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Brandon King (Ryan Phillippe, left) and Steve Shriver (Channing Tatum) are two best friends trying to cope with the return to civilian life in Paramount Pictures' drama "Stop-Loss.

There wasn’t much on director Kimberly Peirce’s resume to suggest she would be the ideal filmmaker to take a shot at making an Iraq War drama. But something about 9-11 moved the director of “Boys Don’t Cry” (1999) to postpone her years-long struggle to make a film about an infamous Hollywood murder and take on the war and its impact on the home front, on her “people” - among them, her younger brother.


“It felt personal, this war,” says Peirce, who grew up in Miami and rural Pennsylvania. “I saw this seismic change in the culture, young people signing up for the military. My younger brother signed up. It really hit home then. I wondered what they were going through in combat and what it was like for them coming home.”


“Stop-Loss” is the movie that came from her wondering. A film that takes us from house-to-house, room-to-room combat in Tikrit to a rural Texas homecoming and its aftermath, “Stop-Loss” is a film that has Peirce’s “Boys Don’t Cry” grasp of rural culture and mores. And it has bang-up combat sequences, “an impressively staged and powerfully kinetic battle in Tikrit,” says Variety critic Joe Leydon.


“I did a huge amount of studying how I wanted the combat to look,” says Peirce, 40. “I’m a big fan of war films and went back through all these great World War I, World War II films, onward - `All Quiet on the Western Front,’ `Best Years of Our Lives,’ `Apocalypse Now,’ `Coming Home,’ `Deerhunter,’ `Patton,’ I love these movies.”


Peirce wanted to make her “war movie.” She says she wanted to make a comment on how the most patriotic among us, those who enlisted, are being penalized for that patriotism by the military’s “stop-loss” program, not allowing soldiers to serve their time and opt out. Most importantly, Peirce wanted the chance to show her respect for a part of the culture often mocked in the media and in film - small-town Southern patriotism and gun culture. As in last fall’s “In the Valley of Elah,” she wanted to depict that world without judging it.


“The more I talked to soldiers, the more I realized I had to find a way to dramatize that culture,” Peirce says. “And while city kids are patriotic and have signed up, there’s something different about the South. That’s obvious, and it is fascinating. I like stories about the heartland, and in this case, Texas, where the value system feels more real and authentic, somehow. I wanted to capture that and give it the dignity it deserves.


“That small-town rural life of guys drinking, target shooting, that’s kind of the world I grew up in. Boys will be boys, especially in the country. I always related to that. They’re like my family.”


The reviews aren’t all raves, and “Stop-Loss” will be facing the long box-office odds that every other Iraq War/War on Terror film, from “In the Valley of Elah” to “Rendition” to “Lions for Lambs,” has faced. Peirce is braced for that.


“I think this is a totally different movie from those other movies about Iraq. It’s from the soldiers’ point of view. And while we spend time with these characters in combat, it’s really a story about relationships between the men and their families when they return.


“And this movie is geared toward a younger audience, because that’s who’s fighting the war. We didn’t cast movie stars. We cast boys, young actors (Ryan Phillippe, Channing Tatum, and Joseph Gordon-Levitt) who aren’t stars but who are the right age. This movie is more inside that culture.


“I guess what I’m hoping is that if you’ve got a good story and a good bunch of boys, people will come see it.”

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Realism doesn't make a better movie, just a more sensitive one.
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In Brandon's confrontations with his own delusions, Stop-Loss focuses on unhealthy rituals of manhood and male community recalling Peirce's Boys Don't Cry.
1 Jan 1995
As the charismatic protagonist in Kimberly Peirce's Boys Don't Cry, Brandon embodies the ongoing dilemma of masculine identity. This dilemma is exacerbated by the fact that, when you see him riding that pickup truck, some fifteen minutes into the film, you already know that 18-year-old Brandon's efforts to act like a boy are complicated by the fact that he is, biologically speaking, a girl, born Teena Brandon.
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