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"Hollywood and Vietnam" Topic


5 Posts

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Tango0107 Jan 2015 10:30 p.m. PST

"In writing to President Johnson in December 1965 about his intention to make a film about the Green Berets, John Wayne explained that it was "extremely important that not only the people of the United States but those all over the world should know why it is necessary for us to be there . . . The most effective way to accomplish this is through the motion picture medium." He thought he could make the "kind of picture that will help our cause throughout the world." According to Wayne, it would "tell the story of our fighting men in Vietnam with reason, emotion, characterization, and action. We want to do it in a manner that will inspire a patriotic attitude on the part of fellow Americans—a feeling which we have always had in this country in the past during times of stress and trouble."


Unlike earlier wars, however, the Vietnam War did not unite the nation to a common cause, but tore it apart. Michael Wayne, who produced the film for his father's company, claimed that The Green Berets did not tell a controversial story: "It was the story of a group of guys who could have been in any war. It's a very familiar story. War stories are all the same. They are personal stories about soldiers and the background is the war. This just happened to be the Vietnam War."


On its part, the White House willingly embraced the project. Jack Valenti, then an advisor to President Johnson, advised him that while John Wayne's politics might be wrong, "insofar as Vietnam is concerned, his views are right. If he made the picture, he would say the things we want said." Wayne himself freely admitted he was doing more than playing his usual soldier role. He saw the movie as "an American film about American boys who were heroes over there. In that sense, it was propaganda."…"
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Garryowen Supporting Member of TMP08 Jan 2015 8:46 a.m. PST

I read the whole article. It was apparently published in 1979 if I read it correctly. Thus it missed a great many of the Vietnam movies.

Tom

ScottS08 Jan 2015 9:42 a.m. PST

Agreed – the historiography has shifted so much in the intervening time that this subject deserves reappraisal.

Good luck tying in "Tropic Thunder." ;)

Personal logo Legion 4 Supporting Member of TMP08 Jan 2015 2:48 p.m. PST

To many movies have been made since '79 about Vietnam … some pretty good ones too …

ScottS08 Jan 2015 4:15 p.m. PST

Yeah – I'd love to see a good, updated take on this.

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