Posted on 01/16/2015 3:04:02 PM PST by Kaslin
War movies often focus on battles over personalities. In great films like Lone Survivor (2013) and Saving Private Ryan (1998), some of the battle sequences are so real and devastating that its easy to get lost in them and lose focus on the individual soldiers trying to survive. Those films often attempt to show viewers what it must be like to be in the midst of an intense and devastating battle.
American Sniper, which only yesterday was nominated for six Academy Awards,is different.
Its more of a character study than a war film with the main character being a Texan who joins the Navy SEALS and grows to become the legend: a military icon who was reportedly the deadliest sniper in U.S. military history.
Oscar-nominated Bradley Cooper plays Chris Kyle, the beloved war veteran whose service was well-known even before his autobiography was released several years ago. When the film begins, Kyle is a tough Southerner who loves his country, his girlfriend and his beer but something seems to change in him when the United States embassies in Kenya and Tanzania are bombed. He sees something in the world and is angered enough to want to do something about it.
His journey leads him to the SEALS where, at 30, he stands as one of the oldest soldiers at camp. Im not like most men, sir. I dont quit, he tells one of his superiors when questioned about his age. During the features first thirty minutes, Kyle slowly develops into a soldier as he trains and prepares for battle. Some of the training scenes may seem a bit obvious (especially if youve seen other films about going into battle) but they are only leading up to the important part: Kyles service overseas, which is handled gracefully by Clint Eastwood.
When Kyle becomes a sniper, hes thankfully not presented as a gung-ho soldier wanting to make his mark in the military. Hes simply a patriotic man who wants to serve his country and save his fellow soldiers from the evil that exists out there. (If you question the existence of such evil, think about how crazed one must be to give a child a bomb and ask them to sacrifice their lives by murdering others.) Even though Kyle sees such evil as a sniper in Iraq, he always hesitates before shooting knowing that people can always change their minds about their decisions. Even when he becomes a legend serving his country on four tours of duty, Kyles humility always shines through. Hes a man with a job to do, he realizes, and hes saddened by those whose lives he couldnt save.
The heart of the film though lies back in the United States where Taya (Sienna Miller), Kyles wife, is caring for their children. When they meet, Taya is hesitant to date a military man but slowly welcomes Kyle, the rough-and-tumble patriot, into her world. But as she sees, military life is difficult and its hard not to understand Tayas growing frustration when her husband seems to choose the military over her family time and again. Even though the relationship only comes alive when Kyle is at home, Eastwood makes it overshadow Kyles entire military career, showing the sacrifices families must make when one of their own is sent into a war zone.
When Kyle is away (and we see the two of them chat over the phone several times while hes on a mission), Taya is alone and even when hes home, hes still thinking about protecting his friends overseas.
Unlike some of Eastwoods recent projects (Jersey Boys and Hereafter come to mind), theres a great subtlety to American Sniper. Kyles world is presented from his perspective but there are small hints and notes that there are larger issues at play. Soldiers talk to Kyle about their questioning the war itself while Kyles brother, a veteran himself, becomes overwhelmed by what he has to do overseas and because he lives in the shadow of the legend himself.
Youre my hero, bro. Always have been, the brother notes with a sadness and fear overwhelming his pained face.
There are some who argue that American Sniper is too simplistic in both its depiction of the war and of Kyle himself. During the opening scenes, I could agree but as the story grows and the world becomes more apparent, Cooper in possibly his best performance to date and Eastwood present a subtle but powerful depiction of an American soldier who, even as he leaves the Navy, never quits serving his nation.
Not much spatter.
I didn’t realize that Timothy Mcveigh worked for the US government.
Wow what a privilege to have known him. We just returned from a matinee and the time just flew by. There wasn’t a sound in the theatre when the movie ended. Very well made and Bradley Cooper was terrific. Makes you realize what a special breed these American heroes are.
Good movie overall. The parts showing his time in Iraq were fascinating, though I question the reality of the way some things were depicted (talking to his wife on sat phone while on a mission, as an example). Also his wife was portrayed as a nearly insufferable narcissist, but I suspect that was the usual Hollywood need to present the hero in a challenging relationship in order to gin up drama for the lady viewers and justify the inclusion of a female character.
“hold on a second baby, we can’t have phone sex I have one finger on the trigger and another on my gun, but Command is calling on the other line”
Back in a tick...
The wife made me insane.
Who’s on the phone?
“Ummm it’s Jake from Gieco”....
State Farm
Not sure what the point of your comment is... Doubt that you are either.
You’re annoying in the extreme. I guess you would call that success here.
Yes they are heros and what sacrifices the people that love them make when they are gone as well as when they return home.
Sorry, I thought that was Mcgowan again. You’re fine.
I doubt it will win many awards. They’ll make a movie like this because it’s Eastwood and he puts “butts in the seat”. But I don’t see Hollywood honoring it. I hope I’m wrong. I’ll gag if BOYHOOD wins.
I agree —that short part was totally ridiculous.
I spent much time wondering where and how they filmed some sequences. Certainly looked like Iraq cities and U.S. military bases.
A sequence showing the sniper talking with his wife by cell phone during combat did not seem realistic, but maybe things have changed. My war was long ago.
There was also what I consider excessive profanity, but maybe that is what is expected from Hollywood today.
Don’t want to pan it to hard.
It largely focused on how deployment effects familys.
Still, the wife irritated the crap out of me.
For you torrent buffs, there are DVD Screeners of it out there already...
“Just quit and take me dancing....”
I have always thought it strange that Hollywood puts too much muzzle flash in films with modern weapons, yet not enough in films portraying say, the Civil War or the Old West. Having owned and fired dozens of different types of pre-1898 guns using black powder, I have noted that they give off huge muzzle flashes and tons of smoke, yet that is rarely seen in period films.
Lone Survivor was good.
To slow for most
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