Full Metal Jacket (1987)

You guys should all watch Stalingrad (1993) The Sherdog Movie Club movie of the week, then you can discuss it with us on Wednesday (or afterwards) if you'd like.

It's better than a lot of the war movies being mentioned in here, imho.

Although I think he could've worded it better, I do agree with Bisexual MMA that the first half of the movie is way better than the second half.

I'll take "Path's of Glory" or "Dr. Strangelove" over Full Metal Jacket any day of the week. Dr. Strangelove is a military movie, in many ways.

Not filler. I think its meant to symbolize the differences between the intensity of bootcamp, and the intensity of war. Both are intense, both have their own worries but both have their own individual anxieties. Neither moment preserves safety, and thats what I think the film is all about. The safety of men, even in this seemingly safe environment of bootcamp you yourself end up becoming the monster of war. ORRRRR I didnt get enough sleep, whatever either way GFY!

I get that the Joker was supposed to show the juxtaposition between those who went through boot camp, and those who didn't, but i feel like his whole personality worked against the emotional impact of the war scenes.

To be fair I haven't watched the movie in almost 20 years, so, take that with a grain of salt.
 
'Even women and children?!?'

'Yeah, sometimes.... Aint war hell haha..'

That door gunner scene is hilarious and fucked up all at the same time. Funny thing is, talking to Nam vets many of them will tell some crazy stories about the door gunners that were on the Jolly greens. Ive been told more than a few times almost all of them had screws loose.

"How can you kill women and children?"

"Easy. You just don't lead 'em so much! Ain't war Hell? Ha ha!"
 
"How can you kill women and children?"

"Easy. You just don't lead 'em so much! Ain't war Hell? Ha ha!"


Yeah, I wanted to work the 'Aint war hell' quote in there too hence the elipses

That, and it was off the top of my head after not seeing the film in some years now.
 
The fact it gave it us Vincent D'Onofrio as Pyle and Adam Baldwin as Animal Mother has to add points to it.
 
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I think the younger you are, the less the 2nd part appeals to you. I've only recently begun to appreciate the second half of the movie, 5 years after I separated from the service.

BTW, TS, not all of the Vietnam war was fought in the jungle. I kind of like the urban setting; it seperates this film from every other Vietnam war movie.

I think this too. Just like clockwork Orange. When I was a kid i just wanted to watch before he got put into jail.
I liked the urban setting as well. Looks like vietnam to me.

as far as worst kubrick, i would put lyndon johnson to the top of mount everest.
 
I get that the Joker was supposed to show the juxtaposition between those who went through boot camp, and those who didn't, but i feel like his whole personality worked against the emotional impact of the war scenes.

To be fair I haven't watched the movie in almost 20 years, so, take that with a grain of salt.


That contrast is on purpose. In fact, if you watch many Nam flicks you'll notice this personality in varying degrees. I think it was that generation really.
 
The Marines recently had a recruit commit suicide at Parris Island for just these sorts of things. When I went through boot camp there 25 years ago, we were most certainly sworn at, the cadences were vulgar, and I was personally struck twice. That's a hard culture to change.

Agree with TS, the second half of FMJ was weak relative to the first half.

Yeah a lot of Marine's careers are fucked because of this investigation.

It's almost like they just discovered "Wait...they haze recruits at bootcamp? Oh My..."
 
All right. Watch the first half of Full Metal Jacket, then press stop, and cue up the 2 Live Crew.

I can't believe that those were considered to be nice asses back in the day. My how things have changed.

I get where you're coming from, but for me, the real value of the film lies in the juxtaposition between the "kill, kill, kill"-hype of the boot camp, the idiotic posturing of the guys in the field, and finally the bleak nihilism of the last act. All parts if the movie only archieves full depth when seen in light of the others for me.
The set during the end sequence where they chase down the sniper is actually a destroyed version of the barracks from the beginning. Definitely not as good of a war film as Platoon, Apocalypse Now, et cetera, but for sure a symbolic masterpiece. And it definitely has some very memorable lines.
 
