Platoon More Than A Movie (2024)

Platoon More Than A Movie (1)


Page 17

Download PDF of this full issue: v17n2.pdf (14.2 MB)

<< 16. Medical Aid For Vietnam18. Radio Hanoi Platoon >>

By Robert Anderson

[Printer-Friendly Version]

—Robert Anderson
Pittsburgh, PA


My friends are asking me what I think of Oliver Stone's new movie "Platoon," since they know I was a demolitions tech in the war. Most of them say the movie seems very realistic, giving them an understanding they didn't have before. I tell them there is more to the movie.

I was in the Air Force, but Military Assistance Command-Vietnam ( MAC-V) needed more support so they used people like me to back up the grunts on the ground. This wasn't what I signed up for but it was my duty, the fighting was getting heavy. This new job put me in close to the action, but luckily, not so close I couldn't get in and out fast. As a demo tech I set up and cleared explosive ordinance, in addition to being on a recovery team for downed aircraft. I was in the same general area, at the same time as the movie "Platoon" is framed.

Any man who went through such intense, chaotic situations as we did will always have an emotional reaction to simple things like a helicopter flying overhead. It brings back a rush of vivid memories of things we'd like to forget. Like my friend Ralph who, while in a bunker, took a 122mm rocket motor in the head, or Joe who took my seat on a chopper and got a round through the floor on the next flight out to a crash site.

We learned to tell the difference in our sleep from a plane or chopper going out or limping back, patrols in trouble or just popping off rounds at shadows. There is an eerie beauty in the jungle at night as flares on parachutes drift with the wind. One night on a flight over North Vietnam we got zeroed-in on by ground fire. I looked down to see huge red tracer rounds—they seemed the size of basketballs-so close, streaking past my C-130 groaning to pull some altitude. We called in an air strike and the countryside lit up like the 4th of July as the F-4's, F-105's, and A-26's dove through the clouds. We often flew as bait, I found out later, to identify targets.

You never forget, or forgive things like that. Bomb craters were everywhere. In the dark, filled with water, you would drown in you feel in one. In "Platoon," the morning after the heavy firefight, enemy bodies are just bulldozed in. Mass graves and death everywhere were burned into our young minds. Friends and families of Vietnam vets should consider these things when vets say they are troubled.

In the theatre the night I went I saw several other vets knee-jerking to the action of the movie, unaware they were reacting. My wife Terry, nurse at a VA hospital, says the movie will be hard for many of the vets to see when it shows in the wards. I don't care to see it again myself.

But I told the mother of a vet friend of mine to see the movie so she would understand a little of what her son went through. He was in a platoon; I don't know how he will handle the movie.

Some conservative critics, like martial artist Chuck Norris, have said "Platoon" unfavorably portrays our troops. True, not everyone had the same experience in the war, but enough men had such similar experiences to that of "Platoon" that the army basically ceased to function. I remember sitting on my bunk late one night listening to Armed Forces Radio tell me that we would all be home by next Christmas. Bob Hope even came with Racquel Welsh to make it true. I got to the show early and sat in the front row, too. A couple of weeks later, after the surprise Tet offensive, I concluded, like many of my friends, that we were not winning this war—something was wrong. Now, Armed Forces Radio was saying we beat back the offensive, but most of us didn't really believe it by then. Besides, Bob hope wasn't there to clean up the bodies.

Like many vets I have stood before the Black Wall in Washington, DC with over 50,000 names finding friends. It came to me there, what size wall it will take to list the names of the one to two million Indochinese killed in the war. I four national trauma is so deep, I think now, how much greater must be theirs? I agree with liberal critics who have pointed out that neither Stone nor any over moviemaker has come close to showing the suffering of the war on both sides.

"Platoon" is excellent in capturing how we Americans saw the people of Indochina. I did my share of passing out candy to kids, digging wells in the dry season and visiting church missions but out troops dehumanized them among ourselves with racist remarks like gooks, dinks, slopes. We kept telling ourselves, the need us! As in the film, we mainly saw the dying and suffering of Americans.

For a long time I was in torment: why did we lost the war? Like many returning vets I threw away all my uniforms. I kept the medals because my father kept his from World War II. I went to a state university on the GI Bill, looking for answers. I came to the conclusion that Stone recounts in "Platoon." We went to war with a mythical theory of containing Communism at the DMZ. Being from the south, the DMZ was the Mason-Dixon line for me. This theory kept us from seeing the Vietnamese were actually fighting their own war of independence. It was 1776 for them. we fought hard, but they fought harder. We Johnson and Nixon, but they had their George Washington in ho Chi Minh. We had become the British redcoats while the National Liberation Front was their Green Mountain boys and the NVA was their Continentally Army. In world history, our two countries really have more in common than we realized.

Today, our Administration continues to see the world as an ideological crusade of West against East, causing them to justify support for things like apartheid, contras and cutting support for our workers and poor here without jobs. In the war, I saw our aid supplies given to the local military who lorded it over their own poor. My candy diplomacy was no match for the military who were taking over the farmers' land. I have noticed the countries where we fought communism or fascism and other local tyrants in the cause of democracy, are the same places our corporations rapidly move for cheap labor. There are no U.S. factories in Vietnam but I think there would be if we had won the war.

At the end of "Platoon" I think Stone says well why America's patriotic young men came back from this murky war throwing away our uniforms and dropping out of society, and why some have never made it back. The narrative says, in effect: we couldn't win; we fought among ourselves because we were the enemy. "Platoon" helps make clear that war is hell, especially if you're fighting for the wrong cause.

