We Were Soldiers
Director: Randall Wallace
Cast: Mel Gibson, Sam Elliot, Madeleine Stowe, Barry Pepper, Greg Kinnear, Chris Klein, Keri Russell
(Paramount Pictures, 2002) Rated: R
Release date: 1 March 2002 (US); 8 March 2002 (UK)
by Cynthia Fuchs
PopMatters Film and TV Editor
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Beginnings
It wasn't so long ago that U.S. war movies opened like
other movies, with premieres attended by movie stars and
journalists who describe what they're wearing. Nowadays,
the context is changed, and war movies like Black Hawk
Down are opening with solemnity and a sense of mission,
with ceremonies attended by non-Hollywood notables like
Donald Rumsfeld or Dick Cheney and the Mrs. The latest
movie to garner such attention is We Were Soldiers,
which star Mel Gibson screened for G.W. at the White House
on 27 February.
Using big, splashy Hollywood movies to promote patriotic
spirit and domestic enthusiasm for U.S. war-making is
hardly a new concept: think John Wayne, Audie Murphy, Gary
Cooper, even Yankee Doodle Dandy Cagney. Though the thorny
U.S. involvements in Korea and Vietnam (goodness, even
Hiroshima) made such high profile self-love projects more
difficult, they did not make them impossible. Aggressively
anti-war in Vietnam movies were, of course, extremely
visible -- from Taxi Driver (1976), The Deer
Hunter (1978), and Apocalypse Now (1979), to
Platoon (1986), Full Metal Jacket (1987), and
Boyz N the Hood (1991), not to mention the less
visible, but influential Oscar-winning documentary,
Hearts and Minds (1974): no one who's seen it can
forget General Westmoreland observing that the "Oriental"
lacks a Westerner's regard for human life, while the film
cuts to a Vietnamese woman throwing herself into her dead
son's grave. Released just before the fall of Saigon in
April 1975, this was a chilling image of the man who had
been leading U.S. troops into battle.
Today, wars tend to be fought without the ideological
padding of such overt racism, though carefully inculcated,
dehumanizing bigotry remains the most efficient way to get
young soldiers to kill other young soldiers (and
"collateral damage"). But war movies (with the notable
exception of David O. Russell's Three Kings) still
make out like any old racism will do: the "enemy" in recent
movies -- and on CNN and Fox News -- looks exotic,
inscrutable, and overly committed to a cause that remains
unfathomable to innocently by-standing "Westerners" (read:
mostly white, mostly middle to upper class, mostly U.S.).
It's no surprise that those movies released after 9-11 are
being deployed to boost wartime "morale," even though they
were plainly conceived and completed before 9-11: these
include The Last Castle, Behind Enemy Lines,
Black Hawk Down, Hart's War, and We Were
Soldiers (films must plainly be "historical" to be
counted as serious). Each movie reframes a past U.S. war by
revising popular conceptions (for instance, that the
Mogadishu raid was disastrous, or that the Nazis were the
only outright racists during WWII). And, at least in the
cases of BHD and We Were Soldiers, the
subjects are complex, confusing moral and military
engagements, if not outright failures, however you define
such a thing in terms of war, where, arguably, no one can
"win."
Mel Gibson himself seems to be under few illusions
regarding war: "It's all about money, isn't it?" he says in
Esquire (February 2002). And yet, the once-and-ever Road
Warrior clearly understands the values and functions of
representing it in particular ways, having worked hard to
get "it" right in Gallipoli, Braveheart, and
The Patriot. It's perhaps instructive that he played
characters who were part of the more or less "underdog"
contingents in each of these films, fighting back against
notoriously oppressive regimes, while in We Were
Soldiers, well, he's part of the invasive outsiders'
force. As Gibson puts it, the North Vietnamese "had a
grievance. I mean, what would you do if someone came
into your country?"
This is surely a question worth asking, repeatedly, even
now, when the U.S. is in the long-term process of
responding to such an attack. But while Gibson (no doubt
sincerely) believes that We Were Soldiers is an
anti-war movie, and not only an anti-war in Vietnam movie,
it is also being used otherwise by the powers that be, or
perhaps better, the powers that can't help themselves.
