ARTS The Michigan Daily Tuesday, January 20, 1987 Page 5 Vet, professor talk about Vietnam films By John Shea I am only nineteen years-old. Had I been that old, that many years ago, I might well have fought in the Vietnam war. As it stands now, all I know about the war is what I've read in textbooks and what I've seen in the movies and as it stands now, I don't know a helluva lot about the Vietnam war. The first major motion picture to depict the war was The Green Berets. Released back in 1968, it starred John Wayne, Jim Hutton and David Janssen. Wayne, who also co-wrote the script, said he was interested in the project because he wanted to present to America the horrifying reality of Vietnam. Even President Johnson assisted Wayne in the making of The Green Berets. I saw it the other night on VCR, hoping to gain some insight into what the war meant. A hundred a twenty minutes - and several hundred dead Vietnamese later - Wayne told me. "Why, this is all about you," he tells a little Vietnamese boy. The two are standing on a beach; the boy's parents are dead and 'his only friend just got killed. Upon hearing this, though, the boy wipes away the tears and takes the Duke's hand as they walk off into the sunset. The End. If all I knew about Vietnam was what I saw in The Green Berets, then I know less than a little.' Lawrence Obrist knows about it, though; perhaps more than he cares to remember. He was there - in Vietnam - working as a medic for the 25th Infantry Battalion. He now works as a social worker/psychology specialist at the Ann Arbor Veteran's Hospital. He remembers seeing The Green Berets.A "I saw it while in the Philipines on R&R," he tells me in a telephone conversation. "We were all curious to see if a group of men who had never fought in Vietnam could capture what the war was like and what we went through." He sighs, and lets out a little laugh. "The good guys always won," he says in reference to Wayne and Hollywood's standard American war picture. "It was, ludicrous. If you'd have been there, you could see that." The problem is, until recently, every single writer/director who has ever made a major motion picture depicting Vietnam hasn't been there, and can't see what Obrist saw. And this has led to many factual inaccuracies, several of which have been gross; there's been little improvement since the days of The Green Berets. Platoon's violence boarders on being excessive, but none of it is glorified. It presents an intense, unforgiving vision where there are no sandy beaches and warm sunsets; just frightened young men who want to make it home. 'There hasn't been a single satisfactory representation of war in Vietnam ... until today.' - Gerald Linderman, University history professor "There hasn't been a single satisfactory representation of war in Vietnam," says Professor Gerald' Linderman, an historian of twenieth century American wars at the University, "until today." 'Today' means Platoon. Currently in release, this film won critical acclaim. The writer and director of the film, Oliver Stone, was in Vietnam, along with Obrist, in the 25th Infantry Battalion - Platoon is based on those experiences. The release of the film breaks a five year trend in Hollywood, which began in 1982 with Sylvester Stallone's First Blood; a revisionist's version of the war, where America finally wins the war we lost in the seventies, along with excessive and gratuitous violence. This is the vision Obrist knows all too well, and he's not sure if he wants to see it again. "I haven't see the film yet," he tells me. His voice becomes softer, deeper as he searches for the right words. "I'm basically torn in wanting to see it because its based on the 25th Infantry... What shuns me from seeing it is because its too graphic, too true-to-life...real people got killed, even by their buddies." This is a vision Hollywood has never really projected before. Death has been well-depicted in the Rambo films, but those who died resembled cardboard cut-ups more than people. First Blood and Uncommon Valor were films which were mildly entertaining but used a sledgehammer to get across there re - spective political messages; they strayed too far from the Vietnam experience. At the close of the seventies, shortly after America withdrew from Vietnam, three films were released in a two year span; they seemed to capture the essence of what the veterans were going through: 1978's Apocalypse Now and Coming Home, and 1979's The Deer Hunter. These films focused more on the psychological aftermath of the war. Yet, while they were critically acclaimed, there were, nevertheless, gross inaccuricies. "The Deer Hunter was 'a travesty of Vietnamese culture,"' says Linderman, referring to the infamous Russian Roulette game that stars Robert DeNiro and Christopher Walken were forced to play after being captured by the VC. And Apocalypse Now, Francis Ford Coppola's 31 million dollar epic concerns itself more with art than with its subject matter. Obrist has little interest in seeing any of these movies but as a psychology specialist at the Veterans Hospital, he has talked with many of the men there about Vietnam pictures. It's not easy for them to do this; many of them have had nightmares about Vietnam and these films seem to rekindle those' memories. But most of them agree: - Platoon is the most accurate of the Vietnam films. "They feel: strongly it (captures what we've; been through). People died for less; than patriotic reasons...its a direct: contrast to Johnny marching and: flag waving." He points out that of the 58,000 men who died in Vietnam, over 10,000 of them