No Stone Unturned (2017) Poster

(I) (2017)

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10/10
Powerful, must-see documentary.
joemurraycalder19 October 2017
A very brave, must-see documentary about state murders in the North of Ireland carried out by the British Army and loyalist police force RUC now renamed the PSNI, on Irish Catholics. Heartbreaking. We rarely see a documentary as brave as this and should be compulsive viewing to all those who wish a deeper understanding into the war in the North of Ireland. Powerful.
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10/10
Compelling A Must See
The_Boxing_Cat4 April 2018
This documentary is a fine example of how to approach such a serious subject matter.

Alex Gibney was masterful in the way he dealt with these families...such tenderness and heartfelt sympathy. Yet he dove in headfirst on his path to find the truth.

I will be on the lookout for more from Mr. Gibney.

God bless these souls and bring peace to their hearts and minds.

Z3
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A messy Civil War, and a sincere documentary about a famous massacre.
JohnDeSando8 January 2018
"Anyone born and bred in Northern Ireland can't be too optimistic." Seamus Heaney

At times the civil war in Northern Ireland reaching some sort of apex or denouement in the '90's made me aware of how bloody and divisive ours must have been in the 1860's. Alex Gibney's documentary, No Stone Unturned, investigates the mass murder of six Irishmen in a pub as they watched the World Cup in 1994. It's not pretty, and it's still not solved.

Gibney's photography and portraits are first rate, another Errol Morris in the making, as he places us in a small town seemingly remote from the IRA bombings and the intense protectionism of those loyal to Great Britain, occupying Northern Ireland with an iron grip. Some shots are bloody bodies being carried away from a bombing, some are ironic (small kids looking at a crouching soldier from around a corner), but all are made more horrible from the endless battle with no end.

The re-creation of the murder in the pub is gladly elliptical but memorable enough for the director to return to its images several times. The invasion into the pub feels like a home invasion, and maybe it is because the Irish team is about to win the cup.

Cutting away consistently between emotion-laden testimony to the consistently-blocked investigation, Gibney confuses more than clarifies, and even in the final report is unable to cast the murderers other than lucky to have a colluded circumstance that the police will not set straight because they are part of the cover up.

Seeing this expert but flawed doc will bring back the horror of the conflict in Northern Ireland, its inscrutability, and the dedication of the Irish commoners to make peace. I don't know why I demand clarity when chaos rules. That Gibney got right.
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10/10
A timely reminder
ant_home1 June 2023
I had to watch this via YouTube after a recommendation from a friend in NI. You can't watch it, or even pay to watch it in the UK and that kind of says all you need to know. It taught me a lot about the troubles in Northern Ireland and what many of us suspected was going on behind the scenes. I hope this helps to bring some sense of justice to those poor families and everyone else affected by this atrocity. It also opens a lot of questions about who funded the arms, where they were coming from, and who (including British government) would turn a convenient blind eye rather than see justice through. Would highly recommend and hauntingly timely with what's happening in the UK at the moment.
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