Movie Review: Act of Valor

I watched it today. I thought it was a very good movie. I don't pretend to understand the inner workings of the world, so I can't really comment on that part of the movie. But it did tug at my heartstrings. I saw grown men leave the theater in tears. I was one of them as well.
 
I watched it today. I thought it was a very good movie. I don't pretend to understand the inner workings of the world, so I can't really comment on that part of the movie. But it did tug at my heartstrings. I saw grown men leave the theater in tears. I was one of them as well.

Intended reaction was intended.
 
FFS can no one just leave politics aside and enjoy a damn movie? No wonder people think we're crazy.
 
FFS can no one just leave politics aside and enjoy a damn movie? No wonder people think we're crazy.

Is this a joke? We aren't crazy; they are crazy! There has never been a film that wasn't propaganda. "Field of Dreams" was a propaganda piece put forward by the Iowa board of tourism. "The Big Lebowski" was made and distributed to increase the bottom line of Vodka, cream, and kahlua companies. We must resist their brain control!
 
Yeah,,



Just enjoy the entertainment.
Ya bunch of nuts.

:(


Nothing in Act of Valor made me want to join the military, nor support the cause for overseas involvement. In fact, without giving away too many spoilers, a lot of it points in the direction that Ron Paul wants to take us.
 
Is this a joke? We aren't crazy; they are crazy! There has never been a film that wasn't propaganda. "Field of Dreams" was a propaganda piece put forward by the Iowa board of tourism. "The Big Lebowski" was made and distributed to increase the bottom line of Vodka, cream, and kahlua companies. We must resist their brain control!

Exactly right, and Johnny English was created to increase recruitment into secret agent organizations.
 
Is this a joke? We aren't crazy; they are crazy! There has never been a film that wasn't propaganda. "Field of Dreams" was a propaganda piece put forward by the Iowa board of tourism. "The Big Lebowski" was made and distributed to increase the bottom line of Vodka, cream, and kahlua companies. We must resist their brain control!

Is this really true, I hope I just didn't fall of the hook line and sinker trick.......
 
The families left behind.

See they should be angry!! Angry our government is pissing in everyone's mess kit in the middle east and we send our fathers, brothers, and sisters to die for whom? They aren't fighting for our freedoms--just ask those veterans who came home and those trying to get their lives back in order.
 
If you mean, The Green Berets, it received wonderful reviews. It was a fantastic movie.


The Green Berets (1968)
Screen: 'Green Berets' as Viewed by John Wayne:War Movie Arrives at the Warner Theater
By RENATA ADLER
Published: June 20, 1968

"THE GREEN BERETS" is a film so unspeakable, so stupid, so rotten and false in every detail that it passes through being fun, through being funny, through being camp, through everything and becomes an invitation to grieve, not for our soldiers or for Vietnam (the film could not be more false or do a greater disservice to either of them) but for what has happened to the fantasy-making apparatus in this country. Simplicities of the right, simplicities of the left, but this one is beyond the possible. It is vile and insane. On top of that, it is dull.

The film, directed by John Wayne and nominally based on a novel by Robin Moore, has no hero. It is vaguely about some Green Berets, led by John Wayne, trying to persuade Wayne's idea of a liberal journalist (David Janssen) that this war is a fine thing for Vietnam and for America. The movie has human props taken from every war film ever made: a parachute jump; an idea of Vietcong soldiers, in luxury, uniform, champagne and caviar, apparently based on the German high command; a little Asian orphan named Hamchunk, pronounced Hamchuck but more like Upchuck than anything; battle scenes somewhere between "The Red Badge of Courage" and "The Dirty Dozen"; a pathetically dying dog.

