War Porn
Hollywood and War from World War II to
American Sniper
By Peter Van Buren
February 19, 2015 "ICH"
- "Tom
Dispatch" - In the
age of the all-volunteer military and an
endless stream of war zone losses and ties,
it can be hard to keep Homeland enthusiasm
up for perpetual war. After all, you don't
get a 9/11 every year to refresh those
images of the barbarians at the airport
departure gates. In the meantime, Americans
are clearly finding it difficult to remain
emotionally roiled up about our confusing
wars in Syria and Iraq, the sputtering one
in Afghanistan, and various raids, drone
attacks, and minor conflicts elsewhere.
Fortunately, we have just the
ticket, one that has been punched again and
again for close to a century: Hollywood war
movies (to which the Pentagon is always
eager to lend a
helping hand). American Sniper,
which started out with the celebratory
tagline “the most lethal sniper in U.S.
history” and now has the
tagline “the most successful war movie
of all time,” is just the latest in a long
line of films that have kept Americans on
their war game. Think of them as war porn,
meant to leave us perpetually hyped up. Now,
grab some popcorn and settle back to enjoy
the show.
There’s Only One
War Movie
Wandering around YouTube
recently, I stumbled across some good old
government-issue propaganda. It was a video
clearly meant to stir American emotions and
prepare us for a long struggle against a
determined, brutal, and barbaric enemy whose
way of life is a challenge to the most basic
American values. Here's some of what I
learned: our enemy is engaged in a crusade
against the West; wants to establish a world
government and make all of us bow down
before it; fights fanatically, beheads
prisoners, and is willing to sacrifice the
lives of its followers in inhuman suicide
attacks. Though its weapons are modern, its
thinking and beliefs are 2,000 years out of
date and inscrutable to us.
Of course, you knew there
was a trick coming, right? This little U.S.
government-produced
film wasn’t about the militants of the
Islamic State.
Made by the U.S. Navy in
1943, its subject was “Our Enemy the
Japanese.” Substitute “radical Islam” for
“emperor worship,” though, and it still
makes a certain propagandistic sense. While
the basics may be largely the same (us
versus them, good versus evil), modern times
do demand something slicker than the video
equivalent of an old newsreel. The age of
the Internet, with its short attention spans
and heightened expectations of cheap
thrills, calls for a higher class of war
porn, but as with that 1943 film, it remains
remarkable how familiar what’s being
produced remains.
Like propaganda films and
sexual pornography, Hollywood movies about
America at war have changed remarkably
little over the years. Here's the basic
formula, from John Wayne in the World War
II-era
Sands of Iwo Jima to today's
American Sniper:
*American soldiers are
good, the enemy bad. Nearly every war movie
is going to have a scene in which Americans
label the enemy as “savages,” “barbarians,”
or “bloodthirsty fanatics,” typically
following a “sneak attack” or a suicide
bombing. Our country’s goal is to liberate;
the enemy's, to conquer. Such a framework
prepares us to accept things that wouldn’t
otherwise pass muster. Racism naturally gets
a bye; as they once were “Japs” (not
Japanese), they are now “hajjis” and
“ragheads” (not Muslims or Iraqis). It’s
beyond question that the ends justify just
about any means we might use, from the
nuclear obliteration of two cities of almost
no military significance to the grimmest
sort of torture. In this way, the war film
long ago became a moral free-fire zone for
its American characters.
*American soldiers believe
in God and Country, in “something bigger
than themselves,” in something “worth dying
for,” but without ever becoming blindly
attached to it. The enemy, on the other
hand, is blindly devoted to a religion,
political faith, or dictator, and it goes
without saying (though it’s said) that his
God -- whether an emperor, Communism, or
Allah -- is evil. As one critic
put it back in 2007 with just a tad of
hyperbole, “In every movie Hollywood makes,
every time an Arab utters the word Allah…
something blows up.”
*War films spend no
significant time on why those savages might
be so intent on going after us. The purpose
of American killing, however, is nearly
always clearly defined. It's to “save
American lives,” those over there and those
who won’t die because we don't have to fight
them over here. Saving such lives
explains American war: in Kathryn Bigelow’s
The Hurt Locker, for example,
the main character defuses roadside bombs to
make Iraq safer for other American soldiers.
