
Charlie's War

The Vietnam War waged for practically a decade or more. Oliver Stone's movie, Platoon, like the war itself, will remain in the minds of humankind for years to come.
Based primarily around Chris Taylor (Charlie Sheen, 'Wall Street', 'Eight Men Out'), the film portrays a young college kid who has opted out of college life in order to join those fighting the Vietnam War.
The film is the first part in a trilogy written and directed by Oliver Stone, the subsequent movie titled 'Born on the 4th July' starring Tom Cruise and 'Heaven and Earth' with Tommy Lee Jones. Stone (JFK, Nixon, The Doors) captures the Vietnam War and its consequences about as well as anyone ever could, 'Platoon' being the strongest of the trilogy. The director is famous for his interest in political subjects, especially those relating to the life and times of his childhood and younger years, the 1960s and 1970s. Write and direct what you know is the general concensus. Stone knows his work.
A huge and talented cast includes Charlie Sheen, Tom Berenger, Willem DaFoe, Kevin Dillon (The Doors), John C McGinley (Wall Street, Born on the 4th July, Any Given Sunday, Talk Radio, Nixon), Keith David, Forest Whitaker, Mark Moses, Chris Pederson, Tony Todd - and an early performance by Johnny Depp - only contributes towards the excellent story and sharp directing by Stone, making 'Platoon' arguably the best Vietnam War film in the history of cinema.
Stone aptly captures the horrors of the war while further injecting a dramatic - albeit fictional - storyline, which serves not as a backdrop to the conflict but is incorporated into the heart of the film comfortably, almost effortlessly. The moviegoer is entertained by the conflict between Sgt Barnes and Sgt Elias - hopefully rooting for Chris, the idealistic Private stuck somewhere in the middle of a private war - and yet are offered an insight into the war itself. There is history and entertainment here --- and hopefully a moral message about the futility of war and its effects upon humankind.
It is still nice to watch Charlie Sheen in this film and remember when he was probably the most promising actor of the 1980s with his other performances in John Sayle's 'Eight Men Out', Oliver Stone's 'Wall Street', John Milius's 'Red Dawn' and John Hughes's 'Ferris Bueller's Day Off'. Other strong performances come from John C McGinley(Point Break, Se7en)- and an Oliver Stone regular - Kevin Dillon (The Doors) and Forest Whitaker.
Moreover, the battle scenes are skillfully executed although some critics downed the film for its graphic portrayal of violence --- but Stone was trying to depict the realities of the war and the hard decisions those in charge had to face when confronted with guerrilla warfare.
This special edition is particularly good value, for the extras are plentiful and informative. Well worth the money!
Matt Lee-Williams.
Review ID: 10000000008426319

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