Donating Member (450 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Sep-11-10 01:51 PM
Response to Reply #2
4. the comments at the link are a start
and even though the subject is horrible, I believe it needs to be seen. Note that the M$M were banned from using the photo ever again.

here is a good synopsis.


September 8, 2009, 10:46 AM
The Falling Man

Do you remember this photograph? In the United States, people have taken pains to banish it from the record of September 11, 2001. The story behind it, though, and the search for the man pictured in it, are our most intimate connection to the horror of that day.

By Tom Junod


Read more: http://www.esquire.com/features/ESQ0903-SEP_FALLINGMAN#ixzz0zFRQxgLE



In the picture, he departs from this earth like an arrow. Although he has not chosen his fate, he appears to have, in his last instants of life, embraced it. If he were not falling, he might very well be flying. He appears relaxed, hurtling through the air. He appears comfortable in the grip of unimaginable motion. He does not appear intimidated by gravity's divine suction or by what awaits him. His arms are by his side, only slightly outriggered. His left leg is bent at the knee, almost casually. His white shirt, or jacket, or frock, is billowing free of his black pants. His black high-tops are still on his feet. In all the other pictures, the people who did what he did -- who jumped -- appear to be struggling against horrific discrepancies of scale. They are made puny by the backdrop of the towers, which loom like colossi, and then by the event itself. Some of them are shirtless; their shoes fly off as they flail and fall; they look confused, as though trying to swim down the side of a mountain. The man in the picture, by contrast, is perfectly vertical, and so is in accord with the lines of the buildings behind him. He splits them, bisects them: Everything to the left of him in the picture is the North Tower; everything to the right, the South. Though oblivious to the geometric balance he has achieved, he is the essential element in the creation of a new flag, a banner composed entirely of steel bars shining in the sun. Some people who look at the picture see stoicism, willpower, a portrait of resignation; others see something else -- something discordant and therefore terrible: freedom. There is something almost rebellious in the man's posture, as though once faced with the inevitability of death, he decided to get on with it; as though he were a missile, a spear, bent on attaining his own end. He is, fifteen seconds past 9:41 a.m. EST, the moment the picture is taken, in the clutches of pure physics, accelerating at a rate of thirty-two feet per second squared. He will soon be traveling at upwards of 150 miles per hour, and he is upside down. In the picture, he is frozen; in his life outside the frame, he drops and keeps dropping until he disappears.

*****

The photographer is no stranger to history; he knows it is something that happens later. In the actual moment history is made, it is usually made in terror and confusion, and so it is up to people like him -- paid witnesses -- to have the presence of mind to attend to its manufacture. The photographer has that presence of mind and has had it since he was a young man. When he was twenty-one years old, he was standing right behind Bobby Kennedy when Bobby Kennedy was shot in the head. His jacket was spattered with Kennedy's blood, but he jumped on a table and shot pictures of Kennedy's open and ebbing eyes, and then of Ethel Kennedy crouching over her husband and begging photographers -- begging him -- not to take pictures.

Richard Drew has never done that. Although he has preserved the jacket patterned with Kennedy's blood, he has never not taken a picture, never averted his eye. He works for the Associated Press. He is a journalist. It is not up to him to reject the images that fill his frame, because one never knows when history is made until one makes it. It is not even up to him to distinguish if a body is alive or dead, because the camera makes no such distinctions, and he is in the business of shooting bodies, as all photographers are, unless they are Ansel Adams. Indeed, he was shooting bodies on the morning of September 11, 2001. On assignment for the AP, he was shooting a maternity fashion show in Bryant Park, notable, he says, "because it featured actual pregnant models." He was fifty-four years old. He wore glasses. He was sparse in the scalp, gray in the beard, hard in the head. In a lifetime of taking pictures, he has found a way to be both mild-mannered and brusque, patient and very, very quick. He was doing what he always does at fashion shows -- "staking out real estate" -- when a CNN cameraman with an earpiece said that a plane had crashed into the North Tower, and Drew's editor rang his cell phone. He packed his equipment into a bag and gambled on taking the subway downtown. Although it was still running, he was the only one on it. He got out at the Chambers Street station and saw that both towers had been turned into smokestacks. Staking out his real estate, he walked west, to where ambulances were gathering, because rescue workers "usually won't throw you out." Then he heard people gasping. People on the ground were gasping because people in the building were jumping. He started shooting pictures through a 200mm lens. He was standing between a cop and an emergency technician, and each time one of them cried, "There goes another," his camera found a falling body and followed it down for a nine- or twelve-shot sequence. He shot ten or fifteen of them before he heard the rumbling of the South Tower and witnessed, through the winnowing exclusivity of his lens, its collapse. He was engulfed in a mobile ruin, but he grabbed a mask from an ambulance and photographed the top of the North Tower "exploding like a mushroom" and raining debris. He discovered that there is such a thing as being too close, and, deciding that he had fulfilled his professional obligations, Richard Drew joined the throng of ashen humanity heading north, walking until he reached his office at Rockefeller Center.

