Posted on 01/19/2015 4:21:29 AM PST by Kaslin
The left-wing criticism of American Sniper was to be expected. Frankly, its not worth responding to the vast majority of these criticisms. Yet, if you have a piece from a left-leaning publication, like the New Republic, where the author admits to not even seeing the film, and then ends it with an analysis about the Iraq War; mockery is justified, albeit for a brief time.
Recently, Dennis Jett wrote a piece about American Sniper for the Republic. Theres just one problem; He didnt see the movie:
I have not seen American Sniper. But if the trailer is any indication, Eastwoods film, like Zero Dark Thirty, tries to make a straightforward situation more complex than it is.
But anyone who has read Kyles autobiography of the same title knows that his bravado left no room for doubt. For him, the enemy are savages and despicably evil. His only regret is that he didnt kill more. He laments that there were rules of engagement, or ROE, which he describes as being drafted by lawyers to protect generals from politicians. He argues instead for letting warriors loose to fight wars without their hands tied behind their backs. At another point, he boasts that the unofficial ROE were pretty simple: If you see anyone from about sixteen to sixty-five and theyre male, shoot em. Kill every male you see.
That kind of thinking, compared to Kyle's portrayal by Eastwood, prompted Lindy West to write an article for The Guardian asking, The real American Sniper was a hate-filled killer. Why are simplistic patriots treating him as a hero? One answer to that question: Because many Americans are unable to accept that nothing was won in Iraq, and that the sacrifices Kyle and others made were not worth it. More fundamentally, treating Kyle as a patriot and ignoring any other possibility allows Americans to ignore the consequences of invading a country that had no weapons of mass destruction, had nothing to do with 9/11, and had no meaningful ties to Al Qaeda (our invasion, of course, changed that).
A recent study estimates there were 461,000 war-related "excess" deaths in Iraq between 2003 and mid-2011. If true, President George W. Bush may be responsible for the deaths of more Iraqi civilians than Saddam Hussein was. But Bush is not solely culpable. We live in a democracy where the people elect the government, and therefore citizens cannot escape the blame for what it does. In that sense, it is not just Kyle who pulled the trigger. We all did.
But, have no fear; the publication issued a correction. It did not un-publish this non-film review, but noted that the byline was messed up.
Correction: A previous version of this article featured the wrong byline. The author is Dennis Jett, not Dennis Ross.
Dude, really.
But, lets hear from Director Clint Eastwood, who is not happy that some are trying to portray his movie as jingoistic or a pro-war film:
I think thats a stupid analysis, the American Sniper director growls from New York, when asked about the buckshot his new movie is taking, from critics who believe hes celebrating war, killing and jingoism.
David Edelstein of New York Magazine calls the film, opening Friday in Toronto, a Republican platform movie even as he praises it as a crackerjack piece of filmmaking. Lindy West of the Guardian newspaper bemoans simplistic patriots who applaud Eastwoods portrait of Navy SEAL shooting ace Chris Kyle, played by Bradley Cooper.
Pardon me for sounding defensive, but it certainly has nothing to do with any (political) parties or anything, Eastwood, 84, tells the Star.
These fellows who are professional soldiers, Navy personnel or what have you, go in for a certain reason. Their commander-in-chief (U.S. President Barack Obama) is a Democrat and the administration is, and theres no political aspect there other than the fact that a lot of things happen in war zones.
The things that happen in war zones usually involve killing. The killing of men, women, and children, which at times, is carried out by extremely brutal methods. The film captures one such instance. Its quite unsettling.
You can debate amongst yourselves, but I left the theater feeling that American Sniper wasnt a pro-war movie. It did capture the sacrifices endured by the men and women who serve, along with their families.
