By James Bowman on 3.9.05 @ 12:02AM
Apocalypse not now, not ever.
Movies may or may not show us images of reality. The point is
always debatable. What is beyond doubt is that reality is shaped by
the movies. The Sopranos showed us gangsters learning how
to be gangsters from watching The Godfather movies.
Likewise, Gunner Palace, by Michael Tucker and Petra
Epperlein, shows us soldiers learning how to be soldiers from
Vietnam movies. Tucker and Epperlein, who are real life husband and
wife, aim to help them along. In one sequence they show their
subjects -- the "gunners" of the 2/3 Field Artillery headquartered
during the period when Mr. Tucker and his camera dwelt among them
in a Baghdad palace formerly belonging to Uday Hussein -- going on
a 3:00 a.m. raid to the accompaniment of Wagner's "Ride of the
Valkyries." We hear it first on the soundtrack: an advertisement
that the filmmaker is making the link with Apocalypse Now
and therefore to Vietnam and the gung-ho military attitude
popularly supposed to have been forever discredited there. But then
we hear the same music on a makeshift stereo belonging to the men
themselves as they mount up for their raid. They, too, have learned
how to connect themselves with the Vietnamese futility, except
that, for them, acting like crazy Colonel Kilgore in Francis Ford
Coppola's movie is a source of perverse pride.
Perhaps Mr. and Mrs. Tucker see their movie as playing the role
in public perceptions of Iraq that Coppola's played in relation to
Vietnam, but it has to be said that the material their documentary
has to work with is a good deal less impressive than that of the
fictional film. "A good day at 'Gunner Palace' is one where nothing
happens," the film tells us, and we can well believe it. But a good
day for movie-makers is one where lots happens and, unfortunately
for the Tuckers, they didn't get many such days in the filming of
Gunner Palace. Mr. Tucker goes along on a couple of raids,
and he films the grunts doing rap, having a pool party or watching
movies on their laptop computers in their leisure hours, but
somehow he manages to catch on film little more action than the
arrests of a few terrified Iraqis.
He can only tell us about the constant danger the men are in but
we see little or none of it. It's true that one of the guys he
filmed was killed shortly after his first stint of filming, but the
Tuckers were tucked up in their bed back in Germany by that time.
After the end of what President Bush described as "Major Combat,"
Mr. Tucker says he "witnessed the slow rise of what US soldiers
jokingly defined as 'Minor Combat': random firefights, snipers,
roadside bombs and rocket attacks."
Too bad he didn't have his camera with him when he did.
But then he didn't really need it. He already knew what he
wanted to say. As in so much of the journalistic commentary on the
war, the allusion to Vietnam is simply a statement of anti-war
feeling that corresponds to no visible and non-cinematic reality.
Doesn't everyone already know that Vietnam was a stupid, immoral,
crazy war? Well, we learn, Iraq is like that. But the anti-war
stuff, when looked at closely, is pretty superficial. What better
name than "Minor Combat," for example, for what is going on in
Iraq? The filmmakers seem to think this satirical, and perhaps the
men do too. Why wouldn't they? Because of course no combat is minor
if you're the one being killed or wounded in it.
But that just underlines the problem with this film, which is
that limiting the focus to the ordinary soldier's point of view
makes it nearly impossible for the audience to make any sense of
what it is seeing. Who wouldn't be anti-war without some sense of
the big picture that the war's planners and commanders presumably
had in view when they sent the troops into action? All wars look
chaotic and stupid from the middle of them. That's what is meant by
"The Fog of War." In the middle of a battle, everyone experiences
terror and confusion. It is only once you get outside it a little
ways that anything has a hope of making sense. But if your purposes
are political, it makes sense to show only the emotions of soldiers
who have recently been in dangerous situations and who expect to be
in them soon again. The soldiers themselves, encouraged to express
these emotions, are easily led into a very cinematic kind of
self-dramatization, if not self-pity, which is naturally
exacerbated by the presence of the camera seeking, as cameras
always do seek, something that looks like authentic emotion.
For this purpose, rap is also a particularly appropriate art
form, and the filmmakers employ shots of more than one soldier
performing a rap lyric. Again, the merit or lack of it of these
poetic effusions is really beside the point. All that matters is
that it belongs to a style of declamation that is conventionally
supposed to convey authentic feeling. Yet one person's feelings are
no more likely to be more authentic than another's just because
they are put into rhyming -- or, more usually, half-rhyming --
form. It used to be thought honorable for those who had suffered in
war to make light of the fact, or else to shut up about it. Now it
is apparently more honorable for them to "rap" and complain.
What more needs to be said about this film or the media approach
to the war which it represents? The anti-war mentality presumably
sees progress in this evolution of honorable standards, but perhaps
not everyone will agree.
topics:
Movies, Military, Iraq