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Friday, April 04, 2008
Lorie Byrd :: Townhall.com Columnist
I'd Pay to See Movies About American Heroes
by Lorie Byrd
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“If you make it good, they will come.”  That’s what my friend Sarah said about war movies after reading a recent Washington Post article about how poorly the current crop of Iraq war movies are doing at the box office.  Sarah is an Army wife and she is not surprised that recent movies about the war in Iraq have not been successful.

In the Post article, Paul Farhi writes “a spate of Iraq-themed movies and TV shows haven't just failed at the box office. They've usually failed spectacularly, despite big stars, big budgets and serious intentions.” Farhi asks, “Are audiences turned off by the war, or are they simply voting against the way filmmakers have depicted it?”

Sarah’s answer is, “Make a movie like 300, and people will flock to the theater. Make the soldiers the freaking good guys, and you've got yourself a hit; make them rapists or dupes or Tools of the Bushitler Oil Junta, and no one wants to see your damn movie.”  It’s just about that simple, isn’t it? 

There is no shortage of amazing stories of heroics coming out of Iraq and Afghanistan.  I would love to see a movie about some of those on the Vets for Freedom National Heroes Tour or one about some of the heroes at home like Soldiers’ Angels founder Patti Patton-Bader.

The movies would not need to be jingoistic or simplistic or “rah-rah” to attract an audience.  There is plenty of conflict and drama and grit in stories about the current crop of war heroes for the making of a great movie.  And there is enough good being done by our troops in Iraq and Afghanistan and elsewhere that it would be possible to make an honest and realistic movie about the war that is still positive and uplifting.

Hollywood may not want to make positive movies about our troops’ accomplishments in the war for fear of encouraging young Americans to enlist or they may just be so set in their opinions that they can’t see the incredible accomplishments and feats of heroism our troops have performed.  They might not want to call any attention to any positive aspect of “George Bush’s War.”  For whatever reason, it has been the trend for quite some time to depict the American military in negative ways.  But at the same time, it has been taboo to accurately depict the faces of terrorism.  Even following September 11, Arab Muslim terrorists were often replaced in movies and on television with White Supremacists or other groups. 

I am generalizing when I say this, but it is largely true that in recent movies the American military is the bad guy and the Middle East Muslim terrorist is either misunderstood or non-existent.  Americans are smart enough to understand that and they are smart enough not to buy it.   

Those in Hollywood have no trouble making bad movies if there is a market for them. (There are at least eleven Friday the 13th movies to prove it.) When I was growing up it was sometimes hard to find many movies that weren’t rated “R.”  I remember wondering if filmmakers added in nude scenes or excessively foul language just so the movie could receive an “R’ rather than a “PG” rating so they could be seen as edgy or serious.  There were only a handful of big movies each year made for kids -- most notably by Disney.

Thankfully that changed before I had kids.  As a result of the success of blockbuster family movies in recent years, today there is an abundance of “G” and “PG” rated movies appropriate for both adults and kids.  The box office success of movies like Shrek proved just how large the audience for family-friendly films is.  At the top of the list of highest grossing box offiice films are titles like Harry Potter, The Lord of the Rings, Finding Nemo, The Lion King, The Incredibles and Night at the Museum.

The Passion of the Christ made the top of the list, as well, proving there is a large audience hungry for movies with traditional Christian themes.

If and when someone decides to make a big budget movie about the heroes of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, one in which the United States is portrayed as the “good guy,” I predict it will do huge business.  American movie fans like stories about war heroes, but so far there has been no Saving Private Ryan set in Iraq or Afghanistan.  The stories are out there.  They are being told everyday by those in the field.  They are being recorded by military bloggers and others attempting to tell the story of the modern American hero.  Most of those in the Hollywood community are (to put it mildly) not fans of George W. Bush and many are very strongly opposed to the Iraq War.  Evidently hatred of Bush and the war is stronger than even the profit motive in Hollywood.

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About The Author

Lorie Byrd is a Townhall.com columnist and blogs at Wizbang and at LorieByrd.com.

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Need for heroes
I just saw the movie Ironman and the audience cheered in the end. They loved the movie and the fact that somebody stood up to the bad guys. This is what we want to see. There are so many heroes in the war in Iraq and Afghanistan. Men and women who sacrifice their very lives for their fellow soldiers. They need to be recognized. I avoid any movie or TV show that characterizes the U.S. and our soldiers as the bad guys. I don't think they make them for us. They make them for the Europeans and the Asians who love to see us as the bad guy anyway. The movie makers don't care what we think.

I agree with Grumpy
Hollywierd needs to stop inserting their political beliefs into any future war movies. Stop manufacturing stories that play to the enemy's view. Pick a particular battle to make a movie about and make it as factual as possible and you'll have a movie that we would want to watch. As a former Marine I will say that the anti Vietnam movies mentioned we movies that were liked because they made the characters human and believeable and followed them from boot to battle. IMO the best Vietnam movie to come out was We Were Soldiers.
As others have mentioned, they don't need to make the main character gay or mentally unstable to let us know what they think of our troops. Leave the ideology out and tell the story. The majority of us know our troops are heros and dislike seeing them portrayed any other way. There may be the occasional miscreant who disgraces himself and his unit and if they felt the need to make a movie about it then just tell the full story without embellishing it with their political/sexual conotations.
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