Movie Review

Full Metal Jacket

"Vietnam can kill me, but it can't make me care"

Directed by: Stanley Kubrick

Starring:


Reviewed on: April 24th, 2011
Vincent D'Onofrio, Matthew Modine and R. Lee Ermey in Full Metal Jacket

Vincent D'Onofrio, Matthew Modine and R. Lee Ermey in Full Metal Jacket

Full Metal Jacket was Stanley Kubrick's final masterpiece.  The only other film he would direct is the all but forgotten Eyes Wide Shut.  In his nearly 50 year career behind the camera, Kubrick only directed a dozen films, but many of them are cinematic staples.  Full Metal Jacket is one of my favorites.

It follows a marine through boot camp on Paris Island, and into combat in Vietnam.   At first glance it is a comedy/drama as the recruits are harassed and trained by their abrasive company commander, Gunnery Sergeant Hartman. "I bet you're the kind of guy that would fuck a person in the ass and not even have the goddamn common courtesy to give him a reach-around." The second half of the film is an action/drama as the men fight the enemy and watch their comrades dies.

That is how I first viewed it many years ago.  Watching it now I see that it has so much more to say.  The recurring theme in Full Metal Jacket is the relationship between friend and foe, right and wrong.  It resonates throughout the film from start to finish.  Joker wears a peace symbol on his jacket and a helmet that reads, "Born to kill."

While in boot camp Gunnery Sergeant Hartman is the antagonist, riding and berating the men to no end.  "It looks to me like the best part of you ran down the crack of your mama's ass and ended up as a brown stain on the mattress."  You hate him along with the recruits.  One recruit in particular sees him as the enemy and decides to do something about it.

However, he has a means to an end.  His final speech to his men explains it, "Today, you people are no longer maggots. Today, you are Marines. You're part of a brotherhood. From now on until the day you die, wherever you are, every Marine is your brother. Most of you will go to Vietnam. Some of you will not come back. But always remember this: Marines die. That's what we're here for. But the Marine Corps lives forever. And that means YOU live forever."  He may have been a dick to his men but he is preparing them for far worse things than himself.  He did what he did to toughen them up.

In Vietnam we see even more contradictions.  Joker remarks that they are there to help the South Vietnamese, yet they rob from the Americans, and act ungrateful.  His job at Stars and Stripes is anything but journalism as he is instructed to put positive spins on every story.  The prostitutes that will do "anyting you want." for 10 dollars are the most honest people in the movie.

In one scene, a white soldier calls a black soldier a "nigger" as they are deciding who gets her first.  A few scenes later the black soldier gets shot by a sniper and it is that same white soldier who wants to go save him.  At first you think they are at odds, but then you see otherwise.  

The theme comes to a brilliant climax at the end when they finally get the sniper.  Joker stands over the dying sniper and must decide what to do.  His sense of what is right and what is wrong has become completely blurred, and you see the confusion on his face.   You must decide for yourself if what he did was the right decision. 

Gunnery Sergeant Hartman's rants to the new recruits are legendary.  R. Lee Ermey was nominated for a few awards for this role, but did not win anything big.  You will remember  him.  "There is no racial bigotry here. I do not look down on niggers, kikes, wops or greasers. Here you are all equally worthless."

The most classic scene though, is when you hear Nancy Sinatra's "These Boots are Made for Walking," and the prostitute approaches Joker and Rafterman.  "Me so horny.  Me love you long time."  She only has perhaps 5 minutes of screen time, but her lines live on.  It has been used in a couple of songs, most famously by 2 Live Crew.

Full Metal Jacket stands the test of time. As I watched it, I could not remember when it was made. It could have been a new film. It is graphic and tense.  The dialogue and imagery will stay with you long after the movie ends.  Kubrick was a cinematic genius.

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Photos © Copyright Warner Bros. Pictures (1987)

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