By James Bowman on 11.10.06 @ 12:02AM
Our regular critic's take on Clint Eastwood's bore of a tribute to American "hero-victims."
Clint Eastwood's Flags of Our Fathers is the bigger and
more expensive side of a cinematic diptych, the other half of which
is a movie in Japanese, to be released next year, called
Letters From Iwo Jima. It tells the story of General
Tadamichi Kuribayashi, the Japanese defender of Iwo Jima who knew
his cause was doomed but who fought on bravely, tenaciously,
skillfully and almost to the last man. Apparently, heroism of this
classic type is OK for the Japanese, but it won't do for us
Americans. We only want the victim-hero who has lately become the
stock-in-trade of the Hollywood war movie, and it is that familiar
figure which makes Flags of Our Fathers a bore. True, the
scenes of combat are often gripping, but there are far too few of
them. And they are impossible to make any sense of -- even as much
sense as the men themselves must have been able to make of their
situation. Most of the film consists of scenes set in stateside
America in the spring of 1945 as three victim-heroes of the
flag-raising on Iwo Jima go on a war bond tour.
The number of things wrong with this concept are too many to
count. The three men -- two Marines, Rene Gagnon (Jesse Bradford)
and Ira Hayes (Adam Beach) and a Navy corpsman, John "Doc" Bradley
(Ryan Phillippe) -- are engaging enough characters, but we see too
little of them that's not involved with the emotional after-effects
of combat. In effect, they become their neuroses. Their
disillusionment with being feted as heroes naturally goes hand in
hand with what we learned well after 1945 to call Post-Traumatic
Stress Disorder, as both produce picturesque, pity-inducing
suffering. The trouble is that we've seen it so often before.
Traumatized soldiers who shed their boyish illusions of honor and
glory and heroism are now even more routine in the movies than
those illusions themselves were in the patriotic pictures of the
1940s. We get it, all right? The American movie audience lost its
innocence so long ago it doesn't even remember what innocence was
like anymore. You might almost start to wonder if it ever existed
in the first place.
Even in its set-up, the war-bond tour is bogus. We are asked to
believe that the country is on the brink of bankruptcy and in
danger of being unable to go on with the war unless the bond tour
raises enough money, which is ridiculous. But Mr. Eastwood and his
screenwriters,William Broyles Jr. and Paul Haggis (adapting the
book by James Bradley and Ron Powers), have to hype the tour
because they are also hyping one of the movie's central
pseudo-profundities: that the fate of nations depends on a single
photograph. The comparison that somebody makes in the movie is with
the photograph during the Vietnam war of the South Vietnamese
officer executing a Viet Cong prisoner. This was supposed to have
turned the American public against the war and led to America's
eventual pull-out. Doubtless the media, of which the movie business
may be considered to be an offshoot, would like to believe in their
own importance to this extent, but neither this photograph nor the
one of the flag-raising on Iwo Jima had anything like the
importance that Flags of Our Fathers attributes to
them.
Even more disastrous is the ponderous and heavy-handed
moralizing Clint Eastwood has gone in for in his late directorial
career, at least since Unforgiven (1992). In fact, the
moralism of Flags is substantially the same as that of
Unforgiven and boils down to the sort of "message" that
Sam Goldwyn used to say ought to be left to Western Union: killing
people, and watching people die, leaves a man permanently scarred.
Yet Clint doesn't mention that it's not all down-side, since these
scars also bring status. In particular, they admit the man to a
freemasonry of grief and bitter experience that allows him to look
down with a sort of pitying contempt on everyone who stands outside
it. Of the civilians or stateside military men our three heroes
encounter on their tour, only the parents of dead comrades are at
all sympathetic. The rest are giggly or glad-handing ninnies. They
Just Don't Understand! Sob! And so our victim-heroes are further
victimized by being isolated from society by their experiences.
Politicians, of course, come in for a particular slating. Even
President Harry S. Truman (David Patrick Kelly), a man who in
real-life saw some pretty serious combat himself in World War I, is
made to look like an idiot.
The summit of idiocy comes as the three men are made to climb a
Mt Suribachi made of papier mache erected in the middle of Soldier
Field, Chicago, and plant a flag on the top as a brass band plays
patriotic marches, fireworks go off and thousands cheer. "That's
show-business," says their handler, Bud Gerber (John Slattery),
cheerfully. In the unlikely event you need to have it pointed out
to you, this is supposed to be a very bad thing. Though he has been
a director for 35 years and an actor for more than half a century,
Mr. Eastwood apparently believes that putting on a show is a
shameful thing -- at least if it is a show about heroism. Heroism,
for him, means suffering, not triumph or glory. "Maybe there's no
such thing as heroes," goes the other of the film's two principal
pseudo-profundities. Pishposh! There's an idea nobody in Hollywood
has ever thought of before!
No one would mind it too much if we had been allowed to take the
moral or leave it alone. But Mr. Eastwood apparently thinks we're
as dumb as Mr. and Miss American Everyman of 1945 and need to be
hit over the head with it again and again. Most clumsily, as the
three heroes stand on top of their fake mountain in Chicago and
watch the fireworks go off, the film fades to an Iwo Jima
flashback: the mountain becomes the real mountain, the fireworks
become real bombs and rocketry and the men become their former
selves, terrified in the middle of a nightmare landscape. This
happens not once but twice, and there are literally dozens of other
cuts back and forth between fat and fatuous civvy street and the
allegedly real world of death and destruction that the men
have come from but have been unable to leave behind. Do you think
these switchbacks are meant to tell us something?
If you're anything like me, you will become dizzy and
disoriented from so much needless shuttling between the two
contrasting worlds. The effect is also hopelessly to compromise the
narrative line that might otherwise have given context and meaning
to the emotions of terror and grief on the battlefield and disgust
and disillusionment back in the States. Just as you start to be
engaged by the scenes of battle, you will find yourself back in the
unfeeling civilian world, on a train speeding through the night
with the supposititious heroes feeling sorry for themselves. Just
as you're getting interested -- as interested as you can -- get in
their post-combat and post-war lives, you are whisked away again to
witness some fresh battlefield horror which (count on it) is going
to come back to haunt them in after-years. The representation of
emotion may be what the movies are all about, but when it is
emotion this detached from its non-emotional context it becomes
merely wearying.
Lord knows, I don't want to give the impression that I am
ridiculing a movie that goes to such extraordinary lengths to show
respect for those who have so bravely suffered and died. But I felt
about it rather as I did about Saving Private Ryan, that
perhaps there's such a thing as being too respectful;
perhaps showing too much respect for the suffering is not to show
enough respect for the man. For if we suppose, as some of us still
do, that these men suffered for something -- to wit, their
duty, their honor, their country -- don't these thing deserve just
a little bit of respect as well? Duty and honor are never mentioned
in Flags of Our Fathers, and the country it shows us
doesn't deserve the sufferers' sacrifices. If their suffering is
all they've got to show for it, I call that demeaning, not
respectful.
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