Go tell these movies to the marines
By Bert Ehrmann
2005-10-31 — On November 6, Universal
Pictures will release Jarhead. Directed by Sam Mendes (American Beauty,
Road to Perdition), Jarhead is based on Anthony Swooford's book on
his experiences as a Marine through boot camp, to Kuwait and eventually
taking part in the first Gulf War.
Though I'm guessing the release of Jarhead this year has more to do with our
current situation in Iraq than the previous one, Jarhead is not the first movie
to deal with that war.
The first movie based on the first Gulf War was entitled The Heroes of Desert
Storm and aired on network television the same year the war ended, 1991. The
Heroes of Desert Storm dealt with the war through three different events. I
remember actor Daniel Baldwin as an infantryman tasked to clean out a bunker
system of Iraqi soldiers, but there were also stories about soldiers rescuing
downed airmen behind enemy lines as well as people preparing for chemical attacks
on cities. I do, however, remember that The Heroes of Desert Storm seemed "slapped
together" with a "Movie of the Week" feel and wasn't all that good.
Courage Under Fire was released a few years later. Denzel Washington plays
a Lt. Colonel Serling, investigating helicopter pilot Emma Walden (Meg Ryan)
for the Medal of Honor. Serling discovers that it might not have been the Iraqis
who killed Walden when the soldiers with her the night she was killed all seem
to have different stories. Told Rashomon (1950) style, Courage Under Fire shows
each participant's viewpoint the night Walden was killed and delves into each
character's particular experiences.
Probably the best movie about the Gulf War was Three Kings (1999). Written
and directed by David O. Russell (I Heart Huckabees 2004), Three Kings stars
George Clooney as Maj. Archie Gates, who along with three other men decides
to sneak into Iraq after the war to steal millions in looted Kuwaiti bullion.
When Gates and his men enter the village they suspect houses the loot, they
find the villagers being mistreated by the Iraqi soldiers stationed there.
When Gates and his men try to help them, they become entangled with the Iraqi
soldiers bent on maintaining order.
Look for a very young Alia Shawkat (Maeby from Arrested Development) playing
an Iraqi girl.
HBO's Live from Baghdad (2002) dealt with the Gulf War being the first war
televised live via CNN. Michael Keaton plays CNN producer Robert Weiner, who
leads a film crew into the heart of Baghdad just before the start of the war.
When other news agencies flee the city, the CNN crew is getting the story of
a lifetime, becoming one of the few networks to interview Saddam Hussein and,
when the war breaks out, are the only network in town to broadcast the air
strikes live risking their lives in the process.
Even as recently as last year, the remake of The Manchurian Candidate had its
roots in the Gulf War. In the movie, Maj. Ben Marco (again Denzel Washington)
leads his men into Iraq when things go wrong. It's only the fast action of
Sgt. Raymond Shaw (Liev Schreiber) that saves the group from capture or death.
Or does he? More than a decade later, Marco and the survivors of his squad
aren't doing well, having mental problems and ending up in institutions. What's
thought to be posttraumatic stress disorder could be something more insidious
when Marco turns up some disturbing evidence of that night back in Iraq while
Shaw makes a run for Vice President for the United States.
I was a fifteen-year-old high school student doing homework in the basement
of my grandmother's house when the bombs began dropping, marking the start
of the first Gulf War. And here, fourteen years later, America is still dealing
with this war through the entertainment medium. If World War II is any indication
of how long this process can go on, it's sixty years after the end of that
war and movies based on it are as common as ever. So, I suppose some fifty
years from now future generations will still be watching movies based on the
first Gulf War.