Preview

Pain And Suffering In Vietnam Film

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
512 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Pain And Suffering In Vietnam Film
In the Vietnam trilogy of films, Stone admits to having learnt something about the concepts of pain and suffering. Through the movies, he became in touch with his suffering on `The Platoon' as a soldier. Then, after the Vietnam experience, Stone could live through the experiences of Ron Kovic in a wheelchair and empathize with what his brother in arms went through. Finally, through Le Ly, he was able to empathize with the experience of a Vietnamese peasant girl among other innocent victims of the war. The trilogy of Vietnam films gives the director and the audience the wider picture and idea of the Vietnam War (Riordan, p. 324).
Through Le Ly, Stone realized that although the soldiers passed the Viet peasants such as Le Ly, distrusting them and thinking they were sympathetic to the Viet Cong, they were actually right in doing so since, as he realized later, the Viet Cong deserved their sympathy. However, it was 20 years later that Stone discovered why the peasant Vietnamese rightly sympathized with the
…show more content…
However, these Vietnamese have never been given the credit of that suffering. Instead, later presidents such as Bill Clinton renewed the sanctions against Vietnam, further fuelling hatred against the Vietnamese. Ironically, the US continued to rebuild Germany and Japan after World War II; countries that committed heinous atrocities on an enormous scale. In the case of the Vietnam conflict, the US has somehow lost its compassion and ability to make amends, pardon, reach out and shake the hand of an enemy and befriend them again (Riordan, p. 244). If all these actions were done to befriend Vietnam again, the USA would become a better country. Although some would treat Stone’s statements and thesis on the Vietnam conflict as political speeches, there could be truth in his stance on the

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Satisfactory Essays

    Those who experience the Vietnam War were greatly impacted by it. In the story “The Things they Carried”, by Tim O’Brien, the author is able to share a first hand view of one soldiers experience and impact of the Vietnam War. Lieutenant Jimmy Cross undergoes many difficulties throughout the story. His main Conflict is being able to distinguish what portrays as a fantasy to present truth. By observing O’Brien’s style of writing, it is discovered that Lieutenant Jimmy Cross’s character appears to be very emotional and distracted by a girl named Martha but overcomes it by becoming a leader to help keep his men alive.…

    • 264 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    The reports in this novel are prefaced with a quote by Robert Shaplen, which sums up the feelings of those Americans involved in the Vietnam conflict. He states, "Vietnam, Vietnam . . .. There are no sure answers." In this novel, the author gives a detailed historical account of the happenings in Vietnam between 1950 and 1975. He successfully reports the confusing nature, proximity to the present and the emotions that still surround the conflict in Vietnam. In his journey through the years that America was involved in the Vietnam conflict, Herring "seeks to integrate military, diplomatic, and political factors in such a way as to clarify America's involvement and ultimate failure in Vietnam."…

    • 1881 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Better Essays

    Though this time it is used introverted towards America, and not the outside world. Pathos dominates this statement because it implies that soldiers had to give the ultimate sacrifice to allow South Vietnam peace, which also portrays the war with a higher meaning and purpose. There appear an amount of carefully selected loaded words in the text that is relevant to point out. Nixon speaks of a right kind of peace that works in coherence with the soldiers not dying in vain. He uses this loaded word connection to indicate that there has been achieved a very unique kind of peace in Vietnam. Only one comparison appears in the speech and it is very important for the outcome of the successfulness of it: “Johnson endured the vilification of those who sought to portray him as a man of war. But there was nothing he cared about more deeply than achieving a lasting peace in the…

    • 1003 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Better Essays

    “Vietnam: A Necessary War” is a summary of a book of a similar name by author Michael Lind. The book addresses the viewpoint that the Vietnam War was both moral and necessary for eventual victory in the Cold War. Michael Lind graduated from the University of Texas at Austin with honors in English and History, received an MA in International Relations from Yale University, and a JD from the University of Texas Law School. In 1990-1991 he worked as Assistant to the Director of the U.S. State Department’s Center for the study of Foreign Affairs. From 1991-1994 he was Executive Editor of The National Interest, and from 1994-1998 he worked for Harper’s Magazine,…

    • 1192 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    The preface, Hunt expresses how his early beliefs on Vietnam were molded by books he had read including Lederer and Burdick's The Ugly American, Fall's Street without Joy, and Greene's The Quiet American. He talks of living with his family in Saigon for the summer in the 1960s. His father worked with the U.S. military mission, to revamp the simple idea of Americans as “innocent moral crusaders”) in which was done outside of and in blindness to the actual Vietnamese history and culture. Hunt begins with an extensive look at the America’s view and movement on to the Cold War. In Chapter One, "The Cold War World of The Ugly American," he reviews the United States' indifference to the problems Vietnam while centering on a more international inference. That makes Ho Chi Minh with the seem to be more a communist instead of a patriot and which in turn led initially to help the French colonialism in the area, then to the support of anticommunist leaders, an move that attracted the United States to the issue. Hunt then blames Eisenhower administration's views, which gave a " ... simple picture of Asians as either easily educable friends or implacable communist foes" (p. 17).…

    • 724 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In the dense hot jungles of vietnam thousands of Americans took their last breath and disappeared into history. Most of them paid the full price of war but will forever be known as just a tally on a number of losses in a dark gruesome war. Brothers, fathers, uncles died everyday to protect the citizens of South Vietnam from the brutal North Vietnamese. Like all wars there's no easy way out; blood will always be shed and family chains will forever be broken. Vietnam was a terrible but necessary war. When the Vietnam soldiers returned, they were treated badly by their fellow citizens, by people who protested the war calling them child killers and monsters. It was not the soldier’s fault that their government drafted them into war. The real monsters…

