Entertainment

VIETNAM: War Movie with Peace Theme Seeks to Heal Wounds

HO CHI MINH CITY, Vietnam, Mar 5  (IPS)  - A Vietnamese film that is vying for an Oscar this month offers a glimpse into how Vietnam and the United States are healing decades-old war wounds, as well as how that war still generates emotional debate today.

A contender in best foreign language category of the Oscars, or the 82nd annual awards of the U.S. Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, on Mar. 7, ‘Don't Burn' is based on the wartime diary of 27-year-old Viet Cong physician Dang Thuy Tram, who was shot dead by U.S. soldiers in the early sixties as U.S. military involvement escalated in the country.

The diary was found more than three decades years ago by U.S. soldier Fred Whitehurst, who handed it to his South Vietnamese translator, a sergeant. After reading some pages, the translator told his friend not to burn it, as ”there's already fire in it”.

”Last night I dreamed of peace. I came back and saw everybody. Oh, the dream of peace and independence has burned in the hearts of 30 million people for so long,” read part of Tram's diary.

Her dream of piece became the core of the movie, whose script was written by Dang Nhat Minh, who also directed it. ‘Last Night I Dreamed of Peace' is also the title of the diary's English translation, which was published in the United States in 2007.

That was a year after Whitehurst, who had kept the diary for 35 years, returned it to Tram's family in 2006.

It has since been translated into many languages, hailed by Vietnamese media and officials as the work of a young intellectual who had devoted her life to the revolutionary cause.

But there have been many movies around theme of the war in Vietnam -- and Minh was determined to avoid making yet another war movie and turning Tram's diary into a piece of propaganda.

”The film is not about the war. Instead, it is about the beauty and humanity of Tram,” said Minh, also known the acclaimed war film ‘When the Tenth Month Comes'.

He said he wanted a film that could help further bring together the former warring countries, which in the past decades have reconciled diplomatic, economic and political relations although issues like the impact of the use of Agent Orange and remains of U.S. soldiers missing in action remain.

The war in Vietnam took place from 1959 to 1975, a conflict that the U.S. government entered to stop a takeover of South Vietnam û which it and other allies backed û by the communist North. Referred to as the American War by the Vietnamese, the conflict led to the deaths of 3 to 4 million Vietnamese in the north and south and more than 58,000 U.S. soldiers.

The country was unified in 1976, after the North Vietnamese army captured Ho Chi Minh City, then called Saigon, in April 1975.

The film hints that reconciliation among the peoples of the two countries has indeed taken root, although it does not explicitly show facets like the friendship that developed between Whitehurst and Tram's mother and sisters after he returned the diary and visited them several times afterward.

”It would have been difficult to make this movie without the help of American war veterans Fred Whitehurst and Robert Whitehurst who shared their wartime memories with me,” said Minh, adding that seven U.S. actors had roles in the movie.

Some of responses to the movie highlight how the peace theme in this war movie reaches out to audiences in the United States. Many overseas Vietnamese and lecturers and students have taken part in lively discussions after showings of ‘Don't Burn' in several U.S. universities, news reports say.

At the Cantor Film Centre in New York City, John McAutiff, managing director of the New-York based Conciliation and Development Foundation, thanked Minh for ”a movie about war that doesn't have hatred, only love, the dream of peace and the brotherhood of soldiers”.

But while U.S. audiences may have rapturous applause and tearful faces after watching ‘Don't Burn', overseas Vietnamese tend to be more sceptical.

Screenings of the film have raised questions about its having emotional appeal but failing to look deep enough into other key issues, including U.S. intervention in the region and the divisions that still remain between the north and southern parts of the country owing to their different political pasts.

Some Vietnamese students have remarked that the film shirked essential issues such as the legitimacy of the war, whether the conflict was a liberation war or a civil war, and the plight of the people and soldiers of South Vietnam after U.S. troops pulled out in 1975.

”It's weird that the film is aimed at generating reconciliation between ancient foes,” University of California in Los Angeles student Tran Thanh was quoted as saying. ”For most Americans, the war in Vietnam is already a thing of the past. Reconciliation with Americans is like hitting a door that has been already widely opened. It is with the Southern Vietnamese that reconciliation should go,” Thanh said.

”Viewers have their own thinking and I respect their different thinking,” said Minh, whose film also won the audience award at Japan's Fukuoka International Film Festival in September 2009.

He added that there is an element that includes South Vietnam, since ‘Don't Burn' touched on the whereabouts of the South Vietnamese sergeant who kept Tram's diary from being burned.

The film, however, does not shed light on what happened to this soldier, whose name is not mentioned. Some Vietnamese news reports said the soldier's name was Huan.

