Sadly, I finished watching this film wondering if Sadoff or co-writers Kenneth Harbaugh and Sebastian Junger would err on the side of locking up the Canadian truckers and Dutch and French farmers. In fact, this whole production feels like a plea to criminalize a great many people quickly. In that sense, it exhibits the kneejerk dynamics of the racists it is desperate to condemn. The topic is ill-defined. On the one hand, this is about January 6th. On the other, it’s a rambling investigation of service members being tempted into dubious organizations.
As the 106-minute runtime ticked by, it felt simultaneously as if too much and too little attention to both topics was paid. The pieces on January 6th had raw power and captured the violence of the riot well but were marred by a partisan edge. The investigation into service men and their affiliations started off feeling like it was on to something. But it chewed up a lot of time to come to nothing, bar perhaps an opportunity or two for a few interesting talking heads to discuss their work. “Trump’s rise to power goes against all our values” is the blunt position of Kristofer Goldsmith, CEO of Task Force Butler. You see a lot of this self-styled Nazi hunter. His organization is one of a number of nonprofits assembled here, with their bread perhaps buttered on one side. And as quickly as the mainstream press decried Sound of Freedom as “QAnon adjacent,” I found myself seeing most of the parties depicted in Against All Enemies as “Deep State adjacent.” The main point is a call to expand recent, shaky anti-terror laws to cover domestic sedition. This type of legal overreach constitutes a cornerstone of totalitarianism this movie swears it fears. It seems very un-American. More than that, it is American anti-matter. The nightmare of similarly oriented hate speech legislation in Europe does not get appraised. No heed is given to how damaging it can be to indulge in cosmetic fussing with the legal pillars that constitute your country.
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