Plot Synopsis (continued)
Special Services Captain Willard is ferried down the
coast to the Nung River on an unobtrusive Navy PBR "plastic patrol
boat" crewed by a young group of draftees, representing a cross-section
of America. Since the story is told almost entirely through Willard's
eyes and point of view, he introduces the boat's demographically-diverse
crew: "The crew were mostly just kids, rock and rollers with one
foot in their graves":
-
Jay "Chef" Hicks (Frederic Forrest), Engineman
2nd Class, the dope-smoking boat's machinist and hippie gourmet
cook from New Orleans: "He was wrapped too tight for Vietnam,
probably wrapped too tight for New Orleans"
-
"Lance" B. Johnson (Sam Bottoms), Gunner's Mate
Third Class, a famous blonde, tanned Southern California surfer
champion who water-skis behind the boat and works on his tan
with reflectors: "To look at him, you wouldn't believe he'd ever
fired a weapon in his life"
-
Mr. "Clean" (Laurence Fishburne, credited as Larry
Fishburne, aged 14!), another Gunner's Mate Third Class, actually
Tyrone Miller, a 17-year-old jive-talking South Bronx ghetto
youth who often listens to rock music on his tape player: "I
think the light and the space of Vietnam really put the zap on
his head"
-
Chief Phillips (Albert Hall),
the Chief Quartermaster - the boat's efficient, experienced,
black tough commander/NCO: "It
might have been my mission, but it sure as shit was the Chief's
boat"
Ominously, Chief Phillips recalls that on a previous
trip six months earlier, he took another "regular Army" officer
up the river for Special Ops - but tragically, "heard he shot
himself in the head."
[Transposed to about an hour later in the Redux version:
The PBR crew entertain themselves to Armed Forces Radio playing the
Rolling Stones' 60's hit: "I Can't Get No Satisfaction." The grunts
crew dances to the radio and gets stoned - with a strange sense of
normalcy. Lance even water-skies behind the boat - the rough wake
of the boat disrupts peasants in a simple boat, an apt metaphor for
the intrusion of Americans into a foreign country.]
As they proceed, Willard leisurely studies the dossier
materials, thumbs through the documents, and ponders the absurdity
of his assignment. He wonders how he must murder an American officer
while leading his own forces in senseless murder:
(Williard - in a flat voice-over) At first, I thought
they handed me the wrong dossier. I couldn't believe they wanted
this man dead. Third generation West Point, top of his class. Korea,
Airborne. About a thousand decorations. Etcetera, etcetera. I had
heard his voice on the tape and it really put the hook in me. But
I couldn't connect up that voice with this man. Like they said,
he had an impressive career, maybe too impressive, I mean perfect.
He was being groomed for one of the top slots in the corporation:
General, Chief of Staff, anything. In 1964, he returned from a
tour with advisory command in Vietnam and things started to slip.
His report to the Joint Chiefs of Staff and Lyndon Johnson was
restricted. It seems they didn't dig what he had to tell 'em. During
the next few months, he made three requests for transfer to Airborne
training, Ft. Benning, Georgia and was finally accepted. Airborne?
He was thirty-eight years old. Why the f--k would he do that? 1966:
Joined Special Forces, returns Vietnam.
As they near their rendezvous point for an escort (to
the mouth of the Nung River), they see and hear an impressive B-52
bomber strike, code-worded
"Arc Light" ("Charlie will never see 'em or hear 'em").
With some of the film's fabulous cinematography, they encounter the
Huey helicopters of the notorious Ninth Air Cavalry that are just mopping
up after a destructive assault by the Viet Cong: "It was the Air Cav.,
first of the Ninth....our escorts to the mouth of the Nung River. But
they were supposed to be waiting for us another thirty kilometers ahead.
Well, Air Mobile, those boys just couldn't stay put."
Bloodied civilians are victims of the damaging attack,
visible through the smoky remains and carnage on the beachfront. "The
first of the Ninth was an old cavalry division that had cashed in
its horses for choppers and gone tear-assing around 'Nam lookin'
for the s--t. They had given Charlie a few surprises in their time
here. What they were mopping up now hadn't even happened yet an hour
ago."
After they disembark and look for their contact, they
first encounter a TV news crew getting mock footage for the evening
US news [the crew is led by director Coppola himself in a reflexive
cameo]. They are shouted at:
Don't look at the camera! Just go by like you're
fighting. Like you're fighting. Don't look at the camera! This
is for television. Just go through, go through.
At the start of the film's most memorable, greatest
set of sequences, Willard seeks the CO in charge of the attack. He
encounters the commanding officer of the Air Cavalry as an American
military archetype. Lieutenant Colonel Bill Kilgore [Kill-Gore] (Robert
Duvall) is a hawkish, lunatic, flamboyant commander, who wears a
black horse soldier's Stetson cavalry hat with a cavalry sword emblem,
sunglasses, and a yellow dickey (in the mode of Gen. George A. Custer
and Gen. George S. Patton). The idiosyncratic, unflinching, war-loving
Kilgore places signature cards ("death cards") over the bodies of
the civilian (or VC) dead: "Let's Charlie know who did this." A soldier
announces on a loudspeaker to the stunned Vietnamese: "We are
here to help you."