There was no terror or confusion at the Associated Press. There was, instead, that feeling of history being manufactured; although the office was as crowded as he'd ever seen it, there was, instead, "the wonderful calm that comes into play when people are really doing their jobs." So Drew did his: He inserted the disc from his digital camera into his laptop and recognized, instantly, what only his camera had seen -- something iconic in the extended annihilation of a falling man. He didn't look at any of the other pictures in the sequence; he didn't have to. "You learn in photo editing to look for the frame," he says. "You have to recognize it. That picture just jumped off the screen because of its verticality and symmetry. It just had that look."


Read more: http://www.esquire.com/features/ESQ0903-SEP_FALLINGMAN#ixzz0zFSoPiMw
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elehhhhna Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Sep-11-10 07:51 PM
Response to Reply #4
7. oh christ
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Poll_Blind Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Sep-11-10 09:30 PM
Response to Reply #4
8. I can't believe I clicked on this thread, much less just read that entire Esquire article.
But it was incredible. At first, I didn't really get what was going on, where the author was going. And then, near the end of the article when he starts hitting you with things- like why the family of Norberto Hernandez desperately, angrily did not want it to be their father...how those sentiments were echoed by some yet others embraced the search...I was rocked back on my heels for the last five minutes or so as I finished it.

That was an incredible piece of writing and...and I am still shaken by his analysis of why America will not view those images.

Thank you for taking the time to post that. K&R just for that.

PB
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deutsey Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Sep-11-10 01:58 PM
Response to Reply #2
5. It's not an easy film to watch
considering it focuses on the people who jumped from the Towers on 9/11 rather than face being burned alive or choking to death on the smoke. However, it's also much more than that:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Falling_Man#Documentary_film


9/11: The Falling Man is a 2006 documentary film about the picture and the story behind it.<6> It was made by American filmmaker Henry Singer and filmed by Richard Numeroff, a New York-based director of photography. The film is loosely based on Junod's Esquire story. It also drew its material from photographer Lyle Owerko's pictures of falling people. It debuted on March 16, 2006, on the British television network Channel 4. It later made its North American premiere on Canada's CBC Newsworld on September 6, 2006, and has been broadcast in over 30 countries. The U.S. premiere was September 10, 2007, on the Discovery Times Channel.



"The Falling Man" refers to a photograph taken by Associated Press photographer Richard Drew, depicting a man falling from the North Tower of the World Trade Center at 9:41:15 a.m. during the September 11 attacks in New York City. The subject of the image — whose identity remains uncertain, although attempts have been made to identify him — was one of the people trapped on the upper floors of the skyscraper who apparently was forced to jump rather than die from the fire and smoke. As many as 200 people jumped to their deaths that day;<1> there was no time to recover or identify those who were forced to jump prior to the collapse of the towers. Officially, all deaths in the attacks except those of the hijackers were ruled to be homicides (as opposed to suicides), and the New York City medical examiner's office stated that it does not classify the people who fell to their deaths on September 11 as "jumpers": "A 'jumper' is somebody who goes to the office in the morning knowing that they will commit suicide... These people were forced out by the smoke and flames or blown out."<1>

This picture is somewhat deceptive; it gives the impression the man is falling straight down. In reality, this is just one of a dozen photographs of his fall. In the other photos, it is evident that he is tumbling through the air out of control. The photographer has noted that, in at least two cases, newspaper stories commenting on the image have attracted a barrage of criticism from readers who found the image disturbing.<2> Regarding the impact of The Falling Man, theologian Mark D. Thompson of Moore Theological College says that "perhaps the most powerful image of despair at the beginning of the twenty-first century is not found in art, or literature, or even popular music. It is found in a single photograph."<3>






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Raspberry Donating Member (377 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Sep-11-10 01:10 PM
Response to Original message
3. Thank you for posting
I watched the whole thing--relived my memories of the horror.

At the time, there was an article in one of the news mags, describing the "red mist" as the people hit the sidewalk. Those words were haunting.

This video was the most poignant portrayal of the horrible chose those who were trapped faced.
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geckosfeet Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Sep-11-10 03:06 PM
Response to Original message
6. 'It's not important that we learn who the man is, what's important is that we learn who we are.'
Paraphrased from the woman believed to be the sister of the falling man.
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lillypaddle Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Sep-12-10 05:47 AM
Response to Original message
9. Stark horror
merged into a quiet peace, as I watched him fall. What a moving film. No, we won't ever forget.
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Mrhyde719 Donating Member (171 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Sep-12-10 08:24 AM
Response to Original message
10. thank you for sharing this video
Watched the whole thing. Very powerful. I know its long, but this deserves to be on the front page.
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