vietnam

Hearts and Minds

Hearts and Minds (Director: Peter Davis, US, 1974): A powerful doc­u­mentary about American involve­ment in the Vietnam war. Perhaps the reason it packs such a punch is that it was filmed before the war was actu­ally over, and it argued pas­sion­ately that America’s involve­ment was wrong. For that reason, at the time of its release it was quite con­tro­ver­sial. Now, almost thirty years later, his­tory has caught up with Peter Davis’ film, and its argu­ments seem almost self-evident. That is, unless you look at the cur­rent American involve­ment in Afghanistan and Iraq. Personally, I couldn’t stop thinking about those coun­tries while watching the film. When the inter­viewer asks a former bomber pilot whether America or Americans have learned any­thing from their exper­i­ence in Vietnam, he laments, “I think we’re trying hard not to.” Sadly, I think his­tory has proven him right.

One of the most com­pel­ling sub­jects of the film is Daniel Ellsberg, who leaked the 7,000-page Pentagon Papers to the media in 1971. This doc­u­ment was a report, com­mis­sioned by the US Army and clas­si­fied as top secret, of American decision-making in Vietnam from 1945–1968. Ellsberg was pro­sec­uted for his actions, but the case was dis­missed on grounds of gov­ern­ment mis­con­duct against him. His recently pub­lished memoir Secrets: A Memoir of Vietnam and the Pentagon Papers looks like a fas­cin­ating read.

10/10(10/10)

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