That contrast is on purpose. In fact, if you watch many Nam flicks you'll notice this personality in varying degrees. I think it was that generation really.

I know the contrast was on purpose, I pretty much said that. The rest of them were trained war-machines, but Joker was a "conscientious" journalist who worked for the army.

To an extent your statement on personality is true, I just can't imagine a soldier getting away with wearing a peace button... Isn't that a form of insubordination?

Hunter S. Thompson started out as a journalist for the army. He wasn't exactly allowed to speak his mind, the tone in his writing is totally different after he left the army.
 
I know the contrast was on purpose, I pretty much said that. The rest of them were trained war-machines, but Joker was a "conscientious" journalist who worked for the army.

To an extent your statement on personality is true, I just can't imagine a soldier getting away with wearing a peace button... Isn't that a form of insubordination?

Hunter S. Thompson started out as a journalist for the army. He wasn't exactly allowed to speak his mind, the tone in his writing is totally different after he left the army.

when joker spoke his mind what happened???
 
when joker spoke his mind what happened???

I don't remember, like I said it's been 20 years since I last watched it. I did say my comments should be taken with a grain of salt, for that reason. I guess you missed the start of the conversation.

Do tell, what happened to him?

Is wearing a peace button not a form of "speaking his mind as well? Are soldiers allowed to wear buttons?
 
I know the contrast was on purpose, I pretty much said that. The rest of them were trained war-machines, but Joker was a "conscientious" journalist who worked for the army.

To an extent your statement on personality is true, I just can't imagine a soldier getting away with wearing a peace button... Isn't that a form of insubordination?

Hunter S. Thompson started out as a journalist for the army. He wasn't exactly allowed to speak his mind, the tone in his writing is totally different after he left the army.


And I was agreeing.

Anyways, it wasn't uncommon for soldiers during that war to draw 'peace' signs on helmets or be photographed throwing up the peace sign (just for example). You gotta remember, many of these 'guys' were actually just kids at that time. And kids are gonna be kids. Further more, some of that was also plot device filler type shit even tho it was grounded in reality. I mean, it is a film after all, and in a film you're going to do things that add color to any one of the characters, even if just for 1 scene.

I think Jokers character is meant to be polarizing to some of the other characters in the film in that he's not exactly one of them, yet, hes in the same place they are. I always felt that the end of the film was Jokers baptism into their world where he doesn't exactly become one of them, but for a brief moment acts as they do and therefore gains their perspective in a truer sense than he had previously.
 
This thread makes me feel like this:

<{cuts}>

Bisexual: Most of what I'm going to say here is going to echo what I said to you in your Barry Lyndon thread. At the top, I'll say: Give Full Metal Jacket time and repeat viewings. As most people have found with most Kubrick movies, it'll grow on you. You may never hail it as a masterpiece, but you'll probably like it more in five more years and three more viewings.

Speaking for myself, and admitting the fact that I'm a massive Kubrick fan and find it difficult to find fault in anything of his that isn't The Killing, I'm still finding repeat viewings of Full Metal Jacket rewarding. I think @leto1776 is right about the age factor. It certainly applied to me. I first saw Full Metal Jacket when I was 12 or 13 and I had very little patience for the non-boot camp stuff. Fast-forward to today and I'm 27 and I think the combat section blows the boot camp section off the screen.

