I saw American Sniper last night, and hated it slightly less
than I expected to. Like most Clint Eastwood movies – and I like Clint
Eastwood movies for the most part – it's a simple, well-lit little fairy
tale with the nutritional value of a fortune cookie that serves up a
neatly-arranged helping of cheers and tears for target audiences, and
panics at the thought of embracing more than one or two ideas at any
time.
This is the same Hollywood culture that turned the horror and
divisiveness of the Vietnam War era into a movie about a
platitude-spewing doofus with leg braces who in the face of terrible
moral choices eats chocolates and plays Ping-Pong. The message of Forrest Gump was
that if you think about the hard stuff too much, you'll either get AIDS
or lose your legs. Meanwhile, the hero is the idiot who just shrugs and
says "Whatever!" whenever his country asks him to do something crazy.
Forrest Gump pulled in over half a billion and won Best Picture. So what exactly should we have expected from American Sniper?
Not much. But even by the low low standards of this business, it still manages to sink to a new depth or two.
The thing is, the mere act of trying to make a typically Hollywoodian
one-note fairy tale set in the middle of the insane moral morass that
is/was the Iraq occupation is both dumber and more arrogant than
anything George Bush or even Dick Cheney ever tried.
No one expected 20 minutes of backstory about the failed WMD search,
Abu Ghraib, or the myriad other American atrocities and quick-trigger
bombings that helped fuel the rise of ISIL and other groups.
But to turn the Iraq war into a saccharine, almost PG-rated two-hour
cinematic diversion about a killing machine with a heart of gold (is
there any film theme more perfectly 2015-America than that?) who slowly,
very slowly, starts to feel bad after shooting enough women and
children – Gump notwithstanding, that was a hard one to see coming.
Sniper is a movie whose politics are so ludicrous and
idiotic that under normal circumstances it would be beneath criticism.
The only thing that forces us to take it seriously is the extraordinary
fact that an almost exactly similar worldview consumed the walnut-sized
mind of the president who got us into the war in question.
It's the fact that the movie is popular, and actually makes sense to so many people, that's the problem. "American Sniper has the look of a bona fide cultural phenomenon!" gushed Brandon Griggs of CNN, noting the film's record $105 million opening-week box office.
Griggs added, in a review that must make Eastwood swell with pride,
that the root of the film's success is that "it's about a real person,"
and "it's a human story, not a political one."
Well done, Clint! You made a movie about mass-bloodshed in Iraq that critics pronounced not political! That's as Hollywood as Hollywood gets.
The characters in Eastwood's movies almost always wear white and
black hats or their equivalents, so you know at all times who's the good
guy on the one hand, and whose exploding head we're to applaud on the
other.
In this case that effect is often literal, with "hero" sniper Chris
Kyle's "sinister" opposite Mustafa permanently dressed in black (with
accompanying evil black pirate-stubble) throughout.
Eastwood, who surely knows better, indulges in countless crass
stupidities in the movie. There's the obligatory somber scene of
shirtless buffed-up SEAL Kyle and his heartthrob wife Sienna Miller
gasping at the televised horror of the 9/11 attacks. Next thing you
know, Kyle is in Iraq actually fighting al-Qaeda – as if there was some
logical connection between 9/11 and Iraq.
Which of course there had not been, until we invaded and bombed the
wrong country and turned its moonscaped cities into a recruitment
breeding ground for… you guessed it, al-Qaeda. They skipped that
chicken-egg dilemma in the film, though, because it would detract from
the "human story."
Eastwood plays for cheap applause and goes super-dumb even by
Hollywood standards when one of Kyle's officers suggests that they could
"win the war" by taking out the evil sniper who is upsetting America's
peaceful occupation of Sadr City.
When hunky Bradley Cooper's Kyle character subsequently takes out
Mustafa with Skywalkerian long-distance panache – "Aim small, hit
small," he whispers, prior to executing an impossible mile-plus shot –
even the audiences in the liberal-ass Jersey City theater where I
watched the movie stood up and cheered. I can only imagine the response
this scene scored in Soldier of Fortune country.