Obsessed with surfing in a 'Dr. Strangelove'-like style,
Kilgore breaks away from the operation (after generously offering
water to a dying VC) to meet Lance Johnson, admire the surfer, and
congratulate him on his ability to nose-ride and cut back: "It's
an honor to meet you, Lance...None of us are anywhere near your class,
though...We do a lot of surfing around here, Lance." In the meantime,
the injured and women and children are being taken away. A helpless
and frightened calf in a massive net is hauled away by a helicopter
- an apt symbol of what is occurring.
That night, Kilgore presides over a nocturnal beach
party on the China Sea for the troops - with imported beer and T-bone
steaks. He
"turned the LZ into a beach party." Willard questions making Vietnam
like home: "The more they tried to make it just like home, the more
they made everybody miss it." Kilgore strums unconcernedly on his guitar.
Willard describes "Wild Bill":
Well, he wasn't a bad officer, I guess. He loved
his boys and you felt safe with him. He was one of those guys that
had that weird light around him. You just knew he wasn't gonna
get so much as a scratch here.
Unsure about securing a Vietcong beachhead at a N.
Vietnamese village so that Willard's mission can "get into the river," Kilgore
balks:
"That village you're pointing out's kinda hairy, Willard," but then
changes his mind after learning from the California surfer that the
surfing is fantastic there: "It's unbelievable, it's just tube city." He
reconsiders an attack at "Charlie's point" since it has a "six foot
peak" and is one of the Vietcong's best surfing areas in "Charlie's" territory.
He is unperturbed about interference during the liberation of the beach
area the next day: "Charlie don't surf!"
At dawn, after a trumpet cavalry charge is sounded
on a bugle, Kilgore orders a massive helicopter air attack on an
unsuspecting, seemingly innocent, quiet, peaceful Vietnamese village.
The armada of choppers glide silently through the breaking dawn like
a harmless flock of birds - it is one of the film's most impressive,
memorable sequences. The crazed Kilgore has ordered the music:
"We'll come in low out of the rising sun, and about a mile out, we'll
put on the music...Yeah, use Wagner. Scares the hell out of the slopes.
My boys love it." Chef reflexively imitates other soldiers by removing
his helmet and sitting on it - to avoid having his "balls blown off." [Castration
anxiety and fear is constantly on the men's minds.] Kilgore commands: "Shall
we dance?"
as the music is piped out from the swarm of helicopters - the front
of his copter is painted with the motto adorned with crossed swords: "Death
from Above." The choppers become menacing as rockets and gunfire spew
out along with Wagner's Ride of the Valkyries (from Die Walkure)
blasting over the helicopter-mounted loudspeakers to scare the enemy.
Surfboards are loaded on the side of the command helicopter.
Innocent, uniformed schoolchildren who are attending
school and other villagers are caught as peaceful non-combatants
during Kilgore's senseless attack and amphibious landing. Some run
for cover while others prepare for battle. Concealed Viet Cong counter-attack
with their own weapons and shoot at the helicopters. Kilgore promises
a reward for a direct hit: "Outstanding, Red Team, outstanding. Get
you a case of beer for that." Kilgore barks orders: "Ripple
the shit out of 'em," and wonders at the VC's resilience: "Don't
these people ever give up?" The helicopters land and scores of soldiers
hit the ground for the assault. One screaming black soldier has been
seriously and painfully wounded in the leg, and is being treated
with morphine by medics before evacuation. A young peasant Vietnamese
woman in civilian dress throws a bomb concealed in her straw hat
into the Medevac Huey that has landed to evacuate the wounded American
soldier - it kills all onboard. Kilgore exclaims: "The f--king
savages!" The fleeing woman is vengefully pursued by a chopper
and shot down with strafing machine-gun fire. One seemingly-invincible
OH-6 helicopter is blown out of the sky above the jungle.
After devastating the waterfront Vietcong-controlled
coastal village with the pyrotechnic helicopter strike, Kilgore is
intent on one thing - surfing the "six foot swells." The
oblivious (or immune) commander doesn't duck when warned: "Incoming," casually
unaware of the dangers around him. Kilgore gives one soldier a clear
choice: "You want to surf soldier?...That's good soldier, 'cause
you either surf or fight, is that clear?" Kilgore encourages Lance
to get excited about the unusually great surfing conditions ("one
guy can break right, one left simultaneous"). Willard thinks
the gung-ho, zealous surf-lover Kilgore is crazy:
Willard: Don't you think it's a little risky for
R and R?
