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Seven Days in September is a compilation of
footage of the World Trade Center terrorist attacks and the immediate aftermath in New
York City. Drawing on film and video caught by both amateur and professional filmmakers,
it is a workmanlike reconstruction of the events, enhanced by "talking heads"
commentary by the various filmmakers themselves.
The shots of the twin towers, of the smoke and fire, of the plane
slicing into the second tower, and of the subsequent collapse of the buildings have become
familiar from similar footage that has been heavily exposed in the media, both at that
time and since. Nonetheless, the sheer horror of the calamity doesn't fail to provoke once
again an uncanny combination of anger, awe, and overwhelming sadness as the scale of
destruction and human loss are once again confronted.
What distinguishes Seven Days in September are the smaller
scale moments that it captures, individual human elements within the broader sweep of
events. The way that the rescue workers--police, firemen, medics--doggedly dug into their
work until they fell exhausted has been shown before. But there are previously unseen
shots of the crowds of local residents who gathered simply to applaud the rescue workers
and thank them as they shuttled to the Chelsea Piers for respite. Ordinary folks wanting
to be helpful volunteered to collect contributions, feed the rescue workers, even build
wooden stretchers to carry out survivors--or remains.
On the night of the 11th, a vigil in Union Square documents the
profound need of people to connect in times of crisis; staying home and watching the
endless television coverage was a lonely alternative. Lighting of candles became a regular
ritual, the symbolic bringing of light to fend off the darkness of confusion and despair.
Individual images cumulate to reveal the texture of experience and
feeling at the time: Bill Clinton walking among the crowds offering sympathy and
reassurance; shoes covered with ash abandoned in the street; a street preacher taking
advantage of the moment to proselytize, seemingly without an audience; the awesome advance
from the collapse of the towers, like a tidal wave or an avalanche, of the clouds of
debris and smoke and soot and ash, swirled through with pieces of paper from destroyed
offices.
Not all of the sequences are as successful. The comments of a couple of
children, interviewed for their viewpoints, seem to reflect more what they've heard at
home than their own thoughts. While the scale of personal losses is clear, the film
doesn't delve much into individual experiences of loss of loved ones. Perhaps the latter
is more than should be expected of one film.
The best scene in the film, once again in Union Square, several days
later, shows a crowd gathered, heatedly debating what the appropriate response to the
attacks should be. Hawks and doves emotionally state their cases and anger levels
escalate. Just when things seem ready to erupt, a woman who has argued for peace cries out
plaintively, "What do we do with our rage?" It's what they all have in common at
the moment and, finding that, the opposing sides embrace. A wonderful, unexpected,
very New York moment.
- Arthur Lazere