There is inadvertent humor: "He's dying," a Negro medic says, thoughtfully spooning Jim Beam bourbon down the throat of an elderly Oriental. "Poor old thing can't even keep his rice down any more." What is clearly an Indian extra in a loincloth somehow straggles in among the montagnards. A Vietcong general is dragged from a bed of sin (which, through an indescribable inanity of the plot, the Green Berets have contrived for him) with his trousers on. He is subsequently drugged and yanked off into the sky on a string dangling from a helicopter. A Green Beret points out to the journalist some American-made punji sticks (the movie is obsessed with punji sticks): "Yup," the Green Beret says, "it's a little trick we learned from Charlie. But we don't dip them in the same stuff he does."

What the movie is into is another thing entirely. What is sick, what is an outrage and a travesty is that while it is meant to be an argument against war opposition—while it keeps reiterating its own line at every step, much as soap operas keep recapitulating their plots—it seems so totally impervious to any of the questions that it raises. It is so full of its own caricature of patriotism that it cannot even find the right things to falsify. No acting, no direction, no writing, no authenticity, of course. But it is worse. It is completely incommunicado, out of touch. It trips something that would outrage any human sensibility, like mines, at every step and staggers on.

The first Green Beret comes on speaking German, to show his versatility in languages. When the VC have just been sprayed with flames, a Green Beret is asked about his apparent affinity for this kind of thing. "When I was a kid," he says modestly, "my dad gave me a chemistry set. And it got bigger than both of us." When the VC, nonetheless, win the Special Forces camp in hand-to-hand combat, a soldier calls in air support. "It'll only take a minute," he says, like a dentist, as the VC are mowed down from the air. The journalist, "the former skeptic about the war," the press kit synopsis chooses to say at this point, "leaves to write about the heroic exploits of the American and South Vietnamese forces."

The point is that Wayne is using spoken German, lunatic chemistry sets, machine killing of men who have won fairly hand-to-hand, without apparently noticing that this is not exactly the stuff of which heroic fantasies are made. This is crazy. If the left-wing extremist's nightmare of what we already are has become the right-wing extremist's ideal of what we ought to be we are in steeper trouble than anyone could have imagined. The movie opened yesterday at the Warner Theater.


THE GREEN BERETS, screenplay by James Lee Barrett, based on the novel by Robin Moore; directed by John Wayne and Ray Kellogg; produced by Michael Wayne; a Batjac Production presented by Warner Bros.-Seven Arts. At the Warner Theater, Broadway at 47th Street. Running time: 141 minutes.
Col. Mike Kirby . . . . . John Wayne
George Beckworth . . . . . David Janssen
Sergeant Petersen . . . . . Jim Hutton
Sergeant Muldoon . . . . . Aldo Ray
Doc McGee . . . . . Raymond St. Jacques
Colonel Morgan . . . . . Bruce Cabot
Colonel Cal . . . . . Jack Soo
Captain Nim . . . . . George Takei
Jamison . . . . . Patrick Wayne
Sergeant Provo . . . . . Luke Askew
Lin . . . . . Irene Tsu
 
Why do I care what some idiot you posted thought about the movie, Donnay? I saw it. Several times and I thought it was a very good movie.

Have you seen it? Or, are you just taking someone else's word for it?
 
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Why do I care what some idiot you posted thought about the movie, Donnay? I saw it. Several times and I thought it was a very good movie.

Have you seen it? Or, are you just taking someone else's word for it?

I've seen it. Several times. that review is pretty accurate, and I like John Wayne.
It was glorifying a war we had absolutely no business being in ( I was also a volunteer at the time) and was released to counter the Anti-War sentiment in this country..
To sell war.
 
Why do I care what some idiot you posted thought about the movie, Donnay? I saw it. Several times and I thought it was a very good movie.

Have you seen it? Or, are you just taking someone else's word for it?

I posted it to show that the reviews were not all that good.

I am, and still am, a huge John Wayne fan--mostly his westerns. I have seen all of his movies, several times over, I do not think the Green Berets was on of his best, nevertheless.

It is clear that the Military Industrial Complex has been in bed with Hollywood for a very long time trying to sell the wars. I am sure John thought he was doing the right thing, then. It's too bad he didn't do a movie about Smedley D. Butler.
 
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