Kilgore: If I say it's safe to surf this beach, Captain, it's safe
to surf this beach. I'm not afraid to surf this place...(He rips
off his own shirt.)
To make the surfing beach even safer from sniper fire,
he orders an additional air strike with napalm along the tree line
("Bomb it to the Stone Age, son"). [Apocalypse Now Redux: A
restored scene shows Kilgore helping to save a Vietnamese child brought
to him by the distraught mother.]
With the jungle leveled and engulfed in flames behind
him, he smells the napalm, squats on the beach, becomes rhapsodic,
and exclaims to Willard - in a now-famous line of dialogue about
the thrill of senseless murder:
You smell that? Do you smell that?...Napalm, son.
Nothing else in the world smells like that. I love the smell
of napalm in the morning. You know, one time we had a hill
bombed, for twelve hours. When it was all over I walked up. We
didn't find one of 'em, not one stinkin' dink body. The smell,
you know, that gasoline smell, the whole hill. Smells (or smelled)
like - victory. [A bomb explodes behind him.] Some day, this
war's gonna end.
Kilgore's last line in the film is uncharacteristically
delivered in a matter-of-fact tone as he laments the war's end. The
scene fades to black as Willard watches Kilgore walk off.
[Apocalypse Now Redux: Additional footage is
also inserted of surfin' amidst the attack. The perfect waves are
adversely affected by the wind pattern created by the napalm assault.
Kilgore profusely apologizes to Lance for the poor surfing conditions.
After the assault, Willard and his crew decide to rapidly evacuate
the beach area and board their patrol boat. Just before leaving,
they show lighthearted camaraderie as Willard playfully steals Kilgore's
surfboard for Lance, demonstrating that they still haven't accepted
the harsh reality of the war. And slightly later, they hide under
jungle growth by the river's edge as Kilgore vainly pursues them
upriver by helicopter with recorded loudspeaker entreaties: "I
will not hurt or harm you. Just give me back the board, Lance. It
was a good board - and I like it. You know how hard it is to find
a board you like."]
Finally, the journey upriver on the Nung begins for
Willard and his patrol boat crew. In a myriad series of episodes,
their journey is an hallucinatory odyssey and metaphor for an apocalyptic
descent into the horrors of Hell. Willard knows that he can't go
backwards, only forwards:
Someday this war's gonna end. That would be just
fine with the boys on the boat. They weren't looking for anything
more than a way home. Trouble is, I've been back there, and I knew
that it just didn't exist anymore.
Kilgore, the 'respectable' side of the Vietnam experience,
is ironically contrasted to the other side of the same coin - Kurtz,
the 'barbaric' character who is the object of the mission. Willard
questions what the real reason might be for the orders to assassinate
Kurtz:
If that's how Kilgore fought the war, I began to
wonder what they really had against Kurtz. It wasn't just insanity
and murder. There was enough of that to go around for everyone.
Clean asks Willard about the journey upriver, "Is
it gonna be hairy?,"
and learns: "I don't know, kid. Yeah, probably." Chef ("raised
to be a saucier") and Willard leave the boat at night, in a stunningly-visual
sequence, to search for fruit (mangoes). Dwarfed by the eerieness of
nature all around and the trees above them, Chef and Willard (on guard
against VC) are attacked by a ferocious but beautiful Asian tiger.
Chef is terrified and becomes unglued after retreating to the safety
of the boat. Willard vows (in voice-over) that they must not "get
out of the boat" [a statement of US foreign policy and involvement
in SE Asia during the war]:
Never get out of the boat. Absolutely goddamn right.
Unless you were goin' all the way.
As they proceed farther into the wild jungle by boat,
Willard becomes more and more fascinated by Kurtz' dossier of press
clippings, photographs, and letters (both official and personal)
and compares himself to the self-appointed leader. He reads about
his family, his career, and his rise from being a decorated officer
to an embarrassment to the establishment, musing:
Kurtz got off the boat. He split from the whole f---ing
program. How did that happen? What did he see here that first tour?
38 f---ing years old. If he joined the Green Berets, there was
no way you'd ever get above Colonel. Kurtz knew what he was giving
up. The more I read and began to understand, the more I admired
him. His family and friends couldn't understand it, and they couldn't
talk him out of it. He had to apply three times and he put up with
a ton of s--t, but when he threatened to resign, they gave it to
him. The next youngest guy in his class was half his age.
They must have thought he was some far-out old man humping it over
that course. I did it when I was 19 and it damn near wasted me.
A tough motherf---er. He finished. He could have gone for General,
but he went for himself instead...October 1967, on special assignment...,
Kurtz staged Operation Archangel with combined local forces. Rated
a major success. He received no official clearance. He just thought
it up and did it. What balls! They were gonna nail his ass to the
floorboards for that one, but after the press got ahold of it,
they promoted him to Full Colonel instead. Ah man, the bullshit
piled up so fast in Vietnam, you needed wings to stay above it.
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