In the recent World War II-themed
Fury, Brad Pitt similarly mows
down ranks of Germans to save his comrades.
Even torture is justified, as in
Zero Dark Thirty, in the cause
of saving our lives from their nightmarish
schemes. In American Sniper,
shooter Chris Kyle focuses on the many
American lives he’s saved by shooting
Iraqis; his PTSD is, in fact, caused by his
having “failed” to have saved even more.
Hey, when an American kills in war, he's the
one who suffers the most, not that mutilated
kid or his grieving mother --
I got nightmares, man! I
still see their faces!
*Our
soldiers are human beings with emotionally
engaging backstories, sweet gals waiting at
home, and promising lives ahead of them that
might be cut tragically short by an enemy
from the gates of hell. The bad guys lack
such backstories. They are anonymous
fanatics with neither a past worth
mentioning nor a future worth imagining.
This is usually pretty blunt stuff. Kyle’s
nemesis in American Sniper, for
instance, wears all black. Thanks to that,
you know he’s an insta-villain without the
need for further information. And speaking
of lack of a backstory, he improbably
appears in the film both in the Sunni city
of Fallujah and in Sadr City, a Shia
neighborhood in Baghdad, apparently so
super-bad that his desire to kill Americans
overcomes even Iraq's mad sectarianism.
*It is fashionable for our
soldiers, having a kind of depth the enemy
lacks, to express some regrets, a dollop of
introspection, before (or after) they kill.
In American Sniper, while back in
the U.S. on leave, the protagonist expresses
doubts about what he calls his “work.” (No
such thoughts are in the book on which
the film is based.) Of course, he then goes
back to Iraq for three more tours and over
two more hours of screen time to amass his
160 “confirmed kills.”
*Another staple of such
films is the training montage. Can a young
recruit make it? Often he is the Fat Kid who
trims down to his killing weight, or the
Skinny Kid who muscles up, or the Quiet Kid
who emerges bloodthirsty. (This has been a
trope of sexual porn films, too: the geeky
looking guy, mocked by beautiful women, who
turns out to be a superstar in bed.) The
link, up front or implied, between
sexuality, manhood, and war is a staple of
the form. As part of the curious PTSD
recovery plan he develops, for example, Kyle
volunteers to teach a paraplegic vet in a
wheelchair to snipe. After his first decent
shot rings home, the man shouts, “I feel
like I got my balls back!”
*Our soldiers, anguished
souls that they are, have no responsibility
for what they do once they’ve been thrown
into our wars. No baby-killers need apply
in support of America's post-Vietnam,
guilt-free mantra, “Hate the war, love the
warrior.” In the film
First Blood, for example, John
Rambo is a Vietnam veteran who returns home
a broken man. He finds his war buddy dead
from Agent Orange-induced cancer and is
persecuted by the very Americans whose
freedom he believed he had fought for.
Because he was screwed over in The 'Nam, the
film gives him a free pass for his homicidal
acts, including a two-hour murderous rampage
through a Washington State town. The
audience is meant to see Rambo as a noble,
sympathetic character. He returns for more
personal redemption in later films to rescue
American prisoners of war left behind in
Southeast Asia.
*For war films, ambiguity
is a dirty word. Americans always win, even
when they lose in an era in which, out in
the world, the losses are piling up. And a
win is a win, even when its essence is
one-sided bullying as in
Heartbreak Ridge, the only
movie to come out of the ludicrous invasion
of Grenada. And a loss is still a win in
Black Hawk Down, set amid the
disaster of Somalia, which ends with scenes
of tired warriors who did the right thing.
Argo -- consider it honorary
war porn --reduces the debacle of
years of U.S. meddling in Iran to a
high-fiving hostage rescue. All it takes
these days to turn a loss into a win is to
zoom in tight enough to ignore defeat. In
American Sniper, the disastrous
occupation of Iraq is shoved offstage so
that more Iraqis can die in Kyle’s sniper
scope. In
Lone Survivor, a small American
“victory” is somehow dredged out of hopeless
Afghanistan because an Afghan man takes a
break from being droned to save the life of
a SEAL.