Most people - including most of the people in here - break the film into halves (even though it's really a film of thirds - first, boot camp pre-combat; second, post-boot camp pre-combat; third, combat) and then write off the second half. For me, whether we're talking halves or thirds, the combat sequence with the sniper is the most brilliant portion of the film IMO. Kubrick's legendary craftsmanship is just off the fucking charts. The cinematography and the editing are impeccable (that sequence when the sniper shoots Cowboy is fucking incredible) and the sound design and score are extraordinary. And while it'd be insanely difficult to make a list of Kubrick's best individual scenes, if I were to try to do it, Joker deciding what to do with the wounded sniper would definitely be a contender. I've always loved the soap beating and D'Onofrio's suicide, I've always loved the sniper picking them off, but that last portion where they're surrounded by flames (tons of points for Kubrick with the way he managed to pull off the oldest war cliche, "war is hell," in the subtlest and most elegant fashion) and they're all standing there while Joker, trying to hold on to his humanity, argues with Animal Mother, who is as emotionally vacant as a dissociated serial killer, about what to do with the sniper is quintessential Kubrick: Poetic, beautiful, disturbing, and tragic.

With the first half of this film, Kubrick made the definitive movie about bullying.

Please don't turn one of the greatest war movies of all-time made by the greatest filmmaker ever into a PC bromide.

<{cum@me}>

His time in the press office is boring, and allows the more annoying aspects of his character to shine through.

I used to literally never watch any of the Stars and Stripes shit. Like never. I've probably seen the movie north of 20 times but I've probably only watched the Stars and Stripes shit three or four times, obviously on my first viewing and then only with my most recent rewatches have I not treated the film like a greatest hits album. Now that I think the whole movie is fantastic, I obviously now think the Stars and Stripes stuff is fantastic, as well. I love Rafterman whining about doing a high school girl's job and wanting to get out in the shit like a real man (which then leads to his excellent arc from puking on the chopper to loving the feeling of shooting the sniper), I love Joker pestering the editor about the Tet talk about which literally nobody else gives a shit and fucking with him after getting his silly notes on his article.

Once he's in the field, it was obvious that it wasn't shot in Vietnam or anything like it. It looked like some deserted British cement factory

You posted this fresh from your visit to Wikipedia, I see.

It didn't have the feel of Vietnam at all, and I was surprised a perfectionist like Kubrick would fail in presenting his setting, given how masterfully he has done that in the past.

http://www.visual-memory.co.uk/amk/doc/0030.html

Geoffrey Alexander: To me, it's another example of Kubrick shying clear of the cliche in order to find the more specific realism, I think. Anybody can take a scene of jungle combat and slather over a few bars of Pink Floyd or Hendrix and have themselves an instantly recognisable 'Viet Nam film'. For that matter, the fact that Kubrick and Herr portray urban warfare, instead of the kind of jungle warfare we associate with that time, tells an incredible lot about how serious a representation of the war they were after -- and the details of Kubrick's recreation of Hue absolutely seal the deal.....

Bilge Ebiri: I noted the bizzareness of the architecture of where Cowboy's group was camped outside of Hue -- specifically, the setting of the scene where Joker first meets them and they show them the dead Vietnamese lounging in a chair. The place seemed to be made up of circular entrances. I was in Vietnam last year and I tried to think if I had seen any architecture resembling this. Then it hit me -- I saw this kind of architecture at one of the Imperial tombs, on the outskirts of -- you guessed it -- Hue, the ancient capital. It's a wonderfully subtle move from someone who was working primarily from photographs.

Geoffrey Alexander: It wasn't just photographs he had -- one of the (Western) architects of Hue City was the very architect who had built the London gasworks where Kubrick filmed; I'm sure many details were added, but there was a versimilitude available to Kubrick that would have otherwise been hard to come by except at great expense.

Gordon Dahlquist: My father spent two tours in Vietnam, including some time in Hue, and he feels that the film was extremely accurate, extremely realistic -- but more than anything in the frankness in presenting details less welcome in today's view of the war (the prostitution, the corruption of the ARVN troops, the drugs, the gung-ho "born to kill" mentality, the distance between troops engaged in actual battle and the mass of "pogue" brass and support troops that were both very close and impossible separated from what was "really" happening ... as for the often- heard criticism of filming in London, I can't understand it -- it does look like Hue, if you do some research and check it out.

