Winter Soldier Movie Review
Winter Soldier Review

"Winter Soldier" Overview

Rating: NR
1972
Cast and Crew
Director : Winterfilm CollectiveProducer : Winterfilm Collective
Screenwiter :
Starring :
Winter Soldier is a documentary which one experiences, instead of simply
viewing. Over three days in January and February 1971, just a couple months
before Lieutenant William Calley would be sentenced to life in prison for the
My Lai Massacre (he would eventually serve less than four years), a group of
Vietnam War veterans convened at a Howard Johnson in Detroit to testify about
the atrocities they had witnessed or partaken in while serving in Vietnam. The
conference was titled “The Winter Soldier Investigation,” after Thomas Paine:
“These are the times that try men’s souls. The summertime soldier and the
sunshine patriot will in this crisis, shrink from the service of his country;
but he that stands it now, deserves the love and thanks of man and woman.”
Needless to say, the country didn’t stand up and thank the (mostly long-haired
and disenchanted) vets for reminding them of the sinkhole of iniquity America
had mired itself in overseas. The gut-wrenching, eye-opening stories delivered
by hundreds of soldiers in that sterile hotel conference room were mostly
ignored by the media, and would likely have sunk without a trace after being
published in the Congressional Record. The testimony, however, was shot by a
group called the Winterfilm Collective (including the future Academy
Award-winning documentarian Barbara Kopple) and edited into a tight, 95-minute
piece of scorching truth-telling that played around at some film festivals,
colleges, and one small Manhattan cinema, before mostly disappearing from the
scene.
It’s not hard to see why, given that the film is essentially a parade of
grainy, black-and-white footage of morose, shaggy-headed vets talking in
confession-booth tones about laying waste to villages and butchering civilians;
this is not a fun night out at the movies (but, then, neither is Shoah). In
general, we as a country have preferred to have our Vietnam horror stories
served up to us as part of thrilling wartime adventure tales, like Apocalypse
Now and Platoon, or used as nihilistic punch lines in the morbidly inhumane
Full Metal Jacket. And yet it remains well-nigh unconscionable that Winter
Soldier a missive delivered straight from the frontline never become one of the
standard texts on the Vietnam War and is only now getting its first proper
theatrical release.
Due to the fact that John Kerry was a member of this group (he appears on
screen for less than a minute, interviewing another veteran), and would testify
on these same matters before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee in April of
the same year, Winter Soldier has been used as something of a punching bag by
elements of the right, which have disputed the veracity of some of the
soldiers’ claims. But it’s not the substance of one or two of the stories which
give the film its quite substantial power to shock, it’s the numbing repetition
of them, the same tropes repeated over and over in slightly varied form, all of
it together painting a portrait of institutionalized brutality.
Like with the Abu Ghraib scandal, the Winter Soldier testimony showed that an
indifference to Geneva Conventions regarding prisoners of war had filtered from
command down to the grunts charged with handling them. Several soldiers speak
with quite jarring normality about prisoners being thrown blindfolded out of
helicopters, by officers no less, while slides show GIs looking on as South
Vietnamese regulars torture suspected Vietcong guerrillas. Almost worse,
however (and here is where, so far at least, the Vietnam-Iraq parallels seem to
lessen), is the absolute disregard for civilian life. Anyone with even a little
knowledge of the war knows the old joke (repeated here) about how to tell a
Vietcong from a noncombatant (“Anybody running away is a VC. Anybody standing
still is a well-disciplined VC.”), but it’s quite another thing to witness this
deluge of horrors, with ordinary Vietnamese gunned down on the side of the
road, from helicopters in rice paddies, in their villages, just because they
happened to be in the way. Soldier after soldier talks about how routine these
killings were, everything sanctioned by their officers, who at best looked the
other way and at worst instigated it. “They weren’t human” is the drumbeat
here, the atrocities that occurred being the inevitable result of
institutionalized racism combined with a war in which no ground could be gained
or lost, and only the body count mattered – whether the bodies were actually
combatants was an oft-ignored detail.
Decades on, Winter Soldier can seem an anachronism with its lack of framing
devices and narration, the testimony just laid out there in stark relief, with
the viewer mostly left to fend for themselves; a potential problem in these
ahistorical times. As a film it runs into problems when trying to tie in
domestic racism against Native and African-Americans to the dehumanization of
the Vietnamese people – it’s an important point that gets muffled, something
that a clearer editorial approach could have helped. However, the sheer weight
of testimony and the numbing repetition of their similar elements shows for a
lie the attempts by fringe right-wing elements (mostly as part of their Swift
Boat-John Kerry smear campaign) to present these soldiers’ stories as
fabricated or aberrations instead of the norm. You can dismiss some of what’s
said here as lies and exaggerations, but to deny the whole of it is to simply
close one’s eyes to reality.
War is hell; Winter Soldier shows that this was true of the Vietnam War, only
more so.
The DVD includes copious extras, including a conversation with the filmmakers,
short films from the era, still photos, and a making-of documentary.
My kingdom for a shave.
Reviewer: Chris Barsanti



