The more I think about ABC/Disney’s official statement in response to “The Path to 9/11” controversy, the less sense I think it makes. Here’s the statement in its entirety:
“The Path to 9/11” is not a documentary of the events leading to 9/11. It is a dramatization, drawn from a variety of sources including the 9/11 Commission Report, other published materials, and personal interviews. As such, for dramatic and narrative purposes, the movie contains fictionalized scenes, composite and representative characters and dialogue, and time compression.
No one has seen the final version of the film, because the editing process is not yet complete, so criticisms of film specifics are premature and irresponsible. The attacks of 9/11 were a pivotal moment in our history, and it is fitting that the debate about the events related to the attacks continue. However, we hope viewers will watch the entire broadcast of the finished film before forming an opinion about it.
Some of this is backpedaling. For ABC to argue that the movie is “drawn from a variety of sources including the 9/11 Commission Report,” is already a concession — in recent weeks, the network’s advertising for the show has said, simply, that the docudrama is “based on the 9/11 Commission Report.” Of course, continuing to insist that this is “not a documentary” rings rather hollow when the writer of the movie is going around telling people that the movie matches the “just-the-facts tone of the report,” and describes the project as “an objective telling of the events of 9/11.” Indeed, if this is just an exaggerated “dramatization,” why did ABC partner with Scholastic to use the film in classrooms?
But the notion that the criticisms are “premature and irresponsible” is just odd.
As I understand the argument, the docudrama isn’t done, so there’s no point in scrutinizing it. That might be somewhat persuasive if ABC hadn’t sent around hundreds of preview copies to conservatives and news outlets for the sole purpose of getting people to talk about it. For ABC, is the far-right praise equally “premature and irresponsible” as the criticisms? Or, more likely, does the network only mind analysis that points out the movie’s flaws?
For that matter, ABC insists the “editing process is not yet complete,” but that’s true in large part because the network is editing scenes that have sparked the most controversy. In other words, the criticism wasn’t “premature,” it was right on time — it’s causing ABC to take a closer look at the project before the network misleads tens of millions of people.
If we follow the official statement’s logic, the only time anyone would be able to complain about this docudrama would be after it had aired and offered an inaccurate and unfair version of the events to Americans who may not know better. I’m afraid ABC has it backwards — the point isn’t to complain after they’ve misled people, it’s to prompt the network to meet its responsibilities and avoid peddling fiction as fact in the first place.
What started as an inconvenient flap is becoming a real debacle for ABC. Today’s disjointed statement only makes matters worse.