Although precious few fiction
films were made about the Vietnam War while it was still raging, the late ’70s
produced a number of thoughtful pictures about the war’s history, impact, and
legacy. Yet not all such movies were created equal. Compared to the other 1978
releases Coming Home and The Deer Hunter, for instance, Go Tell the Spartans feels
old-fashioned, stylized, and even obsolete. After all, the picture is set in
1964, when U.S. involvement in Indochina was still limited to “military advisors,”
so the whole film unfolds as a warning about the dangers and pointlessness of
an expanded American role. Had this picture been made in the late ’60s, when
the underlying material originated—Daniel Ford’s novel Incident at Muc Wa was published in 1967—Go Tell the Spartans could have been politically incendiary.
Arriving three years after the end of the Vietnam War, the picture is elegiac
but also something of an unnecessary told-ya-so lecture. This is not to say
that Go Tell the Spartans is a weak
picture. Quite to the contrary, it’s a brisk and powerful tragedy laced with
dark humor and deep pathos. But timing is everything, and the moment for Go Tell the Spartans to influence public
opinion passed long before the film was made.
In any event, Burt Lancaster
stars as Major Asa Barker, a lifelong Army man tasked with supervising military
advisors in a violent section of South Vietnam. Barker is a cigar-chomping cynic
who hates authority, and Lancaster invests the role with an endearing stripe of
amused world-weariness. When Barker is ordered to establish a garrison around a
seemingly insignificant village called Muc Wa, he sends a group of losers and
misfits under the command of inexperienced Lieutenant Hamilton (Joe Unger). Also
in the Muc Wa detachment are Sgt. Obleonowski (Johathan Goldsmith), an
experienced NCO who’s struggling with battle fatigue, and Corporal Courcey
(Craig Wasson), a principled draftee whose naïveté about military conflict fascinates
Barker. The soldiers’ tenure in Muc Wa is fraught with unexpected hardships,
and it soon becomes clear the village is dead center in the path of a massive
North Vietnamese invasion force. Thus, the Army’s entanglement in Muc Wa
becomes a metaphor representing America’s involvement in Vietnam—an unwinnable
fight against an unstoppable enemy in unfamiliar terrain.
Were it not for the
script’s plentiful jokes, many of which Lancaster delivers with sublime charm, Go Tell the Spartans would feel
impossibly schematic and strident. Further, much of the film is TV-sized
instead of feature-sized, with director Ted Post obviously inhibited by a tight budget. Happily, interesting performances compensates for the meager
production values: In addition to character actors David Clennon, Clyde
Kusatsu, James Hong, and Dolph Sweet (all of whom deliver their usual crisp
work), supporting players including Goldsmith, Watson, and Marc Singer
contribute impassioned portrayals that underscore the film’s theme of war’s
terrible human cost.
Go Tell the Spartans: GROOVY
2 comments:
I agree Peter. This film should be far better known, because the overall message is still relevant. Hell, it's timeless. More terrific late-career work from Lancaster, and the film is well made despite the constraints.
Quite a diverse filmography from Post, to go from HANG 'EM HIGH to HARRAD EXPERIMENT to THE BABY to this, just to name a few.
My father has always admired and appreciated this movie.
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