Posted on 01/20/2015 4:28:45 AM PST by lifeofgrace
I saw American Sniper Monday afternoon. I went with a group of guys, most of them either active duty or former military. The theater was packed, and this was a Monday matinee showing.
Granted, its a federal holiday, and most people in Warner Robins, Georgia have government-related jobs, but not all. The Wall Street Journal duly recorded an opening weekend at $105.3 million, almost double the films production budget of $59 million, calling it a surprise:
Such a massive opening for a mid-budget drama was perhaps Hollywoods biggest surprise since Avengers blew away box-office records by opening to $207 million in 2012. Sniper, directed by Clint Eastwood and starring Bradley Cooper, enjoyed the largest opening ever for a drama or R-rated film and more than doubled the prior record for Martin Luther King Day weekend.Yes, the movie is going to be very, very profitable for Warner Brothers, Village Roadshow Pictures, and probably even Clint Eastwood, whose own legend status in Americana cannot be safer or more deeply ingrained.
Yes, the movie has all the formulaic elements of a military thriller: the stoic hero dealing with conflicting needs of his family and his combat buddies; lots of shooting, blood, and carnage; some humor; characters that resonate, and enough emotional punch to reduce men to tears. But this movie is not a formula film.
In fact, Snipers success is owed neither to money, nor to talent, nor to formula.
I dont believe that Clint Eastwood made this movie for money. He made it to tell a story, and this story is more than historical. Hundreds of thousands of Iraq war combat veterans who live among us, and hundreds of thousands more who served during the war, or are still serving needed to see this story. Some of them lived part of it themselves, having seen things, done things, or suffered injuries in a country at least 6,000 miles from home, where unrestrained evil has ruled for decades.
American Sniper, and Chris Kyles life, is no jingoistic pro-war propaganda. Kyle witnessed evil first-hand. He wasnt on some lone quest for vengeance like Liam Neesons character in Taken 3. He wasnt Charlie Sheens Navy SEALs character, a rebel whose depth of conscience bottoms out at puddle. Chris Kyle was no caricature. He was a real person who served in Iraq, and took between 160 and 255 lives, one at a time, seeing each target in the crosshairs before pulling the trigger. If that doesnt try a mans soul, either hes got no soul, or hes seared it to the point of uselessness.
This story needed to be told because there are men and women whose souls have been tried, and they need to know that redemption is possible, that theres a path out of the dark night of the soul into the light of the living. American Sniper presents PTSD in a real and believable way, putting us through a taste of the life of a combat soldier, a warrior whose kills are one-on-one, and whose victories are intensely personal.
Those who hate the movie reveal more about themselves than the movie. They dont want a movie about a real soldier who dealt with his war experience unapologetically and returned to life in America, family, and purposeto help other veterans with their own return to life. They want a movie about a caricature, or a soldier on a lone, hateful journey into vengeance, or one whose conscience takes him to a place where the war becomes the enemy. The real life soldiers they admire are John Kerry or Bradley Manning (now Chelsea), who betrayed either their honor or their country.
Anyone whose personal creed is God, family, country is not part of the Lefts hall of fame. Thats a shame, because the very values that drove Chris Kyle are the same values that drive most of America. American Sniper has figuratively drawn a celluloid line in the sand.
Those who stand with the movies values and sympathize with Kyle and his fellow SEALs, Marines, sailors, soldiers and airmen share an American spirit. One of the men with whom I saw the movie served on honor guard duty recently, and I know that the scenes depicting those moments honoring the fallen really hit home for him. But you dont have to be an honor guard, or even a veteran, to understand the deep love for their country and for each other the men in Kyles unit shared.
Standing on the far side of the line in the sand are those whose spirits are not American. They may share our land, our nationality, by birth and lineage, but they do not share it by heritage and values. They dont understand why Chris Kyle is a hero, because they dont see America as worthy of heroes. They dont see America as any better than the evil we opposed in Iraq. They are more interested in opposing the war, and the politics of the war, and the history of the war, and the president who led us during the war, than to see men like Kyle recover from it.
They dont want Iraq war veterans to heal from their PTSD. They dont want healing at all. Theyd rather treat vets as dangerous thugs ready to explode upon society than human beings whove walked through unspeakable evil into the dark night of the soul. That puts these people in the same category as the enemy who tried to kill them in Iraq.
Americans of all stripes have the right to speak their minds. Moral midgets like Michael Moore, who call Chris Kyle a coward, have every right to say that. But their shrill whimpers arent worth hearing or wasting breath for a response. They are not American in any effectual sense, and American Sniper is an American story, about American values. Let those on Moores side of the line have their party, joining every other anti-American group in a chorus of venom, while we ignore them for the quislings they are.
American Sniper is intense, a thought shared even by Vice President Biden. Im glad Clint Eastwood crafted this story into a movie, because he projected on screen what we are all thinking: exactly who is American, and wouldnt it be nice to draw a neat line to separate those who are, from those who arent.
Im sure hes gratified, as we all are, to see a $105 million answer to that question.
The success of this movie among so many real Americans is a surprise. The unpopularity of Obamacare among those who must be forced through massive fines to obey the ruling class is a surprise. The lack of new jobs for working Americans under socialist policies is a surprise. Life is full of surprises to liberals.
Message to Hollywood: Give people stories they want to see and they will turn out—Compare the box office for Afirmative Action Annie, Selma and American Sniper? Its like comparing Captain America and Captain Planet. In these times US movie goers want a patriotic Film.
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:: They dont understand why Chris Kyle is a hero, because they dont see America as worthy of heroes. They dont see America as any better than the evil we opposed in Iraq. ::
Boom!
I hope that leaves a mark!
Thank-you.....Well said!
Hollywood promotes every dysfunctional, vile, indecent idea they can think of......
...but give them a true hero......a God fearing, America loving, family honoring man......
...and they try to tear it apart.....
Going to see this great movie today!
Michael Sams ,football player, is a “hero” for “coming out”.So says our President.’Nuff said.
Thank you, Lifeofgrace, for posting your review. You boiled the controversy over the successful this movie down to its simplest terms.
While it’s true that there are people that may not care for the cinematography of the movie, or the premise of killing (for any reason) based on religious beliefs, those are not the people that have been taking shots at the movie’s message and it’s director, Clint Eastwood.
Again, I think your thoughts are right on target.
Watched the movie, it was OK but not great.
IMO, the movie was not as great as the message it conveyed. But it was a very engrossing movie.
The use of the term ‘surprise’ in the box office results reminds me of the phrase ‘unexpectedly’ repeatedly by the government when quoting unemployment, GDP or other statistics.
The people are the only ones who aren’t unexpectedly surprised; we live it every day and see it all around us.
You won’t be disappointed by this masterpiece.
Pray America is waking
No, because he was our sheep dog.
That's part of the realism. Soldiers cuss. A lot. Especially when placed in stressful situations.
dishonored God too many times
I missed that. Are you referring to taking the Lord's name in vain?
and gratuitous sex scenes.
Now wait a minute. There was maybe 1 sex scene that I recall, and there was no nudity in it. I'd hardly call that gratuitous.
But you know, that's how Chris Kyle was, that's how Texas rodeo people are, and that's how (most) Navy SEALs are.
Agreed. As they say: "different strokes for different folks..."
Haven’t heard anything from POS Jesse Ventura yet.
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