To Eastwood, this was probably just good moviemaking, a scene designed to evoke the same response he got in Trouble With the Curve when
his undiscovered Latin Koufax character, Rigoberto Sanchez, strikes out
the evil Bonus Baby Bo Gentry (even I cheered at that scene).
The problem of course is that there's no such thing as "winning" the
War on Terror militarily. In fact the occupation led to mass
destruction, hundreds of thousands of deaths, a choleric lack of real
sanitation, epidemic unemployment and political radicalization that
continues to this day to spread beyond Iraq's borders.
Yet the movie glosses over all of this, and makes us think that
killing Mustafa was some kind of decisive accomplishment – the single
shot that kept terrorists out of the coffee shops of San Francisco or
whatever. It's a scene that ratified every idiot fantasy of every yahoo
with a target rifle from Seattle to Savannah.
The really dangerous part of this film is that it turns into a
referendum on the character of a single soldier. It's an unwinnable
argument in either direction. We end up talking about Chris Kyle and his
dilemmas, and not about the Rumsfelds and Cheneys and other officials
up the chain who put Kyle and his high-powered rifle on rooftops in Iraq
and asked him to shoot women and children.
They're the real villains in this movie, but the controversy has
mostly been over just how much of a "hero" Chris Kyle really was. One
Academy member wondered to a reporter if Kyle (who in real life was
killed by a fellow troubled vet in an eerie commentary on the violence
in our society that might have made a more interesting movie) was a "psychopath."
Michael Moore absorbed a ton of criticism when he tweeted that "My
uncle [was] killed by sniper in WW2. We were taught snipers were cowards
…"
And plenty of other commentators,
comparing Kyle's book (where he remorselessly brags about killing
"savages") to the film (where he is portrayed as a more rounded figure
who struggled, if not verbally then at least visually, with the nature
of his work), have pointed out that real-life Kyle was kind of a dick
compared to movie-Kyle.
(The most disturbing passage in the book to me was the one where Kyle
talked about being competitive with other snipers, and how when one in
particular began to threaten his "legendary" number, Kyle "all of the
sudden" seemed to have "every stinkin' bad guy in the city running
across my scope." As in, wink wink, my luck suddenly changed when the sniper-race got close, get it? It's super-ugly stuff).
The thing is, it always looks bad when you criticize a
soldier for doing what he's told. It's equally dangerous to be seduced
by the pathos and drama of the individual solider's experience, because
most wars are about something much larger than that, too.
They did this after Vietnam, when America spent decades watching movies like Deer Hunter and First Blood and Coming Home about
vets struggling to reassimilate after the madness of the jungles. So we
came to think of the "tragedy" of Vietnam as something primarily
experienced by our guys, and not by the millions of Indochinese we
killed.
That doesn't mean Vietnam Veterans didn't suffer: they did, often
terribly. But making entertainment out of their dilemmas helped
Americans turn their eyes from their political choices. The movies used
the struggles of soldiers as a kind of human shield protecting us from
thinking too much about what we'd done in places like Vietnam and
Cambodia and Laos.
This is going to start happening now with the War-on-Terror movies.
As CNN's Griggs writes, "We're finally ready for a movie about the Iraq
War." Meaning: we're ready to be entertained by stories about how hard
it was for our guys. And it might have been. But that's not the whole
story and never will be.
We'll make movies about the Chris Kyles of the world and argue about
whether they were heroes or not. Some were, some weren't. But in public
relations as in war, it'll be the soldiers taking the bullets, not the
suits in the Beltway who blithely sent them into lethal missions they
were never supposed to understand.
And filmmakers like Eastwood, who could have cleared things up, only
muddy the waters more. Sometimes there's no such thing as "just a human
story." Sometimes a story is meaningless or worse without real context,
and this is one of them.
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