Buffalo Soldiers Movie Review
Buffalo Soldiers Review

"Buffalo Soldiers" Overview

Rating: R
2003
Cast and Crew
Director : Gregor JordanProducer : Rainer Grupe,Ariane Moody
Screenwiter : Gregor Jordan,Eric Weiss,Nora Maccoby
Starring : Joaquin Phoenix,Anna Paquin,Ed Harris,Scott Glenn,Dean Stockwell,Elizabeth McGovern,Gabriel Mann
Delayed from release for two years due to the world political climate, Buffalo
Soldiers is a movie that is categorically worth the wait.
A dark comedy on par with Pulp Fiction, Aussie director Gregor Jordan (in his
second film) transports us to Germany in 1989, on an American Army base during
the waning days of the Cold War. These enlisted troops aren't your Officer and
a Gentleman go-getters. They're criminals, offered the option to serve their
country in lieu of staying in jail. But since there's no war on, getting in to
trouble is the only thing to do. As our protagonist says, "There was nothing to
kill but time."
Front and center is Ray Elwood (Joaquin Phoenix), a clerk whose shit-eating
grin belies the fact that he is an expert at manipulating the system for
personal gain. This entails everything from black marketeering Army-bought Mop
& Glo to cooking up heroin after hours in the Army dispensary. Yet the genius
of Buffalo Soldiers is that Ray isn't a demon: He's a genuinely fun guy that we
can't help but root for: Even though his naïve boss, Colonel Berman (Ed
Harris), can't see what's going on right under his nose, Elwood is cordial and
helpful. He just skims off the top of Berman's ridiculous requests. The system
is corrupt, obviously, so why shouldn't Ray get his?
The film zips along until Ray and his friends come into possession of about $3
million worth of weapons gone missing from their rightful owners. Ray decides
he can sell them on the black market, though it will be his biggest deal ever
by far. The only problem is a new Sergeant (Scott Glenn), who starts giving Ray
the shakedown at every opportunity. In retaliation, Ray dates Sarge's daughter
(Anna Paquin). Sarge in turn puts Ray's shiny new car at the opposite end of a
target practice firing line. As we go along, Ray's story gets progressively
more disturbing while taking it completely over the top, blending tragedy and
comedy as well as I've ever seen. It's A Clockwork Orange meets Catch-22.
A mere plot synopsis simply can't express the wild comedy of Buffalo Soldiers,
which had me in stitches throughout the film. Stoned soldiers crush a hapless
VW beetle with a tank. People blow up in fireballs -- and we laugh. No subject
is sacred, and this may be too much for some who think Jordan's lambasting of
the American military is out of bounds. (There may be something to this: If
you're going to make fun of the U.S. Army, you really ought to be one of us.
The film is so vitriolic I honestly can't believe it got made, with real tanks,
no less.)
No matter. Jordan's film is so dead-on and so utterly perfect that I wouldn't
care if he was Martian. The man can tell a story that makes us laugh at life,
think about political policy, and craft a number of unforgettable characters.
Jordan crams all of this into 100 minutes, with a story as tight as a made bed,
military-style. Jordan's script (based on Robert O'Connor's novel) is masterful
and makes all the right moves. His direction is stylish but not overbearing:
The repeated dream sequences in which Ray finds himself falling from the clouds
to the earth (and hitting it) could have come off as cheesy, but they actually
serve the story quite well. Harris is memorable in a role recalling his work in
Glengarry Glen Ross, but it's Phoenix who steals the show as the anti-Top Gun,
a soldier without a cause who proves that peacetime can be infinitely more
dangerous than any war.
I guess Bob Marley said it best in this movie's namesake song: "Woe yo yo,
woe-woe yo yo."
Jordan's commentary track is the highlight of the DVD extras. Also included is
a behind-the-scenes documentary and one of those Sundance "Anatomy of a Scene"
extras.
Home on the range.
Reviewer: Christopher Null





