More reading on this documentary can be found here. I think this is the most real documentary I have ever seen, which makes sense considering it's all real footage and interviews conducted in Italy.
This documentary avoids the political side of the war, it avoids attaching any narrative to it other than these are the people following the war. This is what they deal with on a regular basis. You see the war as they saw it, the footage has immense power, the interviews are emotional, and it attaches faces and personas to a conflict that doesn't seem to go away. It was a reminder that there are people over there fighting, even if the reports focus on the political side of things.
Edit: I want our politicians and powerful members of society to see things like this. I want them to see what they're subjecting people by sending people to war in foreign countries. I'm fortunate enough to not have any immediate family members in the armed forces, but this still sickens me. Send them into an area like this for a week and I'm sure they'll be thinking twice about the decision to have decade long conflicts that decimate parts of a generation.
The last note that I want to make is this: These film-makers put themselves right in the middle of the action to put this together. It's not just them - it's other people like them, be it documentary makers or photo-journalists. They're constantly in danger just like the soldiers you see being filmed. One of the people who made this film, Tim Hetherington was killed while covering the Libyan Civil War. Without people like him we wouldn't have first hand accounts in mainstream media sources of what is happening in conflict zones. From this came RISC, Reporters Instructed in Saving Colleagues. I'm going to be doing more research into this organization and hopefully you all will too.
Okay, I'm done being preachy. Sorry, but this doc really has affected me.
Edit: ctech4285, I updated the link.