Topical made-for-TV movies have gotten a bad rap
over the years, and not without justification—name a hot-button social issue
from the ’70s to the present, and chances are there’s a perfunctory telefilm
about the topic, if not a number of them. Given this backdrop, ripped-from-the-headlines
TV movies that qualify as legitimate dramas seem even more exceptional than
they might otherwise. Friendly Fire
is a good example. Opting for quiet character moments over outright emotional
fireworks, Friendly Fire explores the
circumstances and repercussions of a controversial topic quite effectively by
grounding its story in the harsh realities of human pain. Based on a book by
C.D.B. Bryan that detailed the experiences of a real American family, the
picture concerns two Midwestern parents who cut through government red tape
while investigating how their son died in Vietnam. With the help of a reporter,
the couple eventually discovers their son died, accidentally, at the hands of a
fellow U.S. soldier, hence the film’s title.
Yet the heat of Friendly Fire doesn’t just come from the
revelation of a battlefield tragedy. Rather, much of the picture concerns an
attempted cover-up by the U.S. government and the U.S. military, two entities
desperate to keep a socially acceptable “face” on the Vietnam War. As the long
movie progresses (Friendly Fire runs
147 minutes), it’s impossible not to grow more and more infuriated with the
stubborn bureaucracy with which the parents are confronted. Presented in an
unvarnished style, with present-day scenes of the parents revolving around
flashbacks to Vietnam that gradually reveal the true facts of what happened
there, Friendly Fire packs a punch
for several reasons, one of which is highly surprising: The star of his very
heavy picture is none other than beloved TV comedienne Carol Burnett, who was
still fresh from the long run of her eponymous variety show. Dispelling any
humorous associations with her gravitas-laden performance, Burnett and costar
Ned Beatty create an absorbing illusion with their respective portrayals of
Iowa residents Peg and Gene Mullen. Exuding heartland values and the noble
grief of parents who need to imbue their son’s death with meaning, the Mullens,
as played by Burnett and Beatty, represent a uniquely American sort of selfless
heroism—their bittersweet victory in exposing the truth is a triumph for all
parents who entrust their children to America’s military.
Director David Greene,
a versatile helmer of big- and small-screen projects whose filmography includes
everything from the religious musical Godspell
(1973) to most episodes of the seminal miniseries Rich Man, Poor Man (1976), approaches the film’s sensitive subject
matter with restraint, allowing the poignant textures of Burnett’s performance
to dominate. (Beatty is wonderful, too, though his job is playing straight man
to Burnett’s bravura emotionalism.) As for the other principal actors, Sam
Waterston, whose character is based on C.D.B. Bryan (the author of the source
material), offers fine support as the principled journalist who makes the
Mullens’ cause his own, and a young Timothy Hutton appears as the Mullens’ other
son, a young man wrestling with anguish and guilt while his family’s existence
becomes an endless battle against a monolithic system.
Friendly
Fire: GROOVY
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