Touted and received as a movie about heroic soldiering,
it's not going to convince anyone that the U.S. needs to
reconsider the upcoming increase in the Pentagon's budget.
On this, Gibson is right: war is about money (the WTC and
Pentagon assaults demonstrated that the so-called "first
world" is not the only body that thinks this way). And
money is always connected, intimately and painfully, to
property and payback.
Against this dense and difficult background, We Were
Soldiers is, above all, an earnest film, working
overtime (and a long time -- at almost three hours) not to be a
standard U.S. war movie where the good (white) boys fight
against diabolical "others." Though it is most certainly
about U.S. troops' fear and bravery when sent on an insane,
impossible operation, it also attempts to show the
Vietnamese as noble adversaries. So, while Gibson's Lt.
Colonel Hal Moore and men roar around up top, the North
Vietnamese regulars (NVA) appear in tunnels, planning their
resistance and preparing for battle (they even have
subtitles so you can understand them, and one has a photo
of a girlfriend that he carries with him into battle -- and
this dooms him, of course, as it would any movie soldier),
and then, waging able and brutal war against their enemies.
While this representation isn't revolutionary, it is more
respectful than that in the best known anti-war movies set
in Vietnam -- from the most heartfelt (Platoon), to
the most rock 'n' roll (Apocalypse Now), to the most
aggressively intelligent (Full Metal Jacket).
Still, there are times when the film just can't get out of
its own way. For one thing, it only takes this "equal"
deference business so far. This is likely a "money" thing,
too. Surely, it's easier to sell a movie (during wartime
and not) that takes a "rousing," pick-a-side approach, than
one caught up in balanced viewpoints. Viewers, the common
wisdom goes, need to be able to root for a team. To this
end, Randall Wallace's We Were Soldiers tends to
fall back, too easily, on its star (who also powered
Wallace's Braveheart). Gibson's Lt. Colonel Hal
Moore (whose book, We Were Soldiers Once... And
Young, written with journalist Joe Galloway, is the
film's basis) is a rock of a character, gallant, tender,
smart, and above all, heroic -- when he walks through
gunfire and explosions, he seems awesome. (But when Robert
Duvall's Colonel Kilgore does the same thing in
Apocalypse Now, he looks a little psychotic.)
This use of the rally-round-him hero is to be expected in
a commercial-minded movie, but it's still disappointing,
since We Were Soldiers does raise some dicey
questions (even if it does mostly drop them). It opens on a
battlefield, the camera panning the Ia Drang Valley in
South Vietnam's Central Highlands. (Actually, this bit of
scenery has been shot near Fort Hunter Liggett in Central
California, U.S. filming as in Vietnam is still... how to
say?... impractical.) This image is accompanied by an
earnest voice-over by reporter Joe Galloway (Barry Pepper),
asserting that what follows is a "tribute to the people who
died" in the legendary battle of Landing Zone X-Ray, 14-16
November 1965, the first major battle between U.S. troops
and the NVA. The people who died, in other words, include
Vietnamese as well as Americans.
To tell the story, Galloway continues, he must "go back to
the beginning," represented here as French troops who are
about to be chased out of Vietnam in 1954 (after
maintaining some form of colonialist fight with the
Vietnamese since the 1850s). The camera continues to move
across the landscape, as a French captain (Nicholas
Hosking) lists the reasons he hates the war he's in: the
"fucking heat," the "fucking grass," the "fucking country."
Within seconds, the captain is killed.
This choice of "beginning" illustrates the dangerous sense
of superiority and entitlement that convinced all varieties
of invaders they would march into Vietnam and "win" (even
if the choice does omit many other possible "beginnings" --
for examples, Vietnam's wars with China, Cambodia, and
Japan, whom the U.S. used as to set up a "common enemy"
connection between a youthful and democratic-minded Ho Chi
Minh, whom the U.S. would then abandon to the French... and
etc.) This choice also conveniently leaves the French
bearing the bad colonialists' weight and lets the film's
U.S. heroes-to-be operate without such political baggage.
