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Full Metal Jacket (1987)
In director/co-writer Stanley Kubrick's searing, thought-provoking
Vietnam War film - it was based upon his adaptation of Gustav Hasford's
1979 novel The Short Timers. It followed in the footsteps of Kubrick's
other anti-war films: Paths of Glory (1957) and Dr.
Strangelove, Or: (1964). This was Kubrick's first film after The
Shining (1980), and it made an under-appreciated appearance
the year after Oliver Stone's Platoon (1986) won Best Picture.
Kubrick's own adapted script received its sole Academy Award nomination
for Best Adapted Screenplay.
Kubrick's film was unsuccessful at the box office
-- lost in the spate of mostly Vietnam-related war films that came
out in Platoon's
wake, including Heartbreak Ridge (1986) (about the invasion
of Grenada), Hamburger Hill (1987), The Hanoi Hilton (1987), Casualties
of War (1989), 84 Charlie Mopic (1989), and Born on
the Fourth of July (1989).
It was told in two parts: first, the exploits
of a recruited young Marine Corps soldier during dehumanizing
South Carolina boot-camp training on Parris Island in the late 1960s.
The film's viewpoint was provided by Private J. T. "Joker" Davis
(Matthew Modine), who wore a helmet labeled "Born to Kill," and
provided voice-over narration throughout the entire film. The film's
second half presented the nightmarish, violent front lines within
Hue City - providing a cool, unemotional look at urban warfare on
the eve of the 1968 Tet Offensive at the turning point of the war, as
it followed "Joker's" work as a photojournalist for a military
magazine and his combat soldiering.
- in the striking opening credits sequence, Marine
recruits had their heads shaved on Parris Island, to the tune
of the country song "Hello Vietnam," performed by Johnny Wright
- the scenes of their first weeks of training
at boot camp were dramatically
obscene, as the young Marine cadets were
transformed into killing machines with twisted sentiments, and
verbal, psychological, and physical abuse and torment
- their foul-mouthed, brutal, ruthless, and demanding
drill instructor Gunnery Sergeant Hartman (real-life DI R. Lee
Ermey) spewed memorable one-liners: ("I
am Gunnery Sergeant Hartman, your Senior Drill Instructor. From now
on, you will speak only when spoken to, and the first and last words
out of your filthy sewers will be: 'Sir!' Do you maggots understand
that?...Bulls--t, I can't hear you. Sound off like you gotta pair...If
you ladies leave my island, if you survive recruit training, you
will be a weapon, you will be a minister of death, praying for war.
But until that day, you are pukes! You're the lowest form of life
on Earth. You are not even human f--kin' beings! You are nothing
but unorganized grab-asstic pieces of amphibian s--t! Because I am
hard, you will not like me. But the more you hate me, the more you
will learn. I am hard, but I am fair! There is no racial bigotry
here! I do not look down on n-----s, kikes, wops or greasers. Here
you are all equally worthless! And my orders are to weed out all non-hackers who do
not pack the gear to serve in my beloved Corps! Do you maggots
understand that?...Bulls--t, I can't hear you...")
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"Joker's" Boot Camp Training with Gunnery
Sgt. Hartman
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- Sgt. Hartman demanded that the wise-cracking 'Joker'
show his "war face" and that the recruits go to bed with their rifles, and he recited a
US Marine Corps love poem; also Catholic-believing
Hartman backhandedly slapped Joker's face when he said he didn't
believe in the Virgin Mary - the impertinent Joker was forced to
change his answer: "Now you do love the Virgin Mary, don't you?" - but Joker
stubbornly refused to bend, stating: "The Private believes that
any answer he gives is wrong, and the Senior Drill Instructor will
beat him harder if he reverses himself, sir"
- impressed by the courage and "guts" of his convictions, Hartman immediately
promoted Joker to squad leader, but Joker's added duty was to become
the personal instructor of overweight, slow-witted recruit Private
Leonard Lawrence, nicknamed 'Gomer Pyle' (Vincent D'Onofrio)
- while proceeding through the extremely physically-challenging
obstacle course, Private 'Gomer Pyle' couldn't keep up due to
his physical condition and weight; to ridicule him, Sgt. Hartman
forced Pyle to walk behind the platoon with his pants around his
ankles while sucking his thumb
- Sgt. Hartman delivered a speech about the great
Marine marksmen of the past (including mass murderer Charles Whitman
and JFK assassin Lee Harvey Oswald) - "Those individuals showed
what one motivated Marine and his rifle can do"
- the tremendous strain placed upon tormented
misfit and psychopathic Marine Private "Pyle" led
to his inevitable bloody and suicidal death; in
a very gory scene, insanely-disturbed Private 'Gomer Pyle' went crazy
in the barracks' latrine after being hazed and abused by Hartman
and his fellow Marine roommates; in the middle of the night in the
bathroom as he was suffering from a mental breakdown, he was ranting
about his loaded M-14 rifle (with live ammunition), while rehearsing
one of his training routines - the recitation of the 'Rifleman's
Creed': "This is my rifle. There are many like it, but this
one is mine. My rifle is my best friend"
- Sgt. Hartman heard the commotion and rushed
in, asking Private "Joker" on duty: "What
is this Mickey Mouse s--t? What in the name of Jesus H. Christ are
you animals doing in my head? Why is Private Pyle out of his bunk
after lights out? Why is Private Pyle holding that weapon? Why aren't
you stomping Private Pyle's guts out?"
