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The Lies of Mel Gibson's "We Were Soldiers" by Paul Cox
Kenneth Turan's review of 'We Were Soldiers' on March 1, had the courage
to pan
the film as simple-minded and devoid of historical context. He was right
on both
counts, but I must add the movie also lies massively about the historical
event
itself. The book on which this stinker of a movie was based, 'We Were
Soldiers
Once...And Young', was written by one of the battalion commanders, and a
journalist
who was on hand for most of the LZ X-Ray battle. While the book itself was
simple-minded and devoid of historical context, it was, at least, brutally
clear on
what went down.
The movie, on the other hand, completely changes the end of the story. In
the
movie, after Mel ('The Patriot') Gibson and his men of the First
Battalion/Seventh
Cavalry (1/7) kill all the North Vietnamese in the neighborhood, they left
the field
of battle as battered but victorious heroes, leaving nothing behind but a
pile of
dead Vietnamese. In reality, 1/7 was relieved by a column of troops from
Second
Battalion/Seventh Cavalry (2/7), who two days later were decimated in an
intense
ambush while moving to LZ Albany. The official count of American
casualties from 1/7
was 49 dead and 124 wounded, and from 2/7 was 155 dead and 123
wounded. Thus, the
movie has the temerity to end on a victorious note after only one quarter
of the
American fatalities had been inflicted.
Why did they do this? Randall ('Pearl Harbor') Wallace--producer, director
and
screen writer--could have easily ended the movie as he began it. The movie
began
with a short segment of a deadly ambush on a French column in the same
valley ten
years earlier; it should have ended with at least a passing reference to
the dying
that happened after Mel Gibson's character left the battlefield. The
audience would
have perhaps left the theater with a much different taste in their mouths,
and a
much more accurate understanding of the historical truth. However,
apparently Mr.
Wallace was more interested in a little flag waving, and wanted to send
the audience
home with a patriotic buzz.
This film should have been named 'Big Fat Liar', but I understand that
name has
already been taken.
_____________
Paul Cox served in Vietnam from 1969-1970 as a USMC grunt. He is a
member of
Veterans for Peace, Chapter 69 San Francisco, CA.
forwarded by Eric V. Kirk
kirk@humboldt.net
_____________
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