Posted on 09/21/2005 5:35:25 PM PDT by SandRat
MARINE CORPS AIR STATION NEW RIVER, N.C. (Sept. 21, 2005) -- It was in Stanley Kubricks 1987 movie Full Metal Jacket that R. Lee Ermey portrayed Gunnery Sgt. Hartman, the quintessential Marine Corps drill instructor and for many Marines, a movie version of the nightmare they overcame in training. The movie is a staple on nearly every Marines shelf and has easily become the most quoted and re-enacted film in Corps history for now.
In the coming months and into 2006, the film industry will again turn its focus to telling the Marine Corps story. On Nov. 4, "Jarhead starring Jake Gyllenhall and Jaime Foxx is set to open nationwide, and in 2006 Flags of our Fathers directed by Clint Eastwood is scheduled to premiere.
Jarhead
Jarhead is a film adaptation of Anthony Swoffords novel of the same name. After hitting bookstores in December 2003, the manuscript made its rounds through the Corps and was met with some controversy. The bitter memoir of a sniper in the Persian Gulf War is an unyielding examination of the terror of war and leads the young Marine depicted in the book to question everyone and everything, including the Marine Corps.
The film version of the book follows Gyllenhall (The Day After Tomorrow) through boot camp and into a war he doesnt fully understand while fighting an enemy he cant see. Foxx (Ray, Collateral) plays a hardcharger who leads his sniper platoon into battle. Theyre also joined by Chris Cooper (American Beauty, The Patriot) and Peter Sarsgaard (Skeleton Key, Kinsey) in a star-filled cast that brings the movie an air of credibility.
After viewing the trailer, the film looks to be a cross between Full Metal Jacket and Apocalypse Now. Once word gets out about this movie, Marines in the Jacksonville area are sure to fill the theaters, so be prepared for long lines and sold out showings. To view the films trailer or for more information visit www.jarheadthemovie.com.
Flags of our Fathers
Its the most famous photograph, perhaps in world history. Six men standing on the summit of Mt. Suribachi during the battle for Iwo Jima, raising the American flag. Six men whose lives would be forever changed by a one-four hundreth flash in time.
Author James Bradley, whose father, John Bradley, was one of the only survivors out of the six Marines and Sailors raising the flag, penned a novel that detailed the lives of the men who appeared in the photograph. His touching story weaves together legends of the old Corps and recounted the back story of an important time in Marine history.
The movie version of the book is being directed by Academy Award winning director Clint Eastwood and stars an ensemble cast headed by Paul Walker (The Fast and the Furious) and Ryan Phillippe (Cruel Intentions). The film, set in the Pacific theater during World War II, is sure to compete for film awards at the end of 2006.
No further information concerning this film is currently available as the film is still in the production phase.
Although no one is likely to order their recruits to choke themselves in either movie, each will attempt to carry on the strong tradition of quality Corps movies that started long ago with films like The Sands of Iwo Jima with John Wayne and continued with Full Metal Jacket. Hopefully each will find a way into Marines hearts and try and live up to the service members they seek to emulate.
ok , sorry....now I remember !
"Anyone who runs is a V.C. Anyone who stands still is a well-disciplined V.C. Get some!"
oh crap, he died? that's a shame. he was a good writer, and a bibliophile. Couple years ago he got in trouble for borrowing books from a library without checking them out. But still, that's a shame.
My Drill Sgt's last name was Cunningham. I'll never forget it.
BTTT
In his defense, bibliophilia can be a sickness. I wouldn't be too hard on him.
The only originality of Apocalypse Now was the part where they played Flight of the Valkyries on loudspeakers during the attack to capture the beach for the grunt to surf. Robert's Duvall's character saying "I love the smell of napalm in the morning" is the "highlight" of the movie, IMO.
Seeing how it was based on Joe Conrad, it wasn't supposed to be original.
The movie was loosely based on the classic novel Heart of Darkness, by Joseph Conrad.
The movie is not so much about war, but rather, the depravity of men and their lust to rule and be ruled.
In its attempt to paint the extremes of men it paints the US Military and the Vietnam War in a very bad light.
In many ways it was a crappy movie, but it had potential, if they would have toned down the weirdness and cheapshots at the Military.
-Gene Shallot :-)
Black Hawk Down
We Were Soldiers Once
Enemy At The Gates
Considering that Valkyries wasn't in the book, it was orignal to the movie. :-)
Although not much in the movie, if anything, was in the book, the movie was fairly original. :-)
Duvall's Cav Commander is unforgettable, "Charlie don't surf" and "Smells like...victory" are two of the most memorable lines in the history of war movies.
"Jarhead" will suck, because the book was mostly bragging, and whining.
Second one sounds good. First sounds like typical hollyweird miltary-bashing.
I'm not being hard on him, just providing a bit of trivia.
John Milius (the red dawn guy) and Coppola (sp?)wrote the screenplay from Heart of Darkness. There were nods to colonialism (edited out) and the eventual demise of the Brando character/Kurtz along with his conclusions, "exterminate the brutes" v. "nuke'em all" etc.
Also, obviously, the river as the path for the trip...basically a lot of similarities.
I know -- but it was a good book. Deserves better than to be remembered for the Kubrick film. Author deserves more than to be remembered as a "book thief."
I agree. His demise was sad in more ways than one.
If you like Vietnam books, you might try War Story by Jim Morris.
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