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Born on the Fourth of July
(1989)
In Oliver Stone's anti-war message film:
- the gung-ho patriotism of Marine enlistee Ron Kovic
(Tom Cruise): ("Don't you know what it means to me to be a
Marine, Dad? Ever since I was a kid I've wanted this - I've wanted
to serve my country - and I want to go. I want to go to Vietnam
- and I'll die there if I have to")
- the moment in which Vietnam soldier Ron Kovic during
his second tour of duty in early 1968, was shot during a patrol in
a field when encountering a fierce fire-fight; although wounded in
the foot, he continued to wildly fire at the enemy - and then was
hit in the chest - with blood coming out of his mouth
Ron Kovic's Life-Changing Injury
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- the awful and nightmarish conditions during bedridden
Kovic's recovery at the Bronx Veterans Administration Hospital,
where he suffered from poor and "indecent" treatment,
unavailability of doctors, and a deplorable physical state; in
a dramatic scene, he begged to be treated right with a black doctor
and not to have his leg amputated: ("It's my leg! I want my
leg, do you understand? Can't you understand that? All's I'm sayin'
is I wanna be treated like a human being! I fought for my country!
I am a Vietnam veteran! I fought for my country!...So I think I
deserve to be treated decent, decent...")
- the emotional home-coming scene in 1969 which father
Mr. Kovic (Raymond J. Barry) hugged his newly paralyzed (from the
mid-chest down), wheel-chair bound Vietnam veteran son Ron Kovic
- a former star wrestler and all-American athlete with shattered
illusions and ideals
- Ron Kovic's emotional and ultra-patriotic homecoming
speech on the 4th of July, his birthday: ("I just want to say,
for all the guys, uh, in Vietnam, we're doing our best. It's not
an easy situation, but the boys - the morale over there is real high.
And you can feel confident that we are, we are gonna win that war.
I served my country. And I don't want you to feel sorry for me. Do
not shed a tear. I have my hand, my eyes, my ears, I have my heart,
and I have what I feel - I have what I feel is an unquenchable --- "),
but then he became overcome (during a war flashback when he heard
a baby crying and an overhead helicopter) and had to end his speech
short
- the scene of Ron's revelation about his disillusionment
about the war to his old high school friend Timmy (Frank Whaley),
another wounded veteran, about wishing to have his whole body back:
("I failed, Timmy...because I-I killed some people. I made some
terrible - mistakes!... Sometimes I wish, I wish I'd, the first time
I got hit, I was shot in the foot. I could have laid down, I mean,
who gives a f--k now if I was a hero or not? I was paralyzed, castrated
that day. Why? It was all so stupid! I'd have my dick and my balls
now, and I think, I think Timmy I'd give everything I believe in,
everything I got, all my values, just to have my body back again,
just to be whole again. But I'm not whole. I never will be, and that's,
that's the way it is, isn't it?"); Timmy replied optimistically:
("For Christ's sake, Ronnie, it's your birthday. You're alive.
You made it! Smile!")
- the blunt dialogue that an angry, anguished, and helpless
Kovic screamed at his distressed mother (Caroline Kava) about his
complete disillusionment with life: ("We went to Vietnam to
stop Communism! We shell women and children!...That was the war.
Communism, the insidious evil! They, they told us to go....Thou shalt
not kill, Mom. Thou shalt not kill women and children! Thou shalt
not kill! Remember? Isn't that what you taught us? Isn't that what
they taught us?...And it's all falling apart! King, Kennedy, Kent
State! We all lost the f--king war! F--king Communism won. It's all
for nothing....You tell her, Dad! Tell her it's a lie! It's a f--king
lie! There's no God! God is as dead as my legs! There's no God! There's
no country! It's just me and this f--king wheelchair for the rest
of my life - for nothing. Me and this, this, this dead penis, Mom");
then in the most devastating moment during his breakdown, he pulled
out his catheter and referred to his biggest casualty or loss: ("In
church, they say it's a sin if you play with your penis. I just wish
I could... Penis!...Penis! Big f--king erect penis, Mom!...Penis!
Penis!")
- the sequence of Kovic's visit in Georgia with the
understanding, consoling parents of private-first-class soldier Wilson
(Michael Compotaro), when he confessed the true story of their son's
death (his fellow soldier was killed by Kovic's own friendly-fire)
and his own guilt: ("I remember the day he was killed. Uh, it
was a strange day... we got scattered in the dunes. People were yelling
at anything, firing at anything. And that was when it happened. I
was, uh, confused, scared. I raised my rifle three times and shots
- the body fell in the dunes. God, this is, this is very difficult
for me to say... But, Mr. Wilson, I think I was the one that killed
your son that night. I was the one. I was the one. I was the one");
Wilson's widowed wife Jamie (Lili Taylor) responded: "What's
done is done, sir. I can't ever forgive you, but maybe the Lord can";
and then Wilson's mother (Jayne Haynes) replied: "We understand,
Ron. We understand the pain you've been goin' through"
- the scene of anti-war veterans, including political
activist and paraplegic Kovic, attempting to storm and disrupt the
1972 Republican National Convention in Miami during Nixon's acceptance
speech, and Ron's tumultuous, televised (grainy) speech to reporters,
that soon turned into a "scuffle" and riotous "commotion":
("I'm a Vietnam veteran. I'm here tonight to say that this war
is wrong, that this society lied to me, and lied to my brothers.
The people in this country tricked him into going 13,000 miles to
fight a war against the poor peasant people who have a proud history
of resistance, who have been struggling for their own, for their
own independence for one thousand years - the Vietnamese people.
I can't, I can't find the words to express how the leadership of
this government sickens me. Now, people say, people say: 'If you
don't love America, then get the hell out.' Well, I love America.
We love the people of America very much, but when it comes to the
government, it stops right there. The government is a bunch of corrupt
thieves, they are rapists and robbers, and we are here to say that
'We don't have to take it anymore.' We are here to say, we are here
to tell the truth. They are killing our brothers in Vietnam. We want
them to hear the truth tonight... (a Republican delegate shouted
out 'traitor' and spit in his face) Is this what we get? Spit in
the face! We're never, never gonna let the people of the United States
forget that war. It happened, and you're not gonna sweep it under
the rug because you didn't like the ratings, like some television
show. This wheelchair, our wheelchairs, this steel, our steel, is
your Memorial Day on wheels. We are your Yankee Doodle Dandy coming
home..."); as the disabled vets were wheeled away, Ron kept
screaming: "Stop the bombing! Stop the war!"
- the film's concluding scene, when Ron Kovic was being
wheeled into the 1976 Democratic National Convention to deliver a
speech, now hailed and honored as a real hero after the publication
of his autobiography (Born on the Fourth of July): ("Just
lately, I felt like I'm home, you know, like, uh, maybe we're home")
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Aborted 4th of July Homecoming Speech After War Flashback
Ron's Revelation to HS Friend Timmy
Screaming at his Mother: Tormented and Disillusioned
- Pulling out His Catheter
Ron's Confession to the Disconsolate Wilson Family
About Friendly-Fire
The 1972 Convention in Miami: "We are your
Yankee Doodle Dandy coming home..."
The 1976 Convention
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