People expect films made in other locations all the time, but have such a narrow sense of what Vietnam "actually" looks like, based primarily on films made in the Philipines or maybe Thailand, with a lot of generic grass hut villages. I agree -- making the climactic battle of the film not to be in the jungle (the book, The Short-Timers, contains several sustained actions in the jungle as well, not in the film, so it was definately a choice made...) puts the film, and the film's conception of war, and our sense of what war in Vietnam meant, in direct contrast with countless WWII films of GI's slogging through Italy or France, fighting house to house in that glorious struggle. The helplessness and confusion that hits the squad in FMJ seems as much because the situation doesn't match these earlier films as the immediate hell of sniper -- it strikes me as simply brilliant and wonderfully subtle.

The portion with the interviews of the platoon where they are talking to the camera...it's terrible. It's filler. It's the worst few minutes of any Kubrick film ever, hands down.

There's no such thing as filler in a Kubrick movie. The primary purpose served by that sequence is realism:





Vietnam was famously the first war fought on TV. People were seeing footage from the war and listening to people in the war for the whole duration. Kubrick made sure to include that as an element in his film.

Past that, it fleshes out those characters more. Animal Mother editing himself - twice, and sadistically smiling to himself while running through his many word options - when describing the Vietnamese, Rafterman playing the role, Joker amusing himself at the expense of others. We get to both learn more about the characters more recently introduced like Animal Mother and we get to enjoy seeing the characters we already know like Joker and Cowboy.

Well, you don't get to enjoy it. Hopefully you will someday.

I never liked the first half - all the actors stink it up except Ermey.

I get why so many people write the later portions off given how incredible the beginning is. I don't get not liking the beginning. If you don't like the boot camp sequence, you should choke yourself.

choke-yourself-o.gif


I always thought they screwed up by having pile kill the drill sergeant and himself. After all that suffering and work he was showing improvement and he threw it all away. Would have been so much better if he'd have went to war with them. Maybe play a part similar to the white dude with the m60.

Saying he "threw it all away" implies calculated decision-making on his part. It implies he was weighing the pros-and-cons of sticking it out and heading off to war with his newfound skill-set versus murder-suicide.

Calculated decision-making was no longer something he was capable of. He was made of such weak stuff that his mind and soul were warped beyond all repair. Hence the "major malfunction" question. He was quite clearly a malfunctioning human being, and had he toughed it out and gone to war as a perfect killing machine, then Kubrick's point - that, when you try to turn human beings into robots, there are bound to be some glitches - would've been lost.

So, too, would we have lost one of the best scenes in the history of film.

Kubricks 1st film might just be my favorite of his

The Killing was Kubrick's third narrative feature film (after Fear and Desire in 1953 and Killer's Kiss in 1955) and, including his documentary work, his sixth film overall.

It's also IMO by far his worst film.

The acting is so shitty
How Modine's career never took off is completely non-mysterious.

I thought the acting was great, and other than D'Onofrio, who quite clearly stole the show acting-wise, I thought Modine's performance was the best of the bunch. Especially in that final sequence with the sniper.

As for hating on Modine beyond Full Metal Jacket: He was phenomenal in both Birdy and Vision Quest and his work in the Law and Order: Special Victims Unit episode Rage is some of the best acting I've ever seen on TV.

I don't remember, like I said it's been 20 years since I last watched it. I did say my comments should be taken with a grain of salt, for that reason. I guess you missed the start of the conversation.

 
Hey, don't get me wrong. Just because I think some of the acting is poor doesn't mean I think the film is anything less than fantastic.
 


It doesn't take balls to argue about a subject that you can barely remember. Well maybe, but not the good kind. I seriously don't remember the part he's talking about. The main reason I think the first half is much better is because I can remember it all, even though I've only seen the movie once, 20 years ago. I can barely remember anything from the second half.

I think you know I'm not afraid to speak my mind when It's a subject I'm familiar with.

For me I think the real problem was that I found the boot camp part to be much more fascinating. I knew some of the specifics of how boot camp breaks people down and re-program them, but Full Metal Jacket gave me a much better understanding of how it's done. It's not that there isn't merit to the second half of the movie (by any means) but even in High School when I watched it I felt like I didn't learn anything new from the second half, while I did have to suffer through a lot of cringe-worthy characters and ugly scenes.

