Buffalo Soldiers
review by Cynthia
Fuchs, 15 August 2003
My
guys
Life
is good for U.S. Army Specialist Ray Elwood (Joaquin Phoenix). Or
more precisely, as good as it can be, considering that he's an
ex-con, more or less conscripted by the military for service with
the 317th Battalion at a base outside Stuttgart in 1989. Bored and
cynical, he sells contraband -- everything from Mop 'n' Glo and
cigarettes to heroin and weapons. Observing his fellow soldiers
engaged in an indoor football game, he describes them as products of
a depleted, post-Vietnam War military, a crew of "prisoners and
high school dropouts trained to kill," unfocused and unhappy.
"These were my guys," Elwood says, with "nothing to
kill but time."
With
that, one of his guys reaches for a pass and falls against a table,
smashing his skull. As the others argue over the play, Elwood checks
the kid's pulse and finds him dead. Shoot. Though, as Elwood knows,
there will be "no hero's burial" for this "f*cked up
junkie," he has to go through the motions, and help the
nice-enough but clueless CO, Colonel Berman (Ed Harris), write a
letter to the parents. (That Elwood is secretly bedding Berman's
wife [Elizabeth McGovern] isn't so much cruel or even funny as it is
another sign of the lack of interest anyone takes in anything here.)
When Elwood observes that the letter's phrasing sounds excessive,
Berman backs off fast: "Scratch 'resplendent.' Don't let that
word leave this base!"
Such
mordant details help make Buffalo Soldiers a satire in the
vein of M*A*S*H*, Dr. Strangelove or Catch-22. Buffalo
Soldiers smartly taps into its moment (it ends as the Berlin
Wall falls), particularly through David Holmes' evocative score, and
tracks from Public Enemy ("1989!!"), New Order, and the
Disposable Heroes of Hiphoprisy. And, like its precursors, it takes
darkly comedic aim at U.S. military bureaucracy and ideological
muddles, the endless and appalling ways that plans -- grand or
lesser -- go wrong.
These
errors are revealed here to be functions of tedium, the efforts by
frustrated human beings to feel something other than oppression and
ennui, to feel some sense of self-control, however bogus or fleeting
(as Elwood puts it, "War is hell, but peace is f*cking
boring"). Weary of being told what to think and how to behave
at every turn, they rebel in trivial but telling ways, more often
than not imitating the very systems they think they're bucking.
While
this insight is not precisely news, it's worth repeating, perhaps
particularly when the military is in very loud self-vaunting mode.
That wasn't the case when the film was first set to be released: its
film festival premiere was 7 September 2001. Four days later,
Miramax started rescheduling, allegedly looking for a time when Buffalo
Soldiers' send-up wouldn't seem so "unpatriotic." It's
possible that this moment has still not arrived: as ABC News
reporter Jeffrey Kofman knows too well, suggesting that the U.S.
military is less than committed to its duty every waking minute
might get you outed as gay, Canadian, or both.
Still,
Buffalo Soldiers makes an often witty, sometimes overkilled
case that the military is designed to incite hostilities and
rivalries with a series of escalating contests on the U.S. base.
Elwood's arrogant challenges to any visible form of authority are
obvious. More subtly, the hierarchy depends on insecurity and Berman
and his wife believe that he'll finally get the promotion he covets
if he can: a) impress a General Lancaster (Dean Stockwell) with
proof he's descended from some historical soldier called the Iron
Boar, and b) lead his team to a win a military exercise. (No
surprise: neither approach works, and, as Elwood perceives, Berman
is too decent to succeed in the military.)
Perhaps
most striking in this general thematic context is Elwood's recurring
nightmare, in which he's falling. It's not just any kind of falling
-- he falls from a plane, a bomb himself, plummeting toward earth in
an all-destructive whoosh, not really meaning to wreak horror and
havoc, but, well, that's what bombs do. It's not clear that he
recognizes his responsibility for any of the chaos he brings, as an
individual or as he is affiliated with the U.S. military. But his
fear of falling -- in whatever metaphorical sense you want to read
it -- is undeniable.
On
this tip, the film reaches back as well, not so much to claim a
legacy as to reveal and critique one. On this level, the film is
about its title: the original Buffalo Soldiers were black soldiers
serving the U.S. Army following the Civil War (many had also served
during the War), in a program initiated in 1866. Nicknamed by their
ostensible opponents, the Cheyenne and Comanche, these units
typically endured the worst possible assignments, as well as
prejudice in and out of the military. According to Jordan's film,
the soldiers serving after the Vietnam War were not volunteers in a
conventional sense -- they were the "dregs" of society,
only willing to "enlist" in order to be paroled, from
prison or otherwise desperate circumstances of their lives
("Vietnam," says Elwood, "was the thorn in
everybody's side").
But
Australian director Gregor Jordan (whose Two Hands [1999] is
a cleverly put-together neo-noir, starring Bryan Brown and a very
young Heath Ledger) has something else in mind, beyond a particular
charge against the impracticable structure of the U.S. military. For
him, the film (adapted from Robert O'Connor's novel) offers a
broader indictment -- of human tendencies to violence, and
especially, typical masculine tendencies to aggressive competition.
Even during ostensible peacetime (for instance, the Cold War), the
film proposes, soldiers look for battles to fight. Young Elwood's
chief adversary turns out to be "one of his own," the new
Top Sergeant, Vietnam War veteran Robert K. Lee (Scott Glenn), who
seems willing to undertake any sort of illegal means to stop
Elwood's illegal activities. In other words, their pathologies are
well matched.
This
dick-measuring contest lurches to other levels with two plot events:
first, Elwood and his black market partners, Garcia (Michael Pena)
and Stoney (Leon Robinson), come across a cache of weapons. (That
is, a tank manned by troops high on heroin drives into downtown
service station's gas tanks, resulting in explosions and
wide-ranging disaster, leaving a weapons transport driverless and
available for the taking.) This fortuitous find escalates the scale
of traffic, as previously, their biggest moneymaker was the heroin
they cooked to be distributed by scary MP Saad (Sheik Mahmud-Bey).
Of course, such large scale product also steps up the penalties, if
they're busted.
The
second turn is only nominally more "personal," in that
Elwood decides to "date" Lee's daughter, Robyn (Anna
Paquin), precisely to mess with her father. On hearing this, she
rightly concludes, "That's definitely f*cked up!" but kind
of likes the idea too, because she hates her dad too. Lee responds
to Elwood's cheek with venom: he attacks Stoney repeatedly (at one
point, he asks him, "Aren't you sick of being f*cked by a white
man?" Indeed). And, on seeing Robyn emerge from Elwood's BMW,
he hauls the car out to the shooting range the next morning, and has
Elwood and his squad fire at it until it collapses in smoke.
Elwood's
dispute with Lee folds into the larger, emblematic media event of
the Berlin Wall's destruction, which is pictured on a television set
that's fallen on its side. As the world around them is changing
forever, these soldiers are so wrapped up inside their own narrow
visions, their own self-devised struggles, that they can't see
what's in front of them. In its own time, Buffalo Soldiers
exposes how out of sync history and morality can be.
|
Directed
by:
Gregor Jordan
Starring:
Joaquin Phoenix
Ed Harris
Anna Paquin
Scott Glenn
Elizabeth McGovern
Written
by:
Robert O'Connor
Eric Weiss
Nora Maccoby
Gregor Jordan
Rated:
R - Restricted.
Under 17 requires
parent or adult
guardian.
FULL CREDITS
BUY
VIDEO
RENT
DVD
BUY
MOVIE POSTER |
|