Now that we catch the reality of the Vietnam War in "Deer Hunter" and "Apocalypse", "Deer Hunter" and "Modern Apocalypse" are two movies related to US involvement in the Vietnam War on a personal level. Although the style and narrative of each movie are quite different, the strong theme of "travel" is linking the two movies, probably being stronger than the theme of the Vietnam War itself. In a sense, the philosophy of the central figure is distorted by war, the value itself of life is decreasing.
I have met many Vietnamese veterinarians for many years and I ask them what movie best represents the situation of the war: modern apocalypse, deer hunter, all metal jacket or platoon - and the answer is Almost always ranked. This is reasonable because the writer and director Oliver Stone worked as a soldier there after actually leaving the ale. This is an interesting screenplay behind broadcast news. There is a similar scenario in the center of the story. The hero sheds tears among the other two characters. In the platoon, the protague is a private Charlie scene. Chris has two commanders - Robert Barnes (Tom Belenje), a barbarous and arrogant sergeant and Elias Groden (William Dafo), a more humane sergeant. Broadcast news have romantic triangles, triangle conflict is completely different.
I was born in 1970, so I really did not experience the Vietnam War. All the great films on this subject were created by those who experienced that time or served in the army: platoon, house, modern apocalypse, deer hunter and so on. Now, using quarry, I deal with Vietnam and post-traumatic stress, I am standing on the shoulder of the giant. I am the first movie producer to interact with people in Vietnam. The intimidation has not begun to explain it. While reviewing these movies (Deer Hunter and Cumming Home has particular impact on the quarry), I believe that the best and definitive way of the Kuantan Massacre scene completely experiences war madness and fear I think that it is to do. Apple Computer Running this idea makes us face a wonderful technical challenge
In the 1970s there were five major movies about the plight of war and veterans' wars. Taxi driver (1976), deer hunter (1978), stopping rain (1978) and now apocalypse! (1979). The film in the 1970s returned the Vietnam War to American culture. But the image of war and the story of the veterans they gave to the audience provided a very special version of what war means. These five movies share four important features. First of all, this movie shows that the veterans returned to war. Travis Bickle, the role of Robert De Niro as a taxi driver, once again became an armed warrior (in fact even fantastically), he was hopeless. I want to acquire recognition and change society in some way. In "Deer Hunter" De Niro plays a man returning to Vietnam to save his lost childhood friend, a soldier who will not return home.