Isn't it hard to say what the best Nam flick is?
downtownrobbrown
446 Posts
But most Vets will tell you Deer Hunter which I can back. Still Apocalypse Now has so many layers and kills on Blu Ray. What kind of movie begins on "The End".
Your thoughts?
Side Note: Is that Dennis Hopper's best role? Is he even acting?
Your thoughts?
Side Note: Is that Dennis Hopper's best role? Is he even acting?
Comments
these ones get an honorable mention from me:
The Killing Fields (Related)
Eastern Condors
Platoon
For me Apocalypse now (redux!) transcends the genre and is a top ten movie overall.
Completely. Like with coming home it tells the story on the front and back home
I like Deer Hunter although some argue that it's pretentious, boring and racist in its portrayal of the Vietcong. There's also not a single documented case where captured Americans were forced to engage in a game of Russian Roulette.
The ten best Vietnam movies are Apocalypse Now.
Dennis Hopper, at his own admission, was rarely acting in any of his 60s-70s features. All he did was be Dennis Hopper and be high as fuck. His best "acting" (and directing) by far though is in Out Of The Blue which together with Apocalypse Now is far up in my all-time, all-genre top ten.
a great fuckin movie
What does this have to do with anything?
Did someone say they were?
Pretty sure there's one or two documented cases where GIs were tortured, though. In probably worse ways.
I gotta see Off Limits again. I cant recall it that well seeing it the theatre.
The Fog of War is a great doc narrated by defense minister Robert McNamara. A good portion of it is about what was going in internally within the government during the time.
My dad lied about his age and joined up at 17, went straight to Vietnam. He said that some of the scenes in Forest Gump were really good, particularly the way it started raining for months, not a single sight of the Viet Cong, then the rain stopped abruptly only for the jungle to start firing at you. Then panic, and entire mountainsides napalmed for what might've been one sniper. He said it was more realistic than any of the "serious" Vietnam war films from the '70s-'80s that he'd seen.
The US military was a massive fucking joke in his eyes, corrupt as hell, buying heroin from the enemy.
Reagrding Deer Hunter (returning home angle), I was surprised when he described getting back to the US to be despised for something he'd done to escape poverty.
reminds me of a scene from Electra Glide in Blue where the cop pulls overs a truck driver and discovers that he is a recently discharged vet like him. he says something to the effect of ....
"look buddy I'm going to do for you what they did for me when I got back from nam"
"Yeah? thanks man, appreciated....what's that?"
"Nothing. Absolutely nothing, now show me your license!"
peace, stein. . .
historical accuracy shmistorical accuracy.
should we call into question every scene from every movie about a historic event then?
DOES THERE EXIST ONE DOCUMENTED CASE OF A MARINE DRILL INSTRUCTOR DISCOVERING A JELLY DOUGHNUT IN A RECRUITS FOOT LOCKER?
NO?
I'M OUTRAGED.
;-P
good post, i like your metaphor idea.
We Were Soldiers.
Bat 21.
Go Tell the Spartans.
The Boys in Company C.
Tribes.
Wow - You must be the first person I know of that rates Birdy highly like myself.
Modine was superb in that.
So long since I've seen this but cosign on a great movie.
visually this movie was kinda cool, but it was not informative at all IMO. very confusing; maybe that was on purpose.
Modine killed it and Cage was still in his good stage.
Apocalypse Now aside, I'd put this up there with Deer Hunter as contending for second place.
I agree.
Haven't seen Birdy. Just checked out the trailer and it looks heavy, but I don't expect it to be better than AN as a whole.
edit: the amazing thing about AN is that it works whether you've read 'heart of darkness' or not. (though reading the book does make it better.)
Just wanted to cosign the Fog Of War doc. Watched that a few times and it's interesting each time. McNamara makes for an interesting subject with a great perspective into the complexities of war.
Blended with elements from this book...
Yes.
And might as well read this one with it...