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Apocalypse
Now (1979)
In director Francis Ford Coppola's sweeping,
surreal, still-controversial Vietnam war epic that has been considered
by many to be the best war movie of all time, with incredible performances.
A revised version, Apocalypse Now Redux (2001) followed.
It was a masterful, thought-provoking, pretentious film, with beautifully-chaotic
visuals, about the nightmarish, moral madness of the Vietnam War,
inspired by the novella Heart of Darkness by Joseph Conrad.:
- the opening credits sequence was accompanied by
the thumping sound of the choppers - and billowing napalm flames
coinciding with the music of The Doors, while drunken and debauched
US Army vet Captain Benjamin Willard (Martin Sheen) was in his
Saigon hotel room with a spinning ceiling fan (and his opening
line: "Saigon. Shit. I'm still only in Saigon"); in
the story beginning in Saigon in 1969, he was awaiting orders for
a top-secret mission
- Willard learned that he would be sent up the Nung
River into the off-limits Cambodian jungle aboard a Navy patrol
boat carrying a young, spaced-out crew
- his military objective was to assassinate ("terminate...with
extreme prejudice") a Buddha-like, renegade Colonel Walter
E. Kurtz (Marlon Brando), once a decorated Special Forces officer,
who had become an insane demi-god and now ran his own jungle fiefdom,
and lorded himself over the native peoples and Montagnard troops
- Willard experienced the horrors of war during the
journey, with his patrol boat companions: African-American boat
commander "Chief" Phillips
(Albert Hall), New Orleans cook "Chef" (Frederic Forrest),
17 year-old Bronx ghetto youth "Mr.
Clean" (Larry Fishburne), and California surfer-water skiier
Lance (Sam Bottoms)
- during the river journey,
the crew met up with hawkish, reckless and gung-ho Lieutenant Colonel
Bill Kilgore (Robert Duvall) wearing a black Stetson hat; the
surf-loving, flamboyant and fearless Lieutenant Kilgore gave a
famous speech amidst blowing yellow smoke while others surfed in
celebration: "I love the smell of napalm in the morning...
smelled like...victory," (and "Charlie
don't surf")
- a devastating dawn naval
attack by his 9th Air Cavalry unit was choreographed (supplemented
with visual/audio components) using napalm on a Vietnamese village
(with suspected Viet Cong) by swooping and swarming Huey helicopters,
to the tune of Wagner's "The Ride of the Valkyries"
blaring over loudspeakers
Air Cavalry - Dawn Attack
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Colonel Kilgore: "I love the smell of napalm
in the morning..."
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- afterwards, the group arrived at an isolated US
base supply depot at Hau Phat in a surreal nighttime scene brilliantly
lit by floodlights; Playboy Bunnies performed in a USO-styled show
for sex-starved soldiers
- the panicky crew senselessly massacred
all the innocent Vietnamese peasants in a sampan with machine-gun
fire
- they also came upon a bizarre night battle for the
besieged, psychedically-lit, temporary Do Lung bridge
- at mad renegade Colonel Kurtz's strange jungle compound
and outpost inside Cambodia (with severed heads and hanging mutilated
bodies in view), Willard first encountered maniacal, fast-talking
US freelance photographer (Dennis Hopper)
- Willard was ushered into Kurtz' presence inside a
dark temple. In the shadowy confrontation between Willard and
an incoherently-mumbling and deranged, overweight and bald Kurtz
(weighing hundreds of pounds with head shaven), the Colonel spoke
about the 'horrors' he had experienced: "I've
seen the horrors, horrors that you've seen. But you have no right
to call me a murderer. You have a right to kill me - you have a right
to do that - but you have no right to judge me." Although
Kurtz encouraged Willard to disobey and challenge his officers, he
also urged his own death
- ultimately, Willard emerged
from the jungle water and carried out his mission of murder with
a machete - interspliced with the natives' ritualistic slaughter
of a water buffalo (outraging animal activists). Willard and the catatonic and crazed
Lance (the only surviving patrol boat member) departed from the site,
hearing Kurtz' last words about wartime atrocities: "The
horror, the horror." In some versions of the film (during the end credits),
a fiery, large-scale aerial attack was staged to destroy Kurtz' jungle fortress
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Captain Willard Still in Saigon
Pre-Execution of Col. Kurtz
Death of Colonel Kurtz
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