“There’s an evil out there I’ve never seen before,” says
Chris Kyle, a Navy SEAL whose biggest claim to fame is a reputation for having
killed 160 people (confirmed) during his multiple tours in Iraq, a record for
Americans who aren’t mobsters or serial killers. (Kyle claimed in his memoir
that the number was much higher: around 255, although this is unsubstantiated.)
Kyle’s driving force is the idea that pure evil exists out there in the world,
and it’s his job to locate it and destroy it, to protect all that is good. And
all that is good turns out to be America and Americans and the American way of
life. That’s the driving force of the film American
Sniper, directed by Clint Eastwood, based on Kyle’s memoir, and starring
Bradley Cooper as Kyle.
Clint Eastwood is a talented but also a calculating
director, and he fashions American Sniper
like a video game. (Or perhaps video games have simply caught on to
military maneuvers, and they now just mimic each other. I hear that American Sniper is quite accurate
militarily-speaking.) There are two scenes that particularly stuck in my
memory, both of them involving Chris Kyle having to decide whether to shoot
children who have come into contact with extremely dangerous weapons. These two
scenes feel particularly manipulative coming from a movie that so fixates on the
“pure evilness” of the people we’re fighting in that part of the world. There
is no attempt to understand Iraq beyond a kind of primeval distrust and fear of
its people and their culture. They are Eastwood’s supreme bogeys, and this is
his Iraqi Chainsaw Massacre.
Eastwood deliberately simplifies the political and moral
angles of the war in Iraq in order to isolate and thus elevate the experiences,
gritty, harrowing, and stupefyingly violent as they may be, of American
soldiers in Iraq. The movie ignores questions of why we were and are in Iraq, disregards
the cultural differences at the root of our conflicts in the Middle East, and
conveniently forgets that America might share some of the blame in those
conflicts. Perhaps Eastwood feels these grey areas would complicate his own
mission, that of elevating Chris Kyle to the status of unquestionable American
hero.
To a degree, I want to be on board with the moral logic of a
movie like American Sniper and a man
like Chris Kyle. I would love to think that war is as simple as “good verses
evil.” But I know this not to be true, and so, to insist that it is, constitutes
a dangerously happy lie, one that made me very depressed last night at the
screening. American Sniper holds your
attention, but it’s the kind of movie you don’t want lingering in your mind.
The images are haunting, and the lie behind the movie is perhaps even more so.
So yes, it’s effective, and yes, you’ll get your money’s worth if you want
intense, apparently very accurate, dramatizations of the Iraq war. You’ll also
get your money’s worth if you want to project some hero worship onto Chris
Kyle, martyr to the cause. His story is heartbreaking; he is in some ways a
hero. But to lionize him in this way, without fully exploring the damage done
to him by the things he saw and did, is to ultimately dehumanize him and the
many men and women who’ve gone to war.
The closest the movie comes to having an emotional core is
its skimming of the surface of PTSD. We see Chris Kyle, finally home from his
tours, sitting in his living room staring into the TV, which isn’t on; he’s
looking past the TV, the memories of combat constantly replaying themselves in
his mind. He’s a war zombie, seeing and feeling nothing, utterly zonked out,
yet unable to forget the atrocities he experienced and enacted, unable to still
the turbulent storm inside himself. Sudden loud noises make him jump, triggering
an ingrained instinct forged by the ugliness and the tragedy he’s witnessed and
in which he’s participated. But the film doesn’t ever deal with his PTSD
directly. Kyle’s wife begs him to open up, but he refuses. He’s stubborn during
a session with a psychiatrist. And when the shrink asks him what’s troubling
him, Kyle replies that he’s bothered by the lives he can’t save because he’s at home, no longer serving his country.
This is where Eastwood wants to trap us into equating killing with patriotism.
Suddenly, Chris Kyle is supposed to be a modern-day Oscar Schindler, who bemoaned
the fact that he couldn’t save more
Jews. So the inner-conflict that Kyle suffers when he must point his gun at a
child carrying a bomb is buried beneath the false notion that all patriotism is
sacrosanct, all killing justified in the heat of battle. I can absolutely
understand the character, and the man himself, wanting to bury this
inner-conflict. But the fact that film does so is troubling beyond belief.
Instead, Eastwood conjures up as many violent interplays
between American soldiers and Iraqi terrorists as he can, all of them a ringing
reminder of both Chris Kyle’s prowess as a sniper and a chilling, horrifying
visual encounter with an experience most of us will thankfully never have to
remember. Movies about Iraq are for most of us the only immediate way we can
experience what it was like for those who were and are actually there, engaged
in the turmoil.