In sum: gritty, brave,
selfless men, stoic women waiting at home,
noble wounded warriors, just causes, and the
necessity of saving American lives. Against
such a lineup, the savage enemy is a crew of
sitting ducks who deserve to die. Everything
else is just music, narration, and special
effects. War pornos, like their oversexed
cousins, are all the same movie.
A Fantasy That Can
Change Reality
But it's just a movie,
right? Your favorite shoot-em-up makes no
claims to being a documentary. We all know
one American can't gun down 50 bad guys and
walk away unscathed, in the same way he
can't bed 50 partners without getting an
STD. It's just entertainment. So what?
So what do you, or the
typical 18-year-old considering military
service, actually know about war on entering
that movie theater? Don’t underestimate the
degree to which such films can help create
broad perceptions of what war’s all about
and what kind of people fight it. Those
lurid on-screen images, updated and reused
so repetitively for so many decades, do help
create a self-reinforcing, common
understanding of what happens “over there,”
particularly since what we are shown mirrors
what most of us want to believe anyway.
No form of porn is about
reality, of course, but that doesn’t mean it
can’t create realities all its own. War
films have the ability to bring home
emotionally a glorious fantasy of America at
war, no matter how grim or gritty any of
these films may look. War porn can make a
young man willing to die before he’s 20.
Take my word for it: as a
diplomat in Iraq I met young people in
uniform suffering from the effects of all
this. Such films also make it easier for
politicians to sweet talk the public into
supporting conflict after conflict, even as
sons and daughters continue to return home
damaged or dead and despite the
country’s near-complete record of
geopolitical failures since September
2001. Funny thing: American Sniper
was nominated for an Academy Award for best
picture as Washington went back to war in
Iraq in what you'd have thought would be an
unpopular struggle.
Learning From the
Exceptions
You can see a lot of war
porn and stop with just your toes in the
water, thinking you've gone swimming. But
eventually you should go into the deep water
of the “exceptions,” because only there can
you confront the real monsters.
There are indeed
exceptions to war porn, but don’t fool
yourself, size matters. How many people have
seen American Sniper,The Hurt
Locker, or Zero Dark Thirty?
By comparison, how many saw the anti-war
Iraq War film
Battle for Haditha, a lightly
fictionalized, deeply unsettling drama about
an American massacre of innocent men, women,
and children in retaliation for a roadside
bomb blast?
Timing matters, too, when
it comes to the few mainstream exceptions.
John Wayne’s
The Green Berets, a pro-Vietnam
War film, came out in 1968 as that conflict
was nearing its bloody peak and resistance
at home was growing. (The Green Berets
gets a porn bonus star, as the grizzled
Wayne persuades a lefty journalist to alter
his negative views on the war.)
Platoon, with its
message of waste and absurdity, had
to wait until 1986, more than a decade after
the war ended.
In propaganda terms, think
of this as controlling the narrative. One
version of events dominates all others and
creates a reality others can only scramble
to refute. The exceptions do, however,
reveal much about what we don’t normally see
of the true nature of American war. They are
uncomfortable for any of us to watch, as
well as for military recruiters, parents
sending a child off to war, and politicians
trolling for public support for the next
crusade.
War is not a
two-hour-and-12-minute hard-on. War is what
happens when the rules break down and, as
fear displaces reason, nothing too terrible
is a surprise. The real secret of war for
those who experience it isn't the visceral
knowledge that people can be filthy and
horrible, but that you, too, can be filthy
and horrible. You don't see much of that on
the big screen.
The Long Con
Of course, there are
elements of “nothing new” here. The Romans
undoubtedly had their version of war porn
that involved mocking the Gauls as
sub-humans. Yet in twenty-first-century
America, where wars are undeclared and
Washington dependent on volunteers for its
new
foreign legion, the need to keep the
public engaged and filled with fear over our
enemies is perhaps more acute than ever.
So here’s a question: if
the core propaganda messages the U.S.
government promoted during World War II are
nearly identical to those pushed out today
about the Islamic State, and if Hollywood’s
war films, themselves a particularly
high-class form of propaganda, have promoted
the same false images of Americans in
conflict from 1941 to the present day, what
does that tell us? Is it that our varied
enemies across nearly three-quarters of a
century of conflict are always unbelievably
alike, or is it that when America needs a
villain, it always goes to the same script?
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