Saturday, April 23, 2016

ANOTHER QUICKIE

ANOTHER QUICKIE

Whiskey Tango Foxtrot.

            After most famously establishing herself as a comedian with her uncanny Sarah Palin imitation, and as a comic actor in Sisters, where she uttered more raunchy lines and dick jokes than, well, you could shake a dick at, Tina Fey turns more serious in Whiskey Tango Foxtrot.  Rather loosely based on the memoir Taliban Shuffle by Kim Barker, who covered the fighting in Afghanistan, the movie uses the military lingo for WTF, initials that every Facebook user understands.  In her first non-comic role, Tina Fey plays the reporter, called Kim Baker in the movie, which also transfers the protagonist from print journalism to television.  The film shows a great many episodes, some familiar to any viewer of television news and some even indeed comic, in that useless war that Kim Barker witnessed and reported on; in addition, it also shows the activities of the whole gang of journalists, photographers, cameramen, and their guides and interpreters.
            The general substance of the movie involves the growth and development of an inexperienced, generally ill equipped journalist as she progresses through the chaos and destruction of war to competence in her profession.  After an introduction to the chaotic life of a journalist in a war zone, Kim Barker learns how to become a war correspondent.  She manipulates the Marine general (Billy Bob Thornton) in Kabul in order to get a story; she outwits the lecherous attorney general (Alfred Molina), and she begins an affair with a Scottish photographer (Martin Freeman).  After acquitting herself admirably in a number of difficult situations, she also learns about the betrayal of loyalty and competence through the actions of a colleague and her boss (those familiar with my situation at City Newspaper will understand).
As the novice in Afghanistan discovers, war itself provides an enormous rush of adrenaline, a complicated mixture of emotions that explains some of the attractions of combat, even for noncombatants.  Like a lot of participants in warfare, she finds the gunfire, the bombs, the several skirmishes she covers, the discomfort of primitive quarters, and the death and destruction somehow exhilarating and even addicting.  Although the movie illuminates the progress in learning and awareness of a courageous and resourceful young woman, it also shows something most observers ignore, that war, despite its obvious horrors, often arouses some powerfully positive emotions in people.  It reveals to them a courage they may not have known they possessed, it sometimes ennobles them, it encourages gestures of sacrifice and honor, it intensifies all sorts of feelings.  In the midst of danger, against the bloody background of violence and destruction, people often even fall in love.

To begin with, as a hundred years of cinema shows, Hollywood gives good war.  The innumerable war films almost invariably emphasize not only heroism and sacrifice, but also the moral and physical consequences of mass combat.  Although the movie employs some witty situations and dialogue to convey some of the ambiguity of Kim Baker’s experience of war, it also suggests some reversal of the usual war film, a common point in contemporary cinema.  In short, although this time the protagonist is female and a noncombatant, Whiskey Tango Foxtrot belongs with some other recent films, among them The Hurt Locker and American Sniper; it suggests, like it or not, some of the actual joys of war.  It explains why soldiers encounter difficulty accustoming themselves to peace, a letdown that seldom appears in the usual discussions of post-traumatic stress disorder, and why some well known war correspondents frequently return to the battle zones.  War is hell, to be sure, but it also is somehow a richly exhilarating experience. 

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