These heroes -- the Army's First Cavalry Division
(Airmobile) -- are delivered by helicopters into the
horrendous ("hot") LZ, where they are faced with all kinds
of gun, tank, and missile fire, then picked up and carried
away afterwards, whether dead, wounded, or alive. As crazy
as it sounds, this plot only hints at the absurdity facing
U.S. soldiers told to "take" ground and then abandon it,
kill thousands (some 2,000 Vietnamese died during the two
day battle, along with 79 U.S. casualties), and then go to
another site and kill some more. And the film spends a good
long time underscoring the terrors of this particular
battle, as it also represents what's to come. And the
terrors come pretty relentlessly, as soon as the guys are
dropped off those choppers (one piloted by Greg Kinnear, an
alarming thought in itself, but he does well enough in the
role of Major Bruce "Snakeshit" Crandall, whose central
function appears to be showing his increasing weariness,
disgust, and dread as the hours wear on).
Crandall, as well as Moore's right-hand guy, Sergeant
Major Plumley (Sam Elliot), and the kids who come along
(Chris Klein's 2nd Lt. Jack Geoghegan, Edwin Morrow's Pvt.
Godboldt, Mark McCracken's "Too Tall" Freeman) end up
looking bland compared to Moore's towering charisma. That
this performance includes recognition that war is hell and
Moore, though he's very good at it, hates it too, is part
of the formula. He tells his men before they leave that he
will leave no one behind, that they will all come back with
him, dead or alive. It's a heck of a speech, and Moore
delivers it with a pride that's part paternal and part
self-involved. You get the feeling that this is one
reluctant hero is totally ready and even determined to be
exactly where he is.
There are teary eyes all round the high school football
stadium where he delivers his speech, from the men as well
as the women. His wife Julie (Madeleine Stowe) is
especially sad, perhaps because she knows that he's been
obsessively studying Custer's Last Stand (this is not a
little distressing, as is the fact that he leaves her in
the middle of the night without waking her to say goodbye:
must be a stoic soldier thing). Moore is also a superb dad
to five kids (I think I counted five), including one
adorable cherub in a nightgown who asks him to define
"war," which he does by saying that it's "something that
shouldn't happen, but it does." She's not quite satisfied,
so he continues, it's "when some people try to take the
lives of other people, and my job is to go over there and
try and stop 'em." Yup.
Moore doesn't so much develop during the film as he is
proved right, repeatedly: he's right about the bad idea of
sending inexperienced men into battle, he's right about the
bad idea of using choppers in an area the planners don't
know, and he's right that "some people try to take the
lives of other people," and that he tries to stop 'em. But
We Were Soldiers is not about tactics or even
character. It's about the demands of war that no one can
imagine ahead of time. There is really no way to describe
the "job." So the women (including Jack Geoghegan's
pregnant wife, played by Keri Russell) are left behind to
contemplate their imminent losses, while finding ways to
spend their time at the base (planning lunches, locating
the best off-base markets) and peering out their windows,
dreading the cab driver who will arrive with "Regret to
Inform" telegrams in hand (ironically, the U.S. military
was notoriously terrible at handling death).
Such scenes are harrowing. But the film's time and place --
1965 Georgia -- means that it must address at least a
smidgen of the women's daily lives, including racism. That
it deals with racism via the women's group rather than the
men is an remarkable choice in itself, and, like the choice
of the war's "beginning," it's slightly disingenuous. The
Big Moment comes when one of the white wives, chattering in
front of the group's only black wife, mistakes a "Whites
Only" sign for a direction as to what laundry goes in what
machine. That she must be instructed as to the actual
meaning of the sign is upsetting, of course, but the wives
are all so mutually supportive and sweet that she doesn't
feel too horrible.
But the weird part is that you don't feel too bad either.
And if anything, this scene should make you cringe. That
this is a myth that pervaded (and continues to pervade)
white America has everything to do with the longer book's
title, We Were Soldiers Once... and Young. Naivete
is not a good excuse for ignorance or racism. The film --
in its ad campaign as well as in its thematic focus --
clearly ants to include domestic effects of war (the words
that most soldiers say when they die on the battlefield
are, "Tell my wife I love her"). And so this scene with the
wives stands out, as one where the reasons that U.S.
soldiers go to war -- to defend freedom and civil rights --
were, then and now, in constant jeopardy, at home as well
as "over there."