<< 16. Medical Aid For Vietnam18. Radio Hanoi Platoon >>
Platoon More Than A Movie (2024)

FAQs

What do Vietnam vets think of Platoon? ›

Some conservative critics, like martial artist Chuck Norris, have said "Platoon" unfavorably portrays our troops. True, not everyone had the same experience in the war, but enough men had such similar experiences to that of "Platoon" that the army basically ceased to function.

What is the famous quote from Platoon? ›

Chris Taylor: Day by day, I struggle to maintain not only my strength but my sanity. It's all a blur. I have no energy to write. I don't know what's right and what's wrong anymore.

What is the message of the movie Platoon? ›

Platoon illustrates, in unflinching detail, the dehumanizing power of war. Barnes is the ultimate killing machine. In his mind, atrocities are justified if they achieve and end and if the victims are collaborators with the enemy. Outside of Vietnam, he would have no existence.

Is Platoon accurate in the movie? ›

The film exaggerates certain elements of the conflict, including the ability of a Vietnamese soldier to run into an American command bunker. Platoon is based on director Oliver Stone's own experiences during the Vietnam War, but evidently takes some creative liberties for the sake of entertainment.

Why were Vietnam vets treated horribly? ›

Those who supported the war resented the veterans for losing the war, which left Vietnam veterans feeling like outsiders to veterans of other wars. The Vietnam War divided American society. Those who served were often treated as traitors instead of heroes, and found it difficult to adjust to life back home.

Why was Platoon controversial? ›

The movie has been criticized for featuring only a small handful of black characters despite the fact, as Da 5 Bloods depicted, that the draft meant Vietnam's young soldiers were more diverse than those of earlier wars.

What is the last line of Platoon? ›

As Taylor is flown out of the decimated area, he writes one last letter to his grandmother. "I think now, looking back, we did not fight the enemy. We fought ourselves. And the enemy is in us." In this moment, Stone captured the contentiousness of the Vietnam era and predicted the reason-free Hell to come.

What does Barnes say in Platoon? ›

Elias was a crusader. Now, I got no fight with any man who does what he's told, but when he don't, the machine breaks down. And when the machine breaks down, we break down. And I ain't gonna allow that in any of you.

Why is Platoon so good? ›

Oliver Stone has recreated the jungle combat and placed a morality tale in the middle of it. It is possibly Charlie Sheen's greatest performance. His innocence at the beginning evolves into a grizzled veteran fighter. The combat is so realistic, and the story is so compelling.

Was Johnny Depp in Platoon? ›

Depp is 11th in the Platoon cast, and it's only after his career took off that people took note of his earlier roles (especially his larger part in Wes Craven's original A Nightmare on Elm Street).

Why was Barnes killed in Platoon? ›

Despite being Pure Evil, Dale Dye (who played Captain Harris in the movie and was Oliver Stone's real-life military advisor) said on the DVD commentary that Barnes was something of a tragic character, being so broken by war and understanding that his war crimes were so unforgivable that he ultimately became a death ...

Was Platoon filmed in Vietnam? ›

Although he wrote scripts for films such as Midnight Express and Scarface, Stone struggled to get the film developed until Hemdale Film Corporation acquired the project along with Salvador. Filming took place in the Philippines in February 1986 and lasted 54 days.

How old was Johnny Depp in the movie Platoon? ›

In his first major role, 22-year-old Johnny Depp played a young Pvt. Gator Lerner. At the time of filming, Depp was dating actress Sherilyn Fenn.

Did Oliver Stone serve in Vietnam? ›

U.S. Army. In April 1967, Stone enlisted in the United States Army and requested combat duty in Vietnam. From September 27, 1967, to February 23, 1968, he served in Vietnam with 2nd Platoon, B Company, 3rd Battalion, 22nd Infantry Regiment, 25th Infantry Division and was twice wounded in action.

How many Americans died in Vietnam? ›

The Vietnam Conflict Extract Data File of the Defense Casualty Analysis System (DCAS) Extract Files contains records of 58,220 U.S. military fatal casualties of the Vietnam War. These records were transferred into the custody of the National Archives and Records Administration in 2008.

How big was a platoon in Vietnam? ›

During the Vietnam War, the size of a United States Army infantry platoon was typically around 40 soldiers. The exact number could vary based on a number of factors, such as the specific mission, the size of the company (which typically had 3-4 platoons), and the overall strength of the unit.

How do Vietnam vets feel about Rambo? ›

Nam Vets Picket Rambo

Cohen, a veteran of the 173rd Airborne, was "upset that Stallone is depicting himself as the voice of Vietnam vets when he neither served in Vietnam or in the armed services.... He exploits our sacrifice in Vietnam as well as the tragedy of the MIA's families."

Does Platoon glorify war? ›

Analysis of the genre

In our opinion Platoon is a film which complies with all the requirements of an Anti-War movie. There is no glorification of the American soldiers, no heroism and rah-rah patriotism which is often shown in American cinemas.

What did Vietnam vets call the enemy? ›

Collectively the United States often called them the Viet Cong. It was commonly shortened to VC, which in military alphabet code was spoken as Victor Charlie. It was further shortened to just Charlie. American soldiers called them Charlie, they called themselves liberators.

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Virgilio Hermann JD

Last Updated:

Views: 5914

Rating: 4 / 5 (41 voted)

Reviews: 80% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Virgilio Hermann JD

Birthday: 1997-12-21

Address: 6946 Schoen Cove, Sipesshire, MO 55944

Phone: +3763365785260

Job: Accounting Engineer

Hobby: Web surfing, Rafting, Dowsing, Stand-up comedy, Ghost hunting, Swimming, Amateur radio

Introduction: My name is Virgilio Hermann JD, I am a fine, gifted, beautiful, encouraging, kind, talented, zealous person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.