But what kind of message does a film like American Sniper send to say, a young boy
who’s in love with the hyper-macho heroics of this Chris Kyle worship? We get
Kyle’s own philosophy about the evils of the people in the Middle East. We get
no measured exploration of the very complicated history between the Middle East
and the Western world, and the ways in which our own country has done wrong,
has many times been the aggressors, has acted as though we are the only country
that matters.
There is much to be said for the effectiveness of American Sniper. Eastwood knows how to
put the screws on the audience, and this film is nothing if not compelling. The
movie’s two hours move fast, the scenes of conflict are truly disturbing and
well-made, and Bradley Cooper is absolutely believable in his role. He
masterfully captures that jock personality you’d expect from a Texas-born Navy
SEAL, and he shows us the amount of mental effort required for Chris Kyle to
keep all the hurt inside himself, an island of deep anguish. (His wife, played
by Sienna Miller, suffers untold agonies trying to bring her husband back.)
If this movie makes you thankful for the sacrifices of
American soldiers—and their families, who surely suffer in a magnitude of ways
that do not end when, or if, their loved ones make it back home—great. But do
we need lies to feel gratitude? Do we need oversimplifications, and platitudes
about the Greatness of America, to love our country? And why must our love of
country stamp out all consideration for a shared human experience that reaches
across national lines? We are indeed a long way from fully understanding the
Middle East or reaching any kind of peace in that world. And yes, there is evil
there. But what of our own pernicious, subtle evils? American Sniper brings us no closer to examining these, and further
entrenches the “us versus them” mentality that feeds the divide between our two
cultures.
3 comments:
Jacob, I can't disagree more. But I enjoyed reading your review and respect your opinion.
Instead of oversimplifying the conflict as an "us vs. them blind patriotism" apologetic for neoconservatism, American Sniper challenges the viewer to consider the the righteous cause of America's involvement in the Middle East. Some of the Sniper's cohorts even raise those doubts and the film doesn't attempt to answer the questions. Actually, it offers up a tepid response by the Sniper who attempts to claim that our actions over there keep the bad guys from coming to "New York" or "Los Angeles." Obviously not an inspired defense for the War on Terror. Instead of being heavy-handed with it's message, the viewer has to make up his own mind about the broader geopolitical and moral implications of America's actions.
The primary message of the film is that there are wolves, sheep, and sheepdogs. This is the story of a sheepdog who became a legend and then had to learn how to win the battle at home that was waged within his own mind. The film isn't redemptive because America wins, it's beautifully redemptive because the Sniper learns he becomes an even greater sheepdog by loving his family and serving wounded veterans.
Your review seemed to read into the film a message that is not supported by the plot, dialogue, symbolism, or character development.
But message aside, what did you think of the film's technical aspects and the art of film-making? I'm unqualified to asses the nuance of film but from a layman's perspective it was ascetically pleasing. Sound, cinematography, acting, directing, and editing all seemed first class.
Hey Justin.
As far as the technical aspects of American Sniper go, it's fine. The movie is effective in that way. It's hard not to be riveted to the screen when what's happening is so immediate, so disturbing. And that does speak to the fact that it's well-made technically.
But I felt compelled to look at what's underneath all that because so many people will see this movie not as a movie but as a kind of ode to a military hero and even perhaps as a standard for the kind of "stock" that is required in order to achieve this kind of heroism.
Now, as to some other claims you made about my review: You're right that American Sniper: a) "challenges the viewer to consider the righteous cause of America's involvement in the Middle East"; b) "doesn't attempt to answer the questions"; and c) forces "the viewer... to make up his own mind about the broader geopolitical and moral implications of America's actions."
So I don't really dispute any of that. But that's just it. The movie doesn't want to address the deeper issues, because to do so would hamper Eastwood's project or giving us a very simple story. There's nothing wrong with simplifying the story, but simplifying the war rings incredibly false to me.
And moreover, I don't find SNIPER redemptive at all. He never deals with his issues. The movie abruptly moves forward in time and never actually addresses the PTSD problem that is, I think, quite worthy of being addressed. Obviously, there are some confines because it's based on a book, but in terms of AMERICAN SNIPER as a movie, not as an historic document, I think it misses an opportunity. And, if AMERICAN SNIPER is only meant to be a historical document, then I am even more disturbed by its refusal to look at this very long conflict honestly.
The message I read into the film is pretty much the same as the one you did: It's about fighting evil. My problem is that the message isn't enough, and I think it will end up getting into the heads of impressionable young people that THIS is the way to be a warrior, a hero: a killing machine. It basically justifies that urge that I see in so many teenagers who say they want to join the military so they can kill people.
Eastwood's project *of* not or
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