Posted on 01/15/2015 9:05:34 AM PST by walford
Spouting off to an empty chair at the 2012 Republican National Convention, Clint Eastwood looked as if he were slipping into doddering dementia, but hes shrewder and more focused than ever in his Iraq War picture American Sniper. Its a crackerjack piece of filmmaking, a declaration that hes not yet ready to be classified as an Old Master, that he can out-Bigelow Kathryn Bigelow. Morally, though, he has regressed from the heights of Letters From Iwo Jima (2006). In more ways than one, the Iraq occupation is seen through the sight of a high-powered rifle. The movie is scandalously blinkered.
Its springboard is the tragically murdered Chris Kyles best-selling memoir (written with Jim DeFelice), which chronicled his tours in Iraq as a Navy seal and his acquisitionthanks to an unprecedented number of sniper killsof the sobriquet the Legend. Im not going to fault Kyles view of his enemies as representing a savage, despicable evil, but I do fault Eastwood for making what is, essentially, a propaganda film.
The script, by Jason Hall, shows Kyle (Bradley Cooper) watching the Twin Towers fall on 9/11 and enlisting, having learned from his dad that the world consists of sheep, wolves, and sheepdogs, and that he must be the lasta protector. Then, after disarming and winning a woman named Taya (Sienna Miller), hes off to Iraq, with no indication that the two events9/11 and the Iraq invasionhave been yoked together by unscrupulous politicians who dont have a clue what lies in store for American soldiers. As in many jingoist war movies, the native population are portrayed as invaders of our sacred space instead of vice versa. Hall provides a supervillain, a crack shot named Mustafa (Sammy Sheik) who hunts the Legend, with Eastwood laying on the growly-doomy music whenever Mustafa appears. Their face-off gives American Sniper a conventional, suck-on-this climax.
In the latest Hunger Games movie, Philip Seymour Hoffmans PR guy, Plutarch, views propaganda footage of Katniss Everdeen and says, Its a little on the nose, but of course so is war. He could be talking about American Sniper. A fellow sniper tells Kyle as he takes aim at a potential insurgent, If youre wrong they send your ass to Leavenworthwhich would be news to a lot of soldiers who got it wrong without consequences. When Kyle goes back to Iraq, Taya (now with their son and daughter) says, I dont think well be here when you get back. And you just know, as soon as Kyles buddy asks him to be his best man, that in a few moments the guy will be history.
Eastwood does stage a scarily amorphous final battle in a sandstorm, and Cooper is very impressive. Best known for more congenial roles, he plays Kyle as grimly self-contained, both hyperalert and alienated. Kyle is put through the kind of training that would drive most men insane and, newly honed, gradually realizes that hes now fit to do only a few thingsprotect other Americans, avoid being killed, and killand that hell never fully recover his old self. But Eastwoodwho never directed a better scene than the one in Unforgiven when the protagonist shoots a basically harmless man and has to listen to his excruciating death throesmakes the moral stakes almost nonexistent. The people Kyle shoots always represent a savage, despicable evil, and the physical and mental cost to other Americans just comes with the territory. Its a Republican platform movie.
Every...and I mean every American that loves this country will go see the movie, “American Sniper”!!! It will make millions and clearly show that the tide is returning that will carry the American nation back into greatness and leadership across the world. Two words for the reality of POTUS Obama, “LAME DUCK”!!!
Trey’s dad in Boys N The Hood?
I read his book and am definitely going to see it. I just hope his family gets any proceeds and not Jesse Ventura.
"American Sniper" might not be too bad, if this guy hated it.
yeah......Doubt he cares, much. :-)
In fact, I can see the squint, a short pause, and the gravelly voice delivering the line - with exactly the right tone and inflection - "Frankly, sir, I really don't give a damn."
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.