Bradley Cooper, who plays Chris Kyle in the film, told the Daily Beast that this is a character study about the plight of being a soldier:
My hope is that if someone is having a political conversation about whether we should or should not have been in Iraq, whether the war is worth fighting, whether we won, whether we didnt, why are we still there, all those [issues], that really—I hope—is not one that they would use this movie as a tool for, Cooper told The Daily Beast, when asked about those targeting Kyles temperament. And for me, and for Clint, this movie was always a character study about what the plight is for a soldier. The guy that I got to know, through all the source material that I read and watched, and home videos—hours and hours—I never saw anything like that. But I cant control how people are gonna use this movie as a tool, or what they pick and choose whatever they want. But it would be short-changing, I think. If its not this movie, I hope to god another movie will come out where it will shed light on the fact of what servicemen and women have to go through, and that we need to pay attention to our vets. It doesnt go any farther than that. Its not a political discussion about war, even…Its a discussion about the reality. And the reality is that people are coming home, and we have to take care of them.
Right now, the latest anti-American Sniper salvos from lefties is that this film is somehow similar the mock Nazi propaganda movie shown in Quentin Tarantinos Inglorious Bastards.
(H/T Twitchy)
You need to make an exception and vote with your dollars. You will not find any rudeness in this movie and you will be surrounded by America loving patriots.
Pray America is waking
In the book, Kyle says he preferred wearing a baseball cap because it looked cool and he felt a helmet wouldn’t help much anyway.
Gut, but, but... he knew how he FELT about it. His EMOTION was strong about it.
A good problem to have if he handles it well.
Thanks for that.
We saw it yesterday in the late afternoon. The theater was packed.....not an empty east. The purchase ticket line was the longest, I have ever seen. We bought our tickets online, because we knew what a crunch the purchase line would be.
Best movie of the year......it blows all the other Academy Award nominee movies out the window. Eastwood & Cooper have given us a film for the ages. America lives, freedom lives, liberty lives, the American family is strong, and the overwhelming majority of Americans love & cherish the guys & gals that put everything on the line to keep us safe at home and abroad. Anti-American hater & bigot, Obama might as well pack his bag, take all his “low life” Democrat Party vermin with him, back to Chicago, where they all belong residing in the cesspool of total obscurity!!!
God bless Chris Kyle, his wife, his kids, his family and, may God also bless Clint Eastwood & Bradley Cooper, the entire staff. actors and crews of this maginificent film, “American Sniper”!!! “Thank you, all of you fine dedicated, patriotic, hard working folks that made this brilliant movie picture possible.” Signed.....The American People!!!
Let’s see the whiny left make a movie of this caliber, with this level of audience acceptance and enthusiasm. Won’t be holding my breath...
I also haven't read all of "Mein Kampf." But I guess from the little I've read of it and the comments I've read from other people who have, I feel justified in making some conclusions about the piece.
I don't begrudge some leftist saying he doesn't like what it, the film, represents. But if I am supposedly doing an actual film or book review, I should be expected to have seen the film or read the book.
“The trouble with our Liberal friends is not that they’re ignorant; it’s just that they know so much that isn’t so.”
— Ronald Reagan
Some things never change.
BTTT
You don’t go to the theater I went to. Everyone was extremely polite, none of the distractions you refer to, and it was a great movie in IMAX.
For proglodytes, the narrative always trumps facts. This is why debate with them is a total waste of time. That leaves only one way to deal with them.
-showed the heroism of American soldiers in World War II and,
-showed the horror and heartache of war, and that all true warriors are anti-war because they know the price of war and what it does to people both physically and psychologically.
"American Sniper" had the same vibe to it as "Patton".
Uhhh, remember 10 years ago?
Bingo. From the article, I present to you the narrative:
More fundamentally, treating Kyle as a patriot and ignoring any other possibility allows Americans to ignore the consequences of invading a country that had no weapons of mass destruction, had nothing to do with 9/11, and had no meaningful ties to Al Qaeda (our invasion, of course, changed that).
What’s the big deal? Leftists do it to Rush all the time.
I remember the silence after "Saving Private Ryan"...
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