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This documentary film features on one of the most unfortunate cases in the middle east. Barely any months back, a gathering of youthful who settled in the desert and thought about themselves as jihadists, did three detonations horrendous auto bombs at the west in downtown Riyadh. They intend to fall the Saudi government, yet there are dependably who protect the home.
As eye-opening as it is disturbing, with little in the way of commentary, it's a patchwork of raw, brutal images that weave a chilling narrative of youthful naivety and adventure being warped into death and destruction.
This is frequently a difficult film to watch, but it remains an essential historical document, with something to say about the banality of evil and the way naïve young men are radicalised.
Although some of its structural manipulations seem a little dubious, this even-handed documentary remains a chilling examination of contemporary terror networks.
Terrorists exist, now, and we're still trying to understand their motives. Path of Blood peels back the black masks and gives us a visceral and frightful look.
For 90 random and often bloody minutes, we're dunked into the raw life of Al Qaeda. A little of this can go a long way, yet "Path of Blood" does have a verité "thriller" element.