Dalya Alberge, Arts Correspondent
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The wars in Iraq and Afghanistan have spawned a new generation of war movies, with the genre being embraced by Hollywood even as the fighting unfolds.
Some 20 films about the post-9/11 conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan have already been shot, or are in production or about to start filming.
The explosion of war films has been likened to the proliferation of movies during the Second World War and Vietnam. But for Hollywood, this new flurry of war films is still a gamble.
The films made during the Second World War were intended as propaganda and the movies that helped to frame Vietnam in the popular imagination, such as Apocalypse Now, The Deerhunter and Platoon, were made after the fall of Saigon in 1975.
Those that sought to satirise the war effort made their points allusively, such as the revisionist Western Soldier Blue and M*A*S*H, which was set during the Korean War.
In 2007, the conflicts depicted are very much ongoing. Prominent among the films adressing them is Robert Redford’s Lions for Lambs, starring Redford, Tom Cruise and Meryl Streep. Interweaving the stories of two American students who end up in Afghanistan, and an idealistic professor, a senator and a journalist, it has been savaged by American conservatives who have yet to see it.
With the US body count continuing to mount, such controversy is inevitable. Other high-profile projects include Rendition, with Reese Wither-spoon, and Charlie Wilson’s War, starring Tom Hanks and Julia Roberts, already tipped as an Oscar contender. Imperial Life in the Emerald City, directed by Paul Greengrass, who made The Bourne Ultimatum, also forms part of the list. Greengrass has already made a film about 9/11 - United 93 - which was adored by critics but struggled to attract audiences.
Almost 18 years ago, Brian De Palma made Casualties of War,one of the most harrowing films about atrocities in Vietnam. Now he has trained his camera on Iraq, where he believes history is repeating itself. At the Venice Film Festival, where his new film, Redacted, is receiving its premiere, he said: “Once again a senseless war has produced a senseless tragedy. I told this story years ago but the lessons from Vietnam have gone unheeded.”
De Palma, 62, is concerned that modern audiences have become disengaged from the conflicts. “All the images we have of our war are completely constructed - whitewashed, redacted,” he said. “Unlike Vietnam, when we saw the destruction and sorrow of the people we were maiming and killing, and soldiers coming home in body bags, we see none of that in this war. It’s all out there on the internet, you can find it if you look for it, but it’s not in the mainstream media.”
He added: “I remember picking up Life magazine and seeing pictures that would horrify me about the Vietnam War. We don’t have those pictures in America now. The pictures are what will stop the war.” He hopes the film will make audiences “incensed enough to get their congressmen to vote against the war”.
Like Casualties of War, Redacted is based on a true story of US forces raping and murdering a local woman in Mahmudiya, south of Baghdad, last year. They reportedly raped a 14-year-old girl, killed her family, shot her in the face and set her body on fire.
“How could these boys have gone so wrong?” De Palma asked. “If we are going to cause such disorder, then we must face the horrendous images that are the consequences of these events.” He said he based Redactedon the internet testimonials, blogs, YouTube clips and video journals of serving soldiers.
Line of fire
Lions for Lambs Directed by and starring Robert Redford as an antiwar
professor whose students end up fighting in Afghanistan. Also stars Tom
Cruise as a pro-Iraq war senator
Grace Is Gone With John Cusack as a father who must tell his children
that their mother died in the line of duty in Iraq
Charlie Wilson’s War Mike Nichols’s adaptation of George Crile’s
book about a congressman’s covert dealings with rebels in Afghanistan. Stars
Tom Hanks and Julia Roberts
The Fall of the Warrior King A Tom Cruise film about an officer who resigned after a scandal in which men under his command drowned an Iraqi civilian
Imperial Life in the Emerald City About life in the Green Zone in Baghdad after the 2003 invasion,
Stop Loss Ryan Phillippe is a soldier who refuses to return to Iraq
The Return Neil Burger’s film about three US servicemen who return from Iraq to find a country divided over the war
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Why is Israel always mentioned when there is conflict in the Middle East? What has Israel got to do with the Iraq war?? Absolutely nothing. I wish people would stop making irrelevant comments and start looking at the facts, rather than harping on about subjects which have nothing to do with the above article!
Eric Freeman, Guildford,
The headline says it all: Hollywood is a new front on the war on terror. Bin Laden has found a formidable new ally.
Andrew Freeman, Overland Park, KS
It's the neocons, not Israel, who are responsible for the mess in Iraq. The neocon's attempt to spread democracy in the ME, even at gunpoint, has locked America into another Viet Nam. Every hard to see how Israel benefits from the Iraq War. The downsides for Israel include among other things being scapegoated in the Muslim world and running the risk of being attacked. As a Jew and an ardent Zionist with family in Israel, I believe better for America and Israel we withdraw asap.
Mark Klein, M.D., OAKLAND, California
Films are indeed a very important part of the US's arsenal of propaganda weapons.
Just compare the image portrayed of the Palestinians and compare with the image of the Israelis.
The interviewing of Palestinian spokespeople who can barely speak English compared Israeli smoothies speaking perfect English.
We rarely see a Yiddish speaking, gun toting, Israeli, West Bank setller spewing forth about his desire to kick the Arabs out, or Israeli tanks firing at stone throwing kids.
American audiences are almost all taken in by these images.
Robin Bather, Metepec, Mexico
Now you can compare Iraq and Vietnam.
Not because scholars, officers, diplomats, historians and other professionnals established the relevance of the comparison but because the show business and Hollywood operatives felt like it.
Another national myth is emerging, and for the worse, as myths may be useful in primitive societies but can be dangerous in modern ones.
Ronnie, PARIS, FRANCE
More propaganda by those who controls Hollywood by not telling you that the state of Israel are responsible for all our dead boys.
Ponce, Oregon, USRael
At least Britain won't have to worry about being identified as one of the bad guys, borderline war criminals. By the time Hollywood has finished, the Brits were never in Iraq or Afghanistan in the first place. And Americans are such hard-wired, two-dimensional simpletons, they'll believe that purile MSM deception.
Andrew Milner, Yokohama, Japan