”Tram's diary would never exist without the civilised and humane attitude of a South Army sergeant. But he only deserves a word for form's sake at the end of the movie,” said a bitter comment on Talawas, one of most prestigious independent Vietnamese websites.

Valentines Day Movie Review

Valentines DayDirector Gary Marshall’s latest edition to the romantic comedy genre “Valentines Day” wasn’t up to the standard that I was expecting.  I must say I felt like a little bit let down because with a cast of some of Hollywoods biggest’s names Valentine’s Day didn’t hit the notes like its predecessor “Love Actually”.

“Valentine’s Day” follows the lives of 23 characters throughout their lives on you guessed Valentine’s day, we start with Ashton Kutcher’s character the florist, who is the closet thing the film has to a main character who wakes up that morning and decides to propose to his girlfriend (Jessica Alba), we then move onto Ashton’s best friend played by Jennifer Garner as an elementary school teacher who is newly in love with her married boyfriend Patrick Dempsey  and blissfully unaware that when he says he is rushing off to surgery he is actually rushing home to his wife. We then move onto the teenage characters in the story where we have high school senior played by Julia Roberts’s niece, Emma Roberts wanting to have sex with her boyfriend and both Taylor Lautner and Taylor Swift as boyfriend and girlfriend who I feel are only in the movie for teen appeal.

Then there is Jessica Biel who hates Valentine’s Day and is trying to deal with the fact she is alone, Jamie Foxx is also thrown into the mix as sports news reader who is trying to work out the next career move from football player Eric Dane. Queen Latifah plays a PR rep who is dealing with complications from Eric Dane’s character and boss for the day to aspiring poet Anne Hathaway who moonlights as a phone sex worker while trying to evaluate her previous one night stand with Topher Grace. Shirley McLaine and Hector Elizondo show us that love can last into the old age while looking after child actor Bryce Robinson’s character who pays $13 to send roses to the love of his life and Julia Roberts and Bradley Cooper are plane buddies travelling back to Los Angeles to spend the day with their significant other.

If after all of that you are confused, I don’t really blame you- this movie unfortunately doesn’t take the time to really focus on any of the characters stories and you sometimes feel as though you are being pulled from one to the other just as it is starting to get interesting. I felt with all the big names in “Valentine’s Day” the outcome was a little like 2009’s “He’s Just Not That Into You” which again crammed some of Hollywood’s finest into one and didn’t really do any of them justice.

“Valentine’s Day”, don’t get me wrong was an easy movie to watch and one that I will probably see again if only for watching the cast work together however I don’t think it is a need to see at the cinemas like some other chick flicks have been and as much as I hate to say it I was disappointed when I left the cinema.

From Paris with Love Movie Review

From Paris With Love‘From Paris with Love’ surprised me in many ways. When I went to see it I had not read anything about it so was a little bit shocked when the cinema suddenly became full of guys- I had just assumed since the movie was recommended by a girlfriend that it was in fact a romantic drama- How wrong was I?

‘From Paris with Love’ is definitely a boy’s movie but not to the standard that director Pierre Morel’s ‘Taken’ was at last year. I guess you could say ‘From Paris with Love’ is a combination of ‘Lethal Weapon’, ‘Die Hard’, James Bond and “The Hurt Locker”.

John Travolta plays Charlie Wax to a tee. Wax’s approach to his job is best described as ‘rock and roll’ and really this just means he doesn’t always play by the rules. Most of the movies laughs come from Wax who is a man who is never afraid to say the ridiculous or do the unthinkable. Wax is wild, unthinkable and unpredictable. And Morel did well in adding the little homage’s to Travolta’s character in ‘Pulp Fiction’ throughout different parts of the movie

Wax is partnered with Jonathon Rhys Meyers as James Reece- a government agent working at the US embassy in France. Frankly I wouldn’t have paired these two actors together as I don’t feel they mesh well together on screen. There is no chemistry between Travolta and Meyers in the scenes that they work together in and there comes a point in the movie where Morel just seems to give up trying to get the chemistry right and splits them into different realities.

‘From Paris with Love’ has its good and bad moments and if your ok with lots of bloodshed, gun fights and the odd car chase  then it is actually kind of fun. There are definitely parts in the storyline where it seems bumpy and Morel is unsure about what it is about, is it a buddy- cop, lets shoot em’ up movie or is it about terrorism and the personal costs that has on lives?

This movie is not about making political statements- it is just your average shameless, violent thriller that doesn’t even try to disguise the fact that the action doesn’t revolve around a coherent plot.

Definitely a boy’s movie but I also thoroughly enjoyed it and would definitely watch it again.