- "Joker" replied to the Sergeant that the
gun's magazine was fully "locked and loaded"; Hartman demanded
that Pyle surrender his rifle and then insulted
him when he didn't comply: "I want that weapon and I want it
now. You will place that rifle on the deck at your feet and step
back away from it.(yelling) What is your major malfunction, numb-nuts?
Didn't Mommy and Daddy show you enough attention when you were a
child?"; holding his rifle at waist level, Pyle murdered Hartman
(filmed in slow-motion) by blasting him in the chest at close range
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Pyle's Retribution: The Murder of Gunnery Sgt. Hartman
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- shortly after, when Pyle had decided to not kill
Joker, Pyle backed up, dropped down on one of the bathroom toilet
seats, put the gun to his mouth, and suicidally pulled the trigger;
he blew his head off, splattering the wall behind him with his
brains and blood; the bloody death scene slowly faded to black
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Introduction of Film's Second Half:
Prostitute Singing "Me So Horny" in Da Nang
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- the film's second-half followed the exploits
of Sgt. 'Joker' in Da Nang who was working for the the military
newspaper Stars and Stripes; the transition was introduced
by the striking entrance of a hip-swiveling, mini-skirted Vietnamese
prostitute/hooker (Papillon Soo) in Da Nang (viewed from behind
as she walked down the Saigon street) to the tune of Nancy Sinatra's
feminist song: "These Boots Are Made For Walkin'" - she
then propositioned two GI soldiers-clients at a cafe: ("You
got girlfriend (in) Vietnam?...Well, baby. Me so horny. Me so horny.
Me love you long time. You party?... Each you $15 dollar.
Me love you long time. Me so horny...Me suckee-suckee.
Me love you too much"); however, the prostitute was part of a set-up to distract 'Joker'
and his partner combat photographer Pvt. 1st Class Rafterman (Kevyn
Major Howard) so that the latter's camera could be stolen by her
accomplice (Nguyen Hue Phong); as Joker's buddy took a picture, another
young Vietnamese man suddenly came up from behind and stole his expensive
camera, and escaped on the back of a friend's motorcycle
- during the combat unit's dangerous search for a deadly Viet Cong sniper amongst the
ruins of factory buildings in Phu Bai during the Battle of Hue,
'Joker' located the sniper on an upper floor, but his rifle jammed
and he was trapped behind a concrete column; his pal Rafterman
shot and lethally wounded the sniper who then begged "Shoot
me!" - surprisingly, the VC Sniper was a teenaged female (Ngoc Le) (who
moments earlier had killed Texan recruit Sgt. "Cowboy" Evans
(Arliss Howard) who had died in Joker's arms); although hesitant,
Joker was initiated into the exclusive club of those who exhibited
the "thousand yard stare" when he performed his first kill - the mercy-killing of the sniper
- in the film's final scene, the surviving troop members of the unit sang "The Mickey
Mouse Club" theme song as they marched through burned-out ruins of flaming buildings
to their main camp; the 'Joker's' memorable voice-over narration
ended the film: "My thoughts drift back to erect nipple wet
dreams about Mary Jane Rottencrotch and the Great Homecoming F--k
Fantasy. I am so happy that I am alive, in one piece and short.
I'm in a world of s--t - yes. But I am alive. And I am not afraid"
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Opening Title Credits: Head Shavings For New Recruits,
Including Private J.T. "Joker" Davis (Matthew Modine)
Hartman's Backhanded Slapping of Joker For Not Believing
in the Virgin Mary
The Many Failures of Private Leonard Lawrence (aka
Gomer Pyle) on the Obstacle Course
Private Pyle's Mental Breakdown and Suicide
Combat in Vietnam
The Female VC Sniper - and Joker's Mercy-Killing
The Mickey Mouse Club Theme Song
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