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Two or More Vietnams: Reactions of a Vietnam Veteran to Platoon


Article # : 12584 

Section : THE ARTS
Issue Date : 6 / 1987  2,096 Words
Author : Col. Harry G. Summers, Jr.
Twice wounded in action on the battlefield and twice decorated for valor, Colonel Harry G. Summers, a combat infantry veteran of the Korean and Vietnam Wars, is the author of On Strategy (Presidio/Dell), the Vietnam War Almanac, and the forthcoming Korean War Almanac (Facts on File). The editor of Vietnam magazine, he also writes a syndicated column for the Los Angeles Times.

       I didn't really want to see Platoon. The Washington Post's Henry Allen, himself a Marine Corps Vietnam vet, expressed my sentiments exactly in a January 1987 column. People kept pushing Vietnam war movies on him and asking "How isn't it like Vietnam?"
       
        "I'd try to explain," he wrote, "that it was just a movie, it was colored light moving around on a screen...." But there were those who wanted it to be reality, who "wanted me to tell them that art's truths were The Truth, The Word, the war itself." And for some, Platoon fit that bill. "A young man who was in grade school when I was in Vietnam tells me it's 'authentic,'" Allen wrote. "Time magazine published a cover story about it and the headline said: 'Vietnam as It Really Was.'"
       
        "This is silly and decadent," he concluded, "this willful confusion of life and art. And it's dangerous. War is too wildly stupid, glorious, hideous, huge, and human for us to think that art can tell us what it really is."
       
        And the fact that Platoon was nominated for eight Academy Awards certainly was no encouragement to see the movie. The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences lost me years ago when they gave an Oscar to Hearts and Minds, an ostensible "documentary" on the Vietnam War that was so deliberately biased, so viciously anti-American, that it would have made even Nazi film propagandist Leni Riefenstahl blush in shame at the depths to which her "art" had descended.
       
        And finally there's the matter of Platoon's writer-director Oliver Stone. The impulse for an ad hominem attack is almost irresistible, ... (1992 of 12208 Characters)
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