In the first half you feel like you're another soldier in boot camp right there with them all, watching it all unfold, 10/10. The second half... was 8/10 max. Joker was full of himself, Pyle was much easier to root for... he had a certain charm to him.

Using your standard, it was the second third of the movie that bored me, despite it being relevant to the story.

Btw, Chomsky doesn't view all forms of the media as the same. He's stated that business and sports journalism is head and shoulders above the rest of the press in terms of honesty and reporting all the facts. He credits the fans passion in those areas though, a business magazine that is full of bad advice won't sell for very long. And sports fans often do the uncovering of facts for the journalists, dimspace is a good example, I've noticed him getting credit on MMA sites now for his hard work researching USADA and their findings. The journalists go to him now.

And I was agreeing.

Anyways, it wasn't uncommon for soldiers during that war to draw 'peace' signs on helmets or be photographed throwing up the peace sign (just for example). You gotta remember, many of these 'guys' were actually just kids at that time. And kids are gonna be kids. Further more, some of that was also plot device filler type shit even tho it was grounded in reality. I mean, it is a film after all, and in a film you're going to do things that add color to any one of the characters, even if just for 1 scene.

I think Jokers character is meant to be polarizing to some of the other characters in the film in that he's not exactly one of them, yet, hes in the same place they are. I always felt that the end of the film was Jokers baptism into their world where he doesn't exactly become one of them, but for a brief moment acts as they do and therefore gains their perspective in a truer sense than he had previously.

Good point, I do recall seeing peace symbols (in marker) on helmets in old pictures. I don't think a button would ever be allowed though. It's not military issue.

I love the movie btw, I just think the first half is much better.
 
I legitimately love this movie but I will admit that the first time I watched it sober being surprised that they went to Vietnam. I legit thought the movie ended with the bathroom suicide.
 
I think the younger you are, the less the 2nd part appeals to you. I've only recently begun to appreciate the second half of the movie, 5 years after I separated from the service.

BTW, TS, not all of the Vietnam war was fought in the jungle. I kind of like the urban setting; it seperates this film from every other Vietnam war movie.

What gets understated is Full Metal Jacket is based on The Tet Offensive in Vietnam. It is uniquely one of the only Vietnam movies that does not have a tropical jungle setting.

Born on the Fourth Of July also has the urban setting but it's only for like 15 minutes of the movie.

http://www.ushistory.org/us/55c.asp

you got girlfriend vietnam???

love the movie, as someone else said Eyes wide shut was by far worse than this

the interviews youre on about are an attempt to show what differeing attitudes of some of the soldiers over there were like, the filming locations they used never bothered me...but youre right about it looking like part of war torn europe

the movie has some great lines in it...not only in the bootcamp scenes but onward thruout the whole film

the shooting women and children line
the no boom boom with soul/sun brother ((too booku))
the 5 dolla make ya holla
etc etc

I dont think its in the same league as Apocalypse Now((what is??)) but it has its place, I for sure wouldnt call it a piece of crap

probably my favorite vietnam movies in loose order are
Apoc Now
Hamburger Hill
Full Metal
Thin Red Line
Platoon
with the bottom 4 pretty much easily interchangable

Except The Thin Red Line was about the battle at Guadalcanal in WWII.
 
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Absolutely love this movie, Vietnam as seen through Stanley's brutal, beautiful eye.

I love how it is split into two halves, and I love the 2nd half as well. All of the absurdity of war is there, (SPOILERS) ... culminating in the dramatic, ruthless, sniper scene, and when you realize that it's a girl... just a perfect cap to the madness.

Really plays wonderfully for me, such a unique war movie. I really love the shit out of it.

And Modine was such a perfect casting choice for the lead... he played it so sweet and real and funny and sad and right down the middle.
 
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