    • 193 Words
    • 1 Page
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Gloria Pollock was 16 years old when the Vietnam War began. When the war first started, Mrs. Pollock did not think much of it. She just thought of it as another war that the United States would take care of. It was not a big deal to her, until further into the war, when she realized it could affect the US in a pretty big way. Although she, or anyone in her family, did not fight in the war, she knew a few people that had entered the war. Most of them were her friend’s fathers or brothers. When asked what she remembers from seeing on tv or reading in the newspapers, Mrs. Pollock revealed a lot of horrible things. On tv, there were a lot of nasty stories, like calling the soldiers baby killers, and just shaming them as if it was their fault. Mrs.…

    • 948 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    The history of Vietnam is one of great struggle and conflict. For centuries the vietnamese people have had no choice but to change their society by force in order to gain their own freedom and independence. Pivitol events in Vietnamese history such as the Battle of Bach Dang in 939 and the Battle of Dien Bien Phu in 1954 are examples of how the conflict theory brought change to Vietnamese society and culture.…

    • 887 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    The American involement in the Vietnam war is a conversial topic because many thing occured during that time that didn't set well in many Americans souls. This war reveal many tragic losses to people livelihood. These losses made certain americans wonder how American involement participation was unjust. The solution to this gruesome war was not agreed on by many americans . Martin Luther King Jr builds his argument on the affect of the felllow americans and the ways american solves the problems in vietnam.…

    • 677 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Better Essays

    Tim O’Brien constructs a meticulous narrative in order to portray a true representation of war through his writing. It is well known however that truth always becomes a casualty through war resulting in a challenging approach for O’Brien. Although deemed a work of fiction, many of the stories within The Things They Carried reflect an almost autobiographical outlook through the characters combined with metafiction. O’Brien does well to create a distinction between the truth of the narrative and that of the truth of the events taking place. Therefore it is this conciliation of truth that he uses to recreate his discourse of Vietnam using fictional form combined with a clear exhibition of facts and figures such as in “The Things They Carried” (O’Brien, 3-21). Nevertheless O’Brien still faces an infinite obstacle in regards to trauma. Herman states that ‘The conflict between the will to deny horrible events and the will to proclaim them aloud is the central dialectic of psychological trauma.’ (Herman, 2) In effect the survivors of such ordeals retell their stories in a heavily distorted account due to emotional stress often controverting…

    • 1894 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Richard Nixon soon came into office as president, and had the Vietnam War on his hands. Nixon was mourned by Vietnamese refugees because they felt he tried his hardest to save their homeland (Richard Nixon: 1913-1994). In that same article, Dr. Co. D.L. Pham stated, “Nixon was the greatest President of the U.S. and one of the greatest leaders of the world,” and Nguyen said, “He killed Communists, that’s good, I love Nixon, I respect Nixon.” Vietnamese refuges were glad that Nixon came to help them out with the communistic North…

    • 969 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Growing up in the United States, my mother's side of the family would annually host a day to pray for our deceased relatives. They suffered a distressing escape from the Vietnam War in order to integrate back into normal society. Despite some of my relatives say we had the fortune of a red envelope, numerous family members told me that the Communists caused us to suffer. At five years old, I believed everything they said; especially things from my parents because I was naïve. After all these years, I realized not all is true; my family only explained the negative side of the story without acknowledging the affirmative version of the Communists. Especially after reading Loung Ung’s First They Killed My Father, Communist Vietnam quite frankly seemed passive and amiable to the Cambodians and saved them from the Khmer Rouge. This crossed my thoughts on this Communist nation; I had two sources which were contrary. Therefore, I strive to understand the reasons why Vietnam liberated the Khmer people from the Cambodian Government yet they fought their own people. The lingering fear in my family needs elimination; they need the truth behind the works of Communist Vietnam.…

    • 576 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Dfew

    • 1483 Words
    • 6 Pages

    In "The Things They Carried," we read that the Vietnam War was closely associated with the physical, psychological, and emotional problems that the soldiers dealt with. This novel incorporated many different outlooks on the things the soldiers carried, dealt with, and were forced to adapt to. It is difficult to understand all the processes they had to go through and they had to overcome. Sometimes it is very difficult to be fully focused if you have committed a mistake in war and that is one of the reasons why a lot of soldiers carry those emotions that will never let go and will never forgive themselves for forgetting about their responsibilities. We sometimes have the wrong perspective about war because we always think that war is only about guns and killing people and protecting our country. However, we don’t realize what they have to suffer and what they have to face with. Many soldiers develop psychological and emotional problems that can affect in their lives.…

    • 1483 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    History is often said to repeat itself. When the American revolution took place in the later half of the eighteenth century, little did anyone know that almost two-hundred years later Vietnam would be in a very similar situation. The revolution in the U.S and Vietnam had three similar qualities, in both rebels used strong language to exaggerate their points, the “parent” countries enforced uncalled for taxes, and both claim to have been abandoned as allies.…

    • 620 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In 1969, Richard Nixon was elected into presidency. One of Nixon’s campaign promises was ‘peace with honour’. Peace with honour was a strategy that involved taking U.S troops out of Vietnam, but did not involve directly giving in to North Vietnam and the Vietcong. Peace with honour started the process of Vietnamization. From 1969 to 1974, negotiations and ceasefires took place, until in March 1975 no further aid was given to Indo-China from the USA. There are many important causes and consequences of Vietnamization; these include Anti-War protests in America, the Tet Offensive in 1968 and the election of Richard Nixon. Consequences include the fall of Vietnam to Communism, the Cambodian civil war and the fall of Laos.…

    • 715 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays