Is There An Iraq War Genre?

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  • Опубліковано 9 чер 2024
  • Listen to our podcast go deeper on Iraq War Films: bit.ly/3ctSY1e
    World War Two movies are a genre by themselves. Same with Vietnam war films. But why is it much harder to point out what the Iraq War genre is? Let’s take a look at some prominent films about the American military in the Middle East and see if we can find out just what makes an Iraq War movie.
    Twitter: bit.ly/2JPgFT2
    Patreon: bit.ly/1UaO9MU
    #IraqWar #AmericanSniper #TheHurtLocker

КОМЕНТАРІ • 708

  • @lordvader903
    @lordvader903 3 роки тому +1956

    reminds me of the sentence that goes something like "America will invade your country,kill your people and then 10 years later make a film about how tough it was for the american troops "

    • @NowYouSeeIt
      @NowYouSeeIt  3 роки тому +211

      Haha do you have a source for this? That's perfect

    • @lordvader903
      @lordvader903 3 роки тому +62

      @@NowYouSeeIt i think i heard it 3-4 years ago but i dont remember who it was, might have been a comedian

    • @ryanguthrie2317
      @ryanguthrie2317 3 роки тому +238

      @@NowYouSeeIt Frankie Boyle: Hurt Like You've Never Been Loved (2016 TV Special)

    • @DeathnoteBB
      @DeathnoteBB 3 роки тому +77

      And no citizens will realize how absolutely it is propaganda and instead insist “That’s just what happened”

    • @ryanguthrie2317
      @ryanguthrie2317 3 роки тому +320

      The full, correct quote is: "American foreign policy is horrendous 'cause not only will America come to your country and kill all your people, but what's worse, I think, is that they'll come back 20 years later and make a movie about how killing your people made their soldiers feel sad."

  • @mat_j
    @mat_j 3 роки тому +1319

    it's basically:
    US troops - sensitive, complex, dealing with the trauma of war
    Iraqis - NPC

    • @Papersheepp
      @Papersheepp 3 роки тому +20

      I mean, maybe because they are American movies with Americans in lead roles? Many Iraq war films are anti-war....

    • @dgenxali
      @dgenxali 3 роки тому +4

      @@edwardkito2794 spot on , my friend

    • @mat_j
      @mat_j 3 роки тому +5

      @@Papersheepp you think?...hs

    • @tamacat920
      @tamacat920 3 роки тому +58

      how americans see the rest of the world, really

    • @faisalal-bandar6680
      @faisalal-bandar6680 3 роки тому +37

      Iraqi checking in. Do you get to the Cloud District very often?

  • @acetrigger1337
    @acetrigger1337 3 роки тому +489

    World War 2 Movies: focus on the modest men that were called into duty, to face a unquestionable evil force.
    Vietnam War Movies: focus on the trauma of young soldiers going into extremely foreign territory without proper preparation.
    Iraq War Movies: show Americans doing good... because Terrorism.

    • @apothecurio
      @apothecurio 3 роки тому +18

      Yeah the difference is the Iraq war, we are the bad guys.

    • @acetrigger1337
      @acetrigger1337 3 роки тому +10

      @@apothecurio
      one could argue that most Iraq War Movies are afraid of showing the "Enemy's side", because they would look like the villain in the story.

    • @salim444
      @salim444 3 роки тому +1

      > TeErRoIsM
      FTFY

    • @kostajovanovic3711
      @kostajovanovic3711 3 роки тому +5

      @@apothecurio but in Vetnam the, were good?

    • @CloroxBleach-cq7tj
      @CloroxBleach-cq7tj 3 роки тому +5

      @@apothecurio ah yesss, and Saddam Hussein was the good guy...

  • @Hakeem-uz1ng
    @Hakeem-uz1ng 3 роки тому +41

    I'm an Iraqi, yeah, totally agree. One thing that caught my eye was this scene 3:05, there is no way in hell this is anything close to reality. Back then, any wrong turn in an area with American presence immediately renders you dead, no negotiations, only one wrong turn and you will be sponge holed. I had a relative that died this way. There is no way in hell that man got closer than 80m without being killed.

  • @nooranik21
    @nooranik21 3 роки тому +262

    What I find interesting, is that many Iraq and Afghanistan vets really don't identify with these movies at all. From what my Iraq and Afghanistan veteran friends have told me the piece of media they most closely identify with is "Generation Kill." I find it interesting that "Generation Kill" does indeed ask the moral questions that these movies about Iraq and Afghanistan do not.

    • @JMann3030
      @JMann3030 3 роки тому +19

      Was about to comment this, gen kill is such an accurate depiction of military life. Id reccomend anybody to watch it.

    • @Advent3546
      @Advent3546 3 роки тому +2

      I'm not familiar Generation Kill. What moral questions do they ask?

    • @nooranik21
      @nooranik21 3 роки тому +40

      @@Advent3546 HBO mini series from 2008. It shows how the men on the ground believed the war to be pointless. It also demonstrates the daily frustrations they have like arguing with superiors. It's very much from an enlisted perspective. The question it mainly asks is "what's the point of being here." A lot of it was subtle and lost on me and to it had to be explained to me by my vet friends. It kinda flopped on the graeter audience because of how niche it was towards vets.

    • @Advent3546
      @Advent3546 3 роки тому +1

      @@nooranik21 Sounds like my kind of war movie. I'm definitely searching this one out.

    • @aarnoman1088
      @aarnoman1088 3 роки тому +2

      @@Advent3546 Mini-series. It's about 7 hours long. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Generation_Kill_(miniseries)
      Would highly recommend it, watched it twice over now.

  • @LeonParvossi
    @LeonParvossi 3 роки тому +199

    No one wanted to sponsor this, yet you did it... Now I see it.

  • @ferghalicious1480
    @ferghalicious1480 3 роки тому +92

    “Americans making movies about what invading other people’s countries did to their soldiers is a bit like a serial killer telling you what stopping suddenly for hitchhikers did to his clutch.” - Frankie Boyle

  • @DanielEarl
    @DanielEarl 3 роки тому +313

    "Don't question why you're fighting, just fight who we tell you to" -the government

    • @AxxLAfriku
      @AxxLAfriku 3 роки тому +2

      HELP MY!!! My muscles are too big! I am a big tall man and my muscles are even BIGGER! I use them to get views but they HURT so much!!! Because they are heavy. Do you have any advice, dear dan

    • @El-Burrito
      @El-Burrito 3 роки тому

      @Lazer Person I googled it

    • @owenbunny4023
      @owenbunny4023 3 роки тому

      @Lazer Person they are some damn fine dancers

    • @sarroumarbeu6810
      @sarroumarbeu6810 3 роки тому

      "it's for a good cause, probably"- the gouvernement, again.

  • @benevolentworldexploder5395
    @benevolentworldexploder5395 3 роки тому +74

    Okay. Are we going to forget all the insane crap that happened in The Hurt Locker because of the dangerous mentality of its central character? The Hurt Locker does not glorify James. He is painted as an adrenaline junky, and a danger to everyone around him. So many conflicts in The Hurt Locker occur because of confusion, delusions, and misunderstanding that he stands in the center of. The movie is a character study of James and his loss of love in anything but his "job". He confuses the boy who he hangs out with regularly, and buys DVDs from, as being dead and then goes on a hunt. He sneaks off base in the middle of the night to seek vengeance for a death that didn't involve his friend. Hell, would he have even cared if he didn't insert a personal fear and delusion into the situation? This whole sequence occurs because he believes he is righting a wrong, but then he doesn't even get the details right at all. He sees a bad thing happen, but then turns it into something personal to justify an incredibly stupid decision. This is an ongoing problem through the whole movie.
    The end of the movie isn't just about his trauma. He decides that his life at home is too mundane and he reenlists specifically to be emersed in the chaos and confusion because he's developed a taste for it.
    It's hard to see these things when the movie has so much of the typical crap that pro war movies portrayed at the time, but my sense of James is that he justifies conflict in order to produce a war that satisfies himself. That, to me, is exactly what the Iraq War was.
    I will admit, however, that this movie could easily be seen as pro war despite all this, and that's not okay. That means the messages were intentionally muddied up to be more digestible, and that is disappointing. So while I am annoyed that this was not mentioned in the video, I get why it might not have been considered due to the message being so nonspecific. Iraq War genre has a very bizarre identity crisis, because support and opposition of the war has always been a mixed bag.

    • @tayloraverett3138
      @tayloraverett3138 3 роки тому +1

      I think you hit the nail on the head with Hurt Locker. It’s sad to seem that the point was missed by so many.

    • @owenbunny4023
      @owenbunny4023 3 роки тому

      You have to shit off the empathy side of your brain in order to kill. And if you can’t switch your brain back, you got PTSD

  • @kjetilsenNOWAY
    @kjetilsenNOWAY 3 роки тому +162

    I think generation kill mini series is a perfect depiction of the invasion.

    • @dannyfratina3901
      @dannyfratina3901 3 роки тому +17

      Came here to say this. Generation Kill is the actual Great Iraq War film - except it's a 7-part tv show instead of a film. It has the most to say in all the right ways and stacks up to great films about previous wars in similar ways.

    • @dnrfrank
      @dnrfrank 3 роки тому

      @@dannyfratina3901 I'd say it's a 7 part movie, you can't really watch one episode separate from the others and fully understand the plot

  • @Bertiebaby
    @Bertiebaby 3 роки тому +338

    Generation Kill is the only "Iraq War" non-documentary drama that I think is worth much of anything. Jarhead is good too. Movies like American Sniper and The Hurt Locker are awful jingo crap dressed up fancy to not be too obvious about it.

    • @NowYouSeeIt
      @NowYouSeeIt  3 роки тому +61

      Oh I will have to check this out. If it's made by the same people who made The Wire I am in!

    • @kjetilsenNOWAY
      @kjetilsenNOWAY 3 роки тому +10

      @@NowYouSeeItits my favorite series ever actually.

    • @AaronSmith1
      @AaronSmith1 3 роки тому +15

      Don't forget "Three Kings"

    • @acetrigger1337
      @acetrigger1337 3 роки тому

      @@AaronSmith1
      that was solid movie.

    • @londonjolly9174
      @londonjolly9174 3 роки тому +6

      @@NowYouSeeIt It's the best depiction of the military I've seen, TV or film.

  • @peterbrickwood3204
    @peterbrickwood3204 3 роки тому +53

    "Sand Castle" is a balanced look at the barbarity of war.

  • @themroc8231
    @themroc8231 3 роки тому +70

    The best Irak war movie was Brian De Palma's Redacted in 2007, but almost no one saw it in the US and it even received a boycott at the time for being "unpatriotic"

    • @LucasVenturoso
      @LucasVenturoso 3 роки тому +12

      So you're saying Redacted got Redacted?

    • @themroc8231
      @themroc8231 3 роки тому +9

      @@LucasVenturoso The ending sequence that was suposed to be a montage of pictures of Iraki victims was actuallly redacted by Mark Cuban and the guys at Magnolia Pictures.

    • @arkaprabhadeb2432
      @arkaprabhadeb2432 3 роки тому +11

      @@themroc8231 that says a lot about "Free Speech", doesn't it? You question something they do and you get labled Anti-National and unpatriotic instantly!

    • @user-kd5th1fo2r
      @user-kd5th1fo2r 3 роки тому +5

      @@arkaprabhadeb2432 almost all Americans are like that, if you oppose their way of thinking they will immediately try to silence you

    • @Ward413
      @Ward413 3 роки тому

      kar jet
      *Generalizes a population of 320 million*

  • @RawBerserker
    @RawBerserker 3 роки тому +315

    I'm so sad that my country and religion are only ever used in movies for negativity. Even the new Aladdin (where the original Aghrabbah was meant to be a fictional city based in Iraq) is made more of an Indian Bollywood story. We can't even keep our own fairytales.

    • @NowYouSeeIt
      @NowYouSeeIt  3 роки тому +68

      Wow I never thought of how they changed Aladdin like that. Any movies/TV you would recommend that actually do justice to your country/religion?

    • @RawBerserker
      @RawBerserker 3 роки тому +32

      @@NowYouSeeIt Honestly..... I can't really think of any. In terms of country I'm really at a loss trying to come up with one. As for religion, there's some characters that come to mind, though they're again quite minor. Yensen from Iron Man is a great example. Someone who helps a stranger as best he could, and is willing to die to protect him. Also the fact that even though his life is in danger, would rather shoot into the air than at the people trying to kill him. And I'd say My Name Is Khan is one movie that also stands out, if you haven't seen it.
      If I can think of anything else, I'll be sure to come back and say.

    • @alandiaz5184
      @alandiaz5184 3 роки тому +3

      But doesn't the original Aladdin story happen in China?

    • @yvesadlaurent6675
      @yvesadlaurent6675 3 роки тому +3

      Gregor Samsa this is an unhelpful take considering they are referring to the disney aladdin version

    • @RawBerserker
      @RawBerserker 3 роки тому +33

      @@alandiaz5184 Yeah so the original tale describes the setting as "Somewhere in China", which is standard old Arabic phrasing for "A far away land". Another example would be an Islamic saying, "Seek knowledge, even if it is in China". So technically, yeah, the setting is China, but other than that, all other details refer to Arabia. There's no other reference to anything Chinese within the story in terms of characters, beliefs and ideologies. And there are other general things such as there being a Sultan and not an Emperor, and the fact that a genie/jinn is of Arabian folklore. So while the story is set "Somewhere in China", it's still very much an Iraqi story.
      Also, I guess I worded it wrongly, but I meant how the original movie was based in a fictional Iraqi city. My bad.

  • @AdzoHeatzo
    @AdzoHeatzo 3 роки тому +121

    Most of these films would have been produced in tandem with either the U.S. Army or the C.I.A. So the overarching genre would be propaganda

    • @DaraGaming42
      @DaraGaming42 3 роки тому

      actually they all are, all modern warfare films are CIA, Army Propaganda becasue the military will provide tanks and stuff and money. Anti-war films usually arent funded by the amry

  • @dkroll92
    @dkroll92 3 роки тому +28

    One note: Saving Private Ryan is about Rangers and the guys in the Deer Hunter are literal Special Forces. By comparison, the EOD guys in Hurt Locker are actually conventional troops. EOD is a unique job, but is ultimately just a job. It's not a special ops unit, though there are special ops EOD units
    Another reason why GWOT movies would show SOF units as being over-represented is because the majority of operations in the GWOT, especially before 2003 and after 2010, were carried about by SOF units. For about the past 5 or 6 years now, for example, about 99% of operations overseas have been carried about by SOF units. Conventional infantry units, when they deploy at all, aren't going outside the wire and doing missions. They're either guarding locations, training host nation forces, or both.

    • @katamariroller2837
      @katamariroller2837 3 роки тому +3

      Conventional forces have seen plenty of action. They are the ones getting ambushed, blown up by IEDs, and besieged when they choose a bad place to set up a base. The reason most GWOT movies feature special forces is that special forces are more glamorous and give off the impression that it is these elite, divine warriors taking the fight to the enemy, and not flesh and bone neighbours of the audience exposing their human bodies to bullets and shrapnel.

  • @hecticfreeze
    @hecticfreeze 2 роки тому +4

    The whole video I was hoping you'd mention Jarhead, even though it's technically a different war, so was super happy when it showed up. The way it portrays how normal men are turned into monsters in order to get a job done that ultimately ends up being futile and pointless is such a great analogy for all war, not just those in the middle east. I know it wasn't well received when it came out but I've always loved it for being one of the few war films that needs no action scenes at all to get its point across

  • @demongrenade2748
    @demongrenade2748 3 роки тому +24

    The only show I've ever consistently seen praised by Iraq war veterans is Generation Kill.
    It examines both what it was like to be there and the moral complexity faced by the invading marines/occupying US forces. Its dialogue and procedures are also spot on according to those I know who were deployed to Iraq. Granted most of who I know where in the army (not the marines like in the show) and were deployed years after the initial invasion, but somehow they all still comment on how unbelievably accurate the show is.
    As a side note, Just about every Iraq war vet I know really don't like the Hurt Locker. Or they flat out hate it.

  • @BarnyWaterg8
    @BarnyWaterg8 3 роки тому +124

    What if I said you can support the troops by not supporting the conflict...?

    • @timonschneider6290
      @timonschneider6290 3 роки тому +3

      Yes and no. Most of the time "Support the troops" is just an unreflected militarist punchline. Since I do not give the benefit of the doubt to militarists and other fascists, it's up to you to prove me wrong in assuming you are a militarist whenever you just use the punchline.

    • @SaintSC05
      @SaintSC05 3 роки тому +3

      @@timonschneider6290 I'd say its a pretty dangerous line of logic to think someone is a fascist based on a pretty common phrase.

    • @DOPEdwarf
      @DOPEdwarf 3 роки тому

      they were volunteers, nope. And the immorality of the iraqi war was well evident everywhere and most of the world condemned it, there is no excuse of "ignorance"

    • @timonschneider6290
      @timonschneider6290 3 роки тому +4

      @@SaintSC05 I don't think logic cares about how many people say it. I am German so naturally I am bewildered by the ubiquity of militarism and fascist tropes in American mainstream culture. Ofc not everyone who ever says that is a fascist in the strict sense of the word but I have rarely heard that used in a way that is not meant to delegitimize critique of the military when critique was ample and necessary.

    • @SaintSC05
      @SaintSC05 3 роки тому

      @@timonschneider6290 I said line of logic. What I'm saying is I think it's dangerous to accuse someone of being a fascist based on something so harmless especially considering the current political climate where that accusation carries real consequences. It's a phrase that has no meaning beyond what the exact words are. I think you're giving undue power to it.
      I believe it's possible to critique the military while still supporting the actual troops. That's what the original poster was saying. People state that they support the troops while disagreeing with the action in Iraq and Afghanistan for example. Nothing wrong with having a standing army.

  • @Crick1952
    @Crick1952 3 роки тому +8

    The Torture Report w/ Adam Driver is an Iraq war movie told from the home front that even calls out Zero Dark Thirty
    Also the Green Zone w/ Matt Damon is about the cover up that there were no WMD's in Iraq

  • @AshTheAntiHero
    @AshTheAntiHero 3 роки тому +3

    Love you man! Can't wait to check this out

  • @mstly4lg
    @mstly4lg 3 роки тому

    Great video as always

  • @zakiowais6829
    @zakiowais6829 3 роки тому

    Don't stop making these awesome videos man.

  • @joshuasheetz9253
    @joshuasheetz9253 3 роки тому +13

    More people need to see Generation Kill. Still the best take on the Iraq War.

  • @_gamma.
    @_gamma. 3 роки тому +1

    Wow, you did a really good job on this video. Thank you

  • @RajkumarSingh-dq8be
    @RajkumarSingh-dq8be 3 роки тому +4

    You gave me a new perspective on war movies.

  • @LukeQuineFilms
    @LukeQuineFilms 3 роки тому

    Citations Needed podcast episodes on this topic is fascinating and a nice companion to this video.

  • @JD..........
    @JD.......... 3 роки тому

    Excellent stuff!

  • @JacenLP
    @JacenLP 3 роки тому +3

    I have been shouting "Jarhead" in my head until 8:30. Thanks for making me see how different it is to the other Iraq war movies. I ... hadn't realized it until now.

  • @PunishedPapa69
    @PunishedPapa69 3 роки тому +9

    Even though it's not in Iraq, to me Sicario seems like the breakdown of these kinds of movies. It turns the special forces into a morally ambiguous group that would do anything to accomplish a mission, regardless of whether the results will make any difference in the end.

    • @frecklesofdoom
      @frecklesofdoom 3 роки тому

      I don't know if I agree with your analysis (still thinking it over), since there's still a "coolness" factor to Benicio Del Toro's character in Sicario. He is vicious and dispassionate in a way a lot of young American men (I think) admire; so, like Apocalypse Now, an average moviegoer might come away missing the larger ethical point and embracing the gratuitous violence. But you raise an interesting point about what films are not explicitly about the Iraq war yet function as commentary on that war anyway. (Btw I say all this despite the fact that Sicario is one of my all-time favorite films!)

  • @AeselElisabeth
    @AeselElisabeth 2 роки тому

    This was on my 'Watch Later' for about 9 months, but damn what a great take! Premium content, this!

  • @ignaciograndalutz6036
    @ignaciograndalutz6036 3 роки тому

    Thank you very much for the episode guys! Are you going to upload your podcasts to spotify at some point?

  • @Shocksidian
    @Shocksidian 3 роки тому +1

    Great video! Learned a lot and actually a very interesting topic

  • @RandallStephens397
    @RandallStephens397 3 роки тому +18

    @8:19 the Iraq war's "Apocalypse Now" was done as a video game in Spec Ops: The Line

    • @victroiumsheepo8585
      @victroiumsheepo8585 3 роки тому +1

      Both are based on the novel "Heart of darkness" tho

    • @Statusinator
      @Statusinator 3 роки тому

      The Line takes place in the United Arab Emirates. Not Iraq, lest you forget.

  • @jarrodb4699
    @jarrodb4699 3 роки тому +8

    I remember watching Jarhead when I was like 14 and having it go way over my head!

  • @AntonioHernandez-li7kv
    @AntonioHernandez-li7kv 3 роки тому +1

    Wow, amazing video

  • @rodrigolopezmaya5974
    @rodrigolopezmaya5974 3 роки тому

    Underrated video right here.

  • @NathanGrawesh
    @NathanGrawesh 3 роки тому

    Nice analysis, wish to hear more about portraying war in movies

  • @Guruc13
    @Guruc13 3 роки тому +1

    Incredible - thanks for bringing attention to this. I'd also like to point out Jarhead 2 is a film that also perfectly missed the point of Jarhead: Folding Ideas has a great video about it.
    "Do you want Jarhead sequels? This is how you get Jarhead sequels!

  • @uncomfortablecat
    @uncomfortablecat 3 роки тому +193

    This is like a Lindsay Ellis video and it's a good thing.

    • @NowYouSeeIt
      @NowYouSeeIt  3 роки тому +67

      Easily the nicest compliment I've gotten on this video

    • @LuxiBelle
      @LuxiBelle 3 роки тому +3

      hotdogs.gif

    • @kostajovanovic3711
      @kostajovanovic3711 3 роки тому +1

      It lacks cinycism

    • @uncomfortablecat
      @uncomfortablecat 3 роки тому +4

      @@kostajovanovic3711 and rage towards Michael Eisner and Something Something Capitalism.

    • @bajamarbass
      @bajamarbass 3 роки тому +5

      Not enough Phantom of the Opera references

  • @ethanbainbridge1333
    @ethanbainbridge1333 3 роки тому +2

    I'm not a film student but damn I love your videos. It pulls me closet and closer to making my own film

  • @farty555
    @farty555 3 роки тому

    Great video

  • @errhka
    @errhka 3 роки тому +2

    I think what The Hurt Locker did best is that it is using film form to communicate the danger of being constantly under the threat of being attacked. So while it's not accurate in terms of... really anything to do with the military, it does do a fantastic job of keeping you on the edge of your seat the entire time worrying for the safety of everyone onscreen.

  • @coboarders
    @coboarders 3 роки тому

    Nice video and breakdown. Missed Three Kings, which was waaaay ahead of its time.

  • @zachfernando5006
    @zachfernando5006 3 роки тому +11

    you forgot to mention generation kill buddy. that one's like full metal jacket in iraq

    • @zalac153
      @zalac153 3 роки тому +2

      But it doesnt follow his narrative so I assume he ignored it on purpose

    • @kostajovanovic3711
      @kostajovanovic3711 3 роки тому

      @@zalac153 or he hasn't seen it at that point

    • @noco7243
      @noco7243 3 роки тому

      @@zalac153 Yeah. It would be a shame if he were to see a movie that doesn't say "Murica bad, white man bad!"

    • @harshbansal7982
      @harshbansal7982 3 роки тому +1

      @@noco7243 bruh what. Why do you feel like need to include race huh ?

    • @paisleepunk
      @paisleepunk 2 роки тому

      @@kostajovanovic3711 I assume this is the case. I think he even says so in a reply to one of the comments.

  • @charlesliang4118
    @charlesliang4118 3 роки тому

    Hey man! could you do a video on how emotions like loneliness are portrayed through cinematography? I watched this short called death from overwork and it was super impactful. It had this sense of familiarity with it. Especially the way it presented subjects in crowded space but isolated. It would be super cool if you could do a video on how these isolated emotions are conveyed through the lens or other methods.

  • @TheMogul23
    @TheMogul23 3 роки тому +3

    QUESTION: Based on your general summary of the tropes of an Iraq war movie, is Starship Troopers kind of an Iraq war movie then?
    i.e. Framed entirely as gung-ho propaganda for the side who start to look more and more like the villains the longer you think about it.

  • @ironapega
    @ironapega 3 роки тому +1

    I got an ad for the armed forces before this video. Sick lads thanks

  • @alrightthen
    @alrightthen 3 роки тому +1

    Man I love that line from jarhead! Getting lost on the way to college, almost happened to a feller once.

  • @trololo_zhirnota
    @trololo_zhirnota 3 роки тому +10

    No comments on "Generation Kill" from HBO?

    • @gabrielle.s1896
      @gabrielle.s1896 3 роки тому +4

      He said in a comment that he hasn't seen it, but will check it out :)

    • @noco7243
      @noco7243 3 роки тому

      Goes against his narrative

  • @beanypoopy9242
    @beanypoopy9242 3 роки тому

    great video

  • @corro202
    @corro202 3 роки тому

    Great video.

  • @elbronto26
    @elbronto26 3 роки тому

    watched Jarhead only recently for the first time. Loved it and completely agree with your analysis.

  • @JayandDave57
    @JayandDave57 3 роки тому

    Great video, I was wondering if you watched the Storyteller’s video essay “American Sniper: Anti-war misinterpreted”?

  • @JakeAustriaco
    @JakeAustriaco 3 роки тому +123

    90% of Iraq & Afghanistan war films are utter trash. Besides Jarhead & Generation Kill I haven't seen a good, honest one. So many great, honest Vietnam war films like Platoon, Apocalypse Now, Rescue Dawn... I haven't personally been deployed to either, luckily; however any veteran can tell you how most of these films are utter trash and wholly inaccurate (Hurtlocker, Green Zone) or some propaganda piece like American Sniper... Even Jarhead & Generation Kill do not give an honest perspective of the Iraqi or Afghani points of view.
    I also wish you would've done more research on the military, how it works, and perspectives of Iraq & Afghanistan veterans before making this video; because I feel like the video itself shows a lot of assumptions on how the modern military is and works based on these films; almost all of which put no effort into research of their own. I think it's really ironic that most people who've served in the contemporary era hate all of these films and how disingenuous it is; but you being a regular audience member like the general American audience have a very different view, expectation of both today's military, it's veterans and because of that these films.
    A genuine war film from today would probably look like Platoon without cannabis or a draft; only most of the people who did volunteer did so with misinterpretations about the military and false expectations about what they'd gain from it. I think your take-away about torture and good vs evil were accurate however, and I think your overall analysis of the trend of these Iraq War Films is also accurate, regardless of whether or not the films themselves are or aren't.
    Your analysis of Jarhead is really great though, and how people get distracted by spectacle. Would it surprise you if I told you that at the MEPS station (basically where recruits officially enlist in the military and sign their contract) they were playing Jarhead in the lobby? That these kids, myself included fell into the exact same mistake that the characters in Jarhead do watching Flight of the Valkries? I think this has to do entirely with the fact we allow children to join the military. The minimum age to fight should be 25 not 18...

    • @peterbrickwood3204
      @peterbrickwood3204 3 роки тому +5

      "Dead Presidents" is an interesting look at Viet Nam vets. Chuck Hogan also wrote books where cadres of vets are recruited to rob banks. Was a time when a lot of prisons were filled with veterans.

    • @JakeAustriaco
      @JakeAustriaco 3 роки тому

      @@peterbrickwood3204 Thank you for the recommendation, I'll definitely check it out. I should say, however being released in 95, it might be less of an Iraq war film and more of a Gulf War film. Same region but they're very different wars; and the Gulf War is significantly shorter than Iraq & Afghanistan.

    • @ComfortableTool86
      @ComfortableTool86 3 роки тому +1

      @@JakeAustriaco really interesting and ironic parallel between you and other recruits watching jarhead and probably misinterpreting it just like the characters of jarhead did the same

    • @JakeAustriaco
      @JakeAustriaco 3 роки тому +1

      @@ComfortableTool86 Yea, I really didn't see it back then. They would love to mention how things sucked but that built this great deep camaraderie. In some ways it did but that didn't forgive the poor treatment let alone what we were doing over there.

    • @VioletSadi
      @VioletSadi 3 роки тому +1

      Jake “got lost on my way to college, sir!” Struck me, not having seen Jarhead, as kind of accurate to those 18 year olds you mention. The way higher education is so ridiculously expensive makes it seem like a fair deal based on how war movies show it, but the experience is so shockingly distant from what was suggested

  • @superfortressstudios
    @superfortressstudios 3 роки тому +8

    I know it's an HBO miniseries and not a film, but I think Generation Kill fits in fairly well with the Jarhead section of the Iraq war genre and was disappointed it was not discussed. It also has direct contrast from the same network in Band of Brothers and The Pacific. While Band of Brothers was basically Saving Private Ryan: true story edition, and The Pacific was extremely dark, neither questioned the war they were set in, or whether the protagonists were fighting a 'just cause.' In direct contrast Generation Kill had it's main protagonist (Sgt. Colbert) growing more and more disillusioned as the invasion continued, while (like Jarhead) showing often glamourized units (snipers and marine recon in Jarhead and Generation Kill respectively) bypassed by the pace of the war; with Generation Kill highlighting the inept leadership (both military and political) during the invasion. I understand that you must limit the scope of the video for time, but I still think you missed probably the 'best' example of anti-war Iraq War visual entertainment.

    • @LiveDieTrolling
      @LiveDieTrolling 3 роки тому

      "While Band of Brothers was basically Saving Private Ryan: true story edition, and The Pacific was extremely dark, neither questioned the war they were set in, or whether the protagonists were fighting a 'just cause.'"
      Generation Kill highlighting the inept leadership (both military and political) during the invasion."
      SOME WHAT, They also showed the GOOD leadership skills of Godfather and the HQ of the invasion.

  • @gekko434
    @gekko434 3 роки тому

    Brilliant analysis of Jarhead.

  • @TheMerik26
    @TheMerik26 3 роки тому +1

    Thank you for this great video. I feel like a film that fits this exactly is the 2018 12 strong. It's in Afghanistan but fits this theory well imo.

  • @EdwardInSpiteOfMe
    @EdwardInSpiteOfMe 3 роки тому

    I love your videos. There's an indie movie that you didn't mention and that almost no one has seen, called Soy Nero. I really, really, REALLY recommend you take a look at it because you will see in the way it uses the Irak War things you haven't seen in any other film.

  • @gameloser123
    @gameloser123 3 роки тому

    this was a particularly good video

  • @papamoto95
    @papamoto95 3 роки тому

    I was hoping you would talk about Generation Kill as well

  • @luuketaylor
    @luuketaylor 3 роки тому

    As someone finishing their studies in trauma-informed therapy/counseling, I would love to see more insight on these war films vs. actual reactions from those who have been in service. Film can be a powerful lens into reality for those who have not experienced what is shown on screen, but it can also be a powerful distorter.

  • @rachiscash
    @rachiscash 3 роки тому

    Thank you for bringing light to the excellent Jarhead but I'd be glad to hear your opinion about *Three Kings* with Clooney and Ice Cube

  • @augustgreig9420
    @augustgreig9420 3 роки тому +3

    I think it should be important to point out how much influence the Department of Defense, Pentagon, and CIA have on these kinds of films. They are very engaged in Hollywood.

  • @SaifAAhmed-nu2yh
    @SaifAAhmed-nu2yh 3 роки тому +31

    If anyone is interested in reading a story from the Iraqi prospective, my comic book, YASMEEN, deals with Iraq after the invasion and the war with ISIS.

    • @Duragon910
      @Duragon910 3 роки тому +3

      Thanks man I just bought the first episode 👍

    • @SaifAAhmed-nu2yh
      @SaifAAhmed-nu2yh 3 роки тому +1

      @@Duragon910 Wow thanks! Hope you like it!

    • @noco7243
      @noco7243 3 роки тому

      Do they have movies from the perspective of ISIS where you're from?

  • @marinebymistake
    @marinebymistake 3 роки тому

    The best thing I've ever seen about Iraq War is Generation Kill. Definitely a must watch. Really would like to see a video on it from you :)

  • @doodledibob
    @doodledibob 3 роки тому +1

    "The Men Who Stare At Goats" is the movie about American identity and the Iraq War I think you're looking for.

  • @rastas4766
    @rastas4766 3 роки тому

    Great video. I would even argue that world war 2 can be blurry. Read about the Battle of Castle Itter.

  • @manooxi327
    @manooxi327 3 роки тому

    tnx

  • @JohnDoe-bm5lp
    @JohnDoe-bm5lp 3 роки тому +36

    I love vietnam but could never stand american made middle east movies, it just feels like propaganda to me, I think about Abu ghraib, drone strikes...

  • @robertoreyes09
    @robertoreyes09 3 роки тому

    No joke i rewatched Jarhead in the theater three times when it came out. Great movie.

  • @geraldmerkowitz4360
    @geraldmerkowitz4360 3 роки тому

    I love the point you made about Jarhead. This film deserved better.

  • @robchuk4136
    @robchuk4136 3 роки тому

    This is a great analysis. I wonder where Black Hawk Down fits in with modern war movies

  • @sandrosoler4275
    @sandrosoler4275 2 роки тому

    I wish you had touched Courage Under Fire, which I do believe it's the first film about the First Gulf War

  • @dirac1425
    @dirac1425 3 роки тому

    Thanks for using Jarhead as part of your review, it's one of my favorite movies even though a lot of people don't like it

  • @Thermalburn
    @Thermalburn 3 роки тому +1

    Its interesting that when I saw jarhead, I was about 17 years old and hated it. However, now its actually one of my favorite war movies. I'm sure a lot of that has to do with my experiences in Afghanistan and also being mature enough to appreciate the deeper underlying context

  • @javidaderson
    @javidaderson 3 роки тому

    I would recommend Generation Kill that addresses the issues of the Iraq war head-on without pulling any punches.

  • @TheHenningab
    @TheHenningab 3 роки тому +1

    Would recommend the podcast Blowback for anyone interested in learning about the Iraq war. The Vietnam War by Ken Burns is a great watch for learning about that war.

  • @marscoriad213
    @marscoriad213 3 роки тому +2

    I was surprised you didn't mention the Green Zone.

  • @AlbySpace
    @AlbySpace 3 роки тому

    Good point there, I’ll rewatch jarhead with new eyes.

  • @firstnamelastname7113
    @firstnamelastname7113 3 роки тому

    something that's really its own thing is a TV show called Generation Kill. It really places you in the centre of being a solider with excess violence, low-key psychopathy, PTSD, the repeating nature of violence and the morality of the Iraq War. This is all with very specific jargon and captured imagery of the war. I really can't recommend it enough

  • @MateoPizarro
    @MateoPizarro 3 роки тому

    I was waiting for Jarhead to appear.. check out Generation Kill, its a mini series but it does a good job of exploring the complexities of that war too, IMO

  • @alexmarcelo6494
    @alexmarcelo6494 3 роки тому

    It's set in Afghanistan, but Kilo Two Bravo (originally released as "Kajaki" in the UK) was very good and, if I remember correctly, the movie can be read as a metaphor for getting involved in the 2000's middle east wars in the first place.

  • @danielmoore5022
    @danielmoore5022 3 роки тому

    I was waiting for jarhead to come up, and I'm glad it did. Love that film

  • @michaellynch4073
    @michaellynch4073 3 роки тому +17

    I thought American sniper was an anti-Middle East war film because of the PTSD shown but that was obviously what I was bringing to it.

    • @leftenantthunder
      @leftenantthunder 3 роки тому +16

      I think it is only anti-war from the American POV. It seems to say "war is bad because it makes our soldiers sad" instead of offering any more complex or nuanced take. It says nothing about why the actual war might be bad, and only uses the Iraqi perspective for violent torture porn (hand drill execution scene).

    • @kleko
      @kleko 3 роки тому +5

      Poor american sniper got ptsd after invading a country for nothing. It's always amazing how many yanks don't understand that they've been the bad guy since the fall of the soviet union.

    • @peterbrickwood3204
      @peterbrickwood3204 3 роки тому

      I recall reading James Jones novels and getting as sense of PTSD caused by WWII which was a "good" war.

    • @calebcampbell5951
      @calebcampbell5951 3 роки тому

      Patrick Winter Are you implying he deserved to get PTSD for falling victim to the vast amount of military propaganda and schemes by recruiters here in the US? There’s a reason the US gets so many recruits. They sweeten the pot and influence our culture into praising and worshipping our veterans, so I would be so insensitive

    • @kleko
      @kleko 3 роки тому +1

      @@calebcampbell5951 Good point. I don't feel sorry for any veteran of a war of agression, but I see your point. The film however and it's makers are all guilty of all murders done by people inspired by it.

  • @metroidsuperfan17
    @metroidsuperfan17 3 роки тому +7

    If anyone else is interested in this topic, I highly recommend the podcast "Blowback". Episode 4.5 is on the films of this genre

  • @tymaa9349
    @tymaa9349 3 роки тому +2

    As a Middle Eastern, America’s involvement here wasn’t just pointless but harmful to us. Iraq was so much better before the US needed oil

  • @Yevjer
    @Yevjer 3 роки тому +15

    War crimes aren’t a “mistake” that’s honestly a very infuriating statement. American war crimes are often the result of bigotry and the complete devaluation of other peoples live while valuing American live as equivalent to 1000’s of Iraqis and Afghans

    • @plaguedoctorjamespainshe6009
      @plaguedoctorjamespainshe6009 3 роки тому

      Mistake in the meaning of morally wrong instead of an necessary evil like a lot of iraq war movies portray

  • @sterhax
    @sterhax 3 роки тому

    2:56 “expertly” defuses lmao, that shot of him pulling up the IED shells by their own wires is often used as an example of how totally unrealistic the Hurt Locker’s EOD processes are

  • @KajiCarson
    @KajiCarson 3 роки тому

    The Hurt Locker is very good.

  • @goodnightcharly5135
    @goodnightcharly5135 3 роки тому +5

    Generation kill is pretty great

  • @valefiori8972
    @valefiori8972 3 роки тому

    Amazing

  • @TravisD.Barrett
    @TravisD.Barrett 3 роки тому

    I know it wasn’t that popular, nor was it from the perspective of a soldier, but Brad Pitts “War Machine” was one of the best Iraq war movies I’ve seen that really got me to think about we’re doing there and what our strategy is.

  • @theroebuck123456789
    @theroebuck123456789 3 роки тому

    So close to a million

  • @daniellalagaccia4729
    @daniellalagaccia4729 3 роки тому

    I'm surprised about the lack of mention of Three Kings (1999) with George Clooney. The definition of an underrated film.

  • @sambarrett871
    @sambarrett871 3 роки тому

    Jarhead is my favorite Irag war film by far!!

  • @needy3535
    @needy3535 3 роки тому +4

    So you mentioned that those movies don't question whether or not we should even be in Iraq. But i would argue that this is not what these movies are about. I think they're much more focused in soldier psychology and mentality. When you're a soldier its not your job to ask why you're there. As a soldier, your unit deploys, and then you're there in the shit. At that point soldiers aren't fighting for their country or the country their in. They're fighting for their friends to the left and right. I think most people if they put themselves in their place they'd think the same thing. Im not gonna say its not propaganda, but I don't think thats all it serves as. There is a warrior class of people. There are people who value honor and duty and who don't want an easy comfortable life. The people in these movies are based on real soldiers. And they do real, crazy shit to protect their friends or fellow soldiers.

    • @needy3535
      @needy3535 3 роки тому +1

      @@edwardkito2794 true but thats because these stories aren't about them. Just because a film is about the Iraq war or the middle east in general doesn't mean every single one of those films needs to have those perspectives. The films are about American soldiers and thats okay. It's not these films fault that there isn't another one out there looking at it from the Iraq peoples perspective. Of course there's warrior classes in every culture. But again, thats not what these movies are about.

    • @needy3535
      @needy3535 3 роки тому

      @@edwardkito2794 war is extremely nuanced. There are objectively evil groups that we are fighting. Genocidal groups. To say that there's not good people that get caught up in that is probably not true. But everyone has a reason for fighting. Everyone thinks they are just in what they are doing. Everyone is the hero of their own story. But that doesn't mean that what they're doing is truly good. You could argue this for America, the innocent civilians, or the genocidal, extremist terrorist who use women and children as shields.

    • @noidontwantthat7237
      @noidontwantthat7237 3 роки тому

      Needy Orphans
      Your country might have destroyed some of those “objectively bad” regimes but also destroyed even more innocent people’s lives, problem is that those movies never mention the sheer amount of civilian casualties

  • @RedXPoison
    @RedXPoison 3 роки тому

    Can you PLEASE publish a movie list?

  • @JimSmyth
    @JimSmyth 3 роки тому

    It's interesting to look at foreign war films as well. Like Japanese films that take place in WWII rarely have any mention of the Americans, Chinese, Koreans, etc. Just the general concept of "the enemy". The 1995 film Memories has a short titled "Cannon Fodder" about a grungy sickly society where war is identity. The child the story centers on, in incidental curiosity, asks his father who it is they're fighting. After a pause the father flatly says "One day, you'll understand."