Casualties of War
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Casualties of War | |
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Theatrical Poster |
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Directed by | Brian De Palma |
Produced by | Art Linson |
Written by | Story: Daniel Lang Screenplay: David Rabe |
Starring | Michael J. Fox Sean Penn |
Music by | Ennio Morricone |
Cinematography | Stephen H. Burum |
Editing by | Bill Pankow |
Distributed by | Columbia Pictures |
Release date(s) | August 18, 1989 |
Running time | 113 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $22,500,000 |
Allmovie profile | |
IMDb profile |
Casualties of War is a 1989 war drama about the Vietnam War, starring Michael J. Fox and Sean Penn. It was directed by Brian De Palma, with a screenplay by David Rabe based on actual events that took place in 1966. An article written by Daniel Lang was the movie's primary source.[1]
The theme of Casualties of War is how normal moral behavior is discarded during war times and shows it in the extreme when soldiers become savages who can dehumanize innocent by-standers, and also about personal responsibility for maintaining that morality in extreme conditions.
This film was Fox's second major dramatic role. A year earlier he had starred in the drama Bright Lights, Big City. John C. Reilly and John Leguizamo make their screen debuts in the film.
Tagline: Even in war... murder is murder.
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[edit] Plot
The story is presented as a flashback of a Vietnam veteran.
A squad of American soldiers is taking a well earned break outside a river village in the Central Highlands in November, 1966. While relaxing and joking around, one of the squad members, Corporal Brown aka "Brownie" is shot in the neck by Viet Cong across the river. The squad kills several enemies until they realize there's a Viet Cong running through a flooded field behind them. He throws a grenade. Eriksson panics but in a miraculous shot blows up the grenade with his M-79 grenade launcher before it lands close to him. Brownie is then evacuated but dies in the hospital. The squad then moves to the village which is believed to be an ally to the Viet Cong. In retaliation, the squad kidnaps a Vietnamese girl, Than Thi Oanh (Thuy Thu Le) to be their sexual slave, much to the objection of one soldier, Pfc. Max Eriksson (Michael J. Fox), who wants no part of it. His objections are quashed by the squad's psychopathic leader, Sergeant Tony Meserve (Sean Penn), who is antagonistic towards Eriksson because of his qualms of conscience.
After the sex, the squad tries to move down a railroad bridge overlooking a Viet Cong river supply depot. Meserve and Clarke realize Oanh's coughing might give them away. Meserve has Private Diaz order air support for an assault on the depot. Then he orders Eriksson to kill Oanh. Eriksson staunchly refuses despite Sergeant Meserve's death threats. It seems no one is willing to kill her. To his horror, Corporal Clarke looks out in the sky and sees a unit of Huey helicopters passing a mountain and then turning towards their position. Fearing the helicopters will somehow see their rape victim, Sergeant Meserve flat out orders Private Diaz to kill Oanh. But before Diaz can kill her, Eriksson fires his M-16 rifle into the air exposing them to the nearby Viet Cong.
As the battle rages, Eriksson who is carefully picking off Viet Cong hiding behind a supply sampan on the river bank, doesn't realize that Corporal Clarke has stabbed Oanh twice with his knife. Things become desperate when the Viet Cong move mortars up to the river and begin lobbing shells onto the bridge trapping the squad. Fortunately, Sergeant Meserve is able to kill many enemies with his M-60 machine gun. But the situation gets worse when Oanh who wasn't killed by Corporal Clarke, walks onto the bridge to try to escape. Eriksson tries to catch her but is hit in the stomach by Sergeant Meserve using his M-60. Completely winded and hurt, Eriksson watches helplessly as the squad shoots Oahn numerous times until she falls off the bridge, dead at last. Then the UH-1 Iroquois helicopters (Hueys) Corporal Clarke originally spotted, strafe the supply depot with missiles blowing it up but accidentally setting a passing U.S. Navy PBR on fire killing all the crewmen. The squad had killed the girl so as not to risk getting caught by their superiors.
After the battle, Eriksson wakes up in a hospital having been "wounded." They cover up the murder but Eriksson refuses to let the secret die. He jeopardizes both his life and military career (thanks in large part to indifferent superiors who prefer to bury the matter) to expose the crime. Eventually, there is an investigation and the four men who participated in the rape and murder are court martialed and receive long sentences. Sergeant Meserve received ten years of imprisonment and hard labor and was dishonorably discharged. Corporal Thomas E. Clarke (Don Harvey) received life in prison. Private Herbert Hatcher (John C. Reilly) received 15 years in prison and hard labor. Private Antonio Diaz (John Leguizamo) received 8 years in prison and hard labor. Privates Hatcher and Diaz were later retried and acquitted on appeal after it was determined that their Fifth Amendment rights were violated and their confessions were ruled as inadmissable.
At the end of the movie, Max wakes up from the flashback he was having of the entire incident only to find himself on a bus just a few feet from a Vietnamese American student (also played by Thuy Thu Le) who resembles the kidnapped girl. She leaves the bus to go to school and forgets her scarf, with Max running after her to return it. They have a brief chat where she notices something is troubling him, and he explains that she reminds him of someone. They go their separate ways as the movie ends.
[edit] Cast and ratings
Ratings | |
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Australia: | M |
Finland: | K-16 |
France: | -12 |
Germany: | 16 |
Iceland: | 16 |
Norway: | 15 |
Philippines: | PG-13 |
Singapore: | NC-16 |
Sweden: | 15 |
United Kingdom: | 18 |
United States: | R |
- Michael J. Fox as Pfc. Eriksson
- Sean Penn as Sgt. Tony Meserve
- Don Harvey as Cpl. Thomas E. Clark
- John C. Reilly as Pfc. Herbert Hatcher
- John Leguizamo as Pfc. Antonio Diaz
- Thuy Thu Le as Tran Thi Oanh/Girl on Train
- Erik King as Cpl.. Brown
- Jack Gwaltney as Pfc. Rowan
- Ving Rhames as Lt. Reilly
- Dan Martin as Hawthorne
- Dale Dye as Capt. Hill
[edit] Locations
- The bridge location was filmed in Kanchanaburi, Thailand. This was the same location where the famous Bridge on the River Kwai is located.
[edit] Awards
Wins
- Political Film Society: PFS Award; Peace; 1990.
Nominations
- Golden Globes: Golden Globe; Best Original Score - Motion Picture Ennio Morricone; 1990.
- Motion Picture Sound Editors: Golden Reel Award; Best Sound Editing - Sound Effects; Maurice Schell; 1990.
[edit] Footnotes
[edit] External links
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