died of "non-combat deaths." Linderman is pleased with Stone's film. "I value Platoon because it raises the issue if such a war, under any favorable circumstances, could be won. I hope this...jerks us beyond 'Rea gan/Ramboism."' Rambo III is scheduled foi release sometime this spring. It is not likely Sylvester Stallone hag the same aspirations to depict Vietnam as Oliver Stone does. But several other Vietnam films are due out this year, including Stanley Kubrick's Full Metal Jacket and John Irvin's Hamburger Hill Should these films follow in Stone's style, it's possible that the revisionist's trend will give way to that of depicting the truth. And then nineteen years old like me can learn a thing or two. Eclipse presents 'Big Beat' jazz lecture series By Wendy Kaplan But can you dance to it? That question has pervaded the music of America's youth for the past twenty-five years. It is a query spurred by Dick Clark's pimply teenagers-on-parade program, "Am- erican Bandstand," and widely used by both teens and, post-teens to judge popular music today. The song may be simplistic. It may be loud - eardrum shattering, if you will. But if you can dance to it, well, that's what matters. But what about jazz? The simultaneously hot and cool music of Duke Ellington, Dizzy Gillespie, Wynton Marsalis and the like has great beats. You can even dance to it. So why has jazz all but disappeared from the record collections of those born after 1960? According to J.C. Heard, a prolific jazz drummer who's played with Billie Holliday, Benny Goodman, and Dizzy Gillespie among others, rock 'n' roll is the music of the day because promoters want it that way. "Rock is fast money, just like fast food places," Heard says. "They shove it down the kids' throats. They're selling show, not music." In an effort to put jazz back into contemporary record collections, Eclipse Jazz, a non-profit, student- run organization, is sponsoring a six-week lecture series entitled, "The Big Beat: The History Of Jazz Through The Perspective Of The Drummer." The series will trace the progression of jazz drumming from its initial position as the backdrop rhythym of Big Band through its active role in Be-Bop to its eminent frontman position in jazz today. Heard, who has contributed over 55 years of percussive innovation to his field, says that young people today have been deprived of a know - ledge of jazz, "the greatest Ameri - can art form and the most con,- sistent music in history." Those who grew up with Benny Goodman and Ella Fitzgerald can appreciate the richness and creativity of the music. Those who grew up after the age of Be-Bop and Big Band lack the knowledge, and thus appreci - ation, of the jazz enthusiast. Through his experiences in this country and abroad, Heard has lived the music, touring the world over ten times. "I open the eyes up and the ears," he asserts. "I show them that the drummer is really the driver of the car." Other drummers contributing to the series will be Roy Brooks, a member of the Aboriginal Choir and other Detroit-based groups, and Tani Tabbal, the percussionist from Myth World Rhythym Troupe and Griot Galaxy. All three artists will. give live demonstrations and/or vid - eotapes of drumming techniques. In addition, Arwulf Arwulf, the director of WCBN's jazz pro - gramming, will be speaking on drummers of the sixties while Greg Dahlberg, an Art Blakey expert, will speak on that artist's influence. The series will meet in the Michigan Union every Tuesday night beginning tonight from 7:30 to 9:30. The price is $4 per lecture or $25 and half off Thursday's Art Blakey show for the series. For more information, contact the Eclipseazz office d763-0046. COME JOIN OUR STAFF The University of Michigan Housing Division RESIDENCE HALL POSITIONS 1987-88 The Housing Division is looking for well-qualified candidates to serve as resident staff members in Residence Halls. We specifically are looking for students interested in: -Serving as positive academic and group living role models -Fostering a spirit of community -Developing and strengthening leadership, communication and group skills and -Developing programs for a diverse student population. THERE WILL BE TWO INFORMATION MEETINGS: Sunday, January 25, 1987 - 1:00 - 3:00 p.m. Tuesday, January 27, 1987 - 7:00 - 9:00 p.m. IN AUDITORIUM 3 - MODERN LANGUAGE BUILDING Representatives from the Housing Division will be there to provide information and answer questions regarding candidate qualifications, selection processes and job expectations. Applications are available only at these meetings. ALL NEW APPLICANTS ARE REQUIRED TO ATTEND ONE OF THESE MEETINGS An Equoa Opportunity, Affirmative Action Employer ?J' r" 111111 s ELM] I'An Let a 2-Year Old Help You . With Your Homework your own: MacintoslM Plus computer e800K external or SCSI hard drive SImageWriteII printer z ; Advance orders now being taken. For more information pick up a supplementary information packet at: *Any Computing Center public facility, such as UNYN, NUBS or the Undergraduate Library; *The Microcomputer Education Center, School of Education Building; e Photo and Campus Services, LS&A Building; "Campus Information Center, Michigan Union. or attend an information seminar in Auditorium 3 of the Modern Languages Building, 812 E. Washington St., at one of the following times: *Tues., Jan. 20: "Wed., Jan. 21: 7-9pm 5-7pm *Mon., *Wed., Jan. 26: Jan. 28: 7-9pm 7-9pm ORDERS RECEIVED AFTER 5:00pm ON FRIDAY, JANUARY 23 INCUR A $50.00 LATE FEE AND AVAILABILITY OF MACHINES WILL NOT BE GUARANTEED. 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