Oliver
Stone's breakthrough as a director, Platoon
is a brutally realistic look at a young soldier's tour of duty in Vietnam.
Chris Taylor (Charlie Sheen)
is a 1968 college student who quits school to volunteer for the Army.
He's shipped off to Vietnam, where he serves with a culturally diverse
group of fellow soldiers and under the two men who lead the platoon:
Sgt. Barnes (Tom Berenger), whose facial scars are a mirror of the violence
and corruption of his soul, and Sgt. Elias (Willem Dafoe), who maintains
a Zen-like calm in the jungle and fights with both personal and moral
courage even though he no longer believes in the war. After a few weeks
"in country," Taylor begins to see the naïvete of his views of the war,
especially after a quick search for enemy troops devolves into a round
of murder and rape. Unlike Hollywood's first wave of Vietnam movies
(including The Deer Hunter,
Apocalypse Now, and Coming
Home), Platoon
is a grunts-eye-view of the war, touching on moral issues but focusing
on the men who fought the battles and suffered the wounds. In this sense,
it resembles older war movies more than its Vietnam peers, as it mixes
familiar elements of onscreen battle with small realistic details: bugs,
jungle rot, exhaustion, C-rations, marijuana, and counting the days
before you go home. This mix of traditional war movie elements with
a contemporary sensibility won Platoon
four Oscars, including Best Picture and Best Director, and a reputation
as one of the definitive modern war movies.
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