Born on the Fourth of July (1989)

reviewed by
Rich Skrenta


                       BORN ON THE FOURTH OF JULY
                     A film review by Rich Skrenta
                     Copyright 1990 by Rich Skrenta

I just saw BORN ON THE FOURTH OF JULY. I can't find fault with any of the film's messages. Its scenes held together okay. Technically it was fine.

However, I did not find the film entertaining, and it did not emotionally involve me very much. It seemed to be more of a collage of scenes from the era than a story. The film's one message -- that the Vietnam war was a mistake -- was beaten until it was dead. I kept waiting for something to *happen*. For the development of any one of the other characters. His brother. Charlie in Mexico. His father. His high school sweetheart. One of his friends.

Unfortunately, Ron was the only character who we see throughout the film. His character development consisted of his change from blind patriotism to his disillusionment with the government. Very simple, we see it coming, it's no big surprise when it happens.

I haven't read the book the movie's based on; perhaps they follow it faithfully, which I suppose is a good thing. However, there's a couple of things I would like to have seen in the movie:

        -  It would have been nice to see his vocal denouncement of
           the war have an effect on somebody.  Anybody.  He repeats his
           speech many times:  in the bar, to his parents, to an anonymous
           reporter.  However, we don't see a single effect from his
           words.
        -  Ron was the only character that received any development in
           the film.  I would like to have seen a more complex change
           take place in him than the binary switch from Yes-I-Like-My-
           Country to No-I-Think-the-War-is-Wrong.
        -  I thought the scene in the Wilsons (?--the parents of the
           American soldier he shot) living room was distressingly
           shallow.  I was expecting him to realize that perhaps his
           CO wasn't an evil monster for not telling the boy's parents
           the truth.  Why did he have to shatter the story of their
           son's death?  Was it necessary?  Perhaps it was, but I was
           upset that Ron didn't even consider that perhaps he was doing
           the wrong thing by telling them.

Individually, I thought the scenes were well done and powerful. However, I wish they would have been tied together into a stronger story. The film came off as little more than highlight's of Ron's life and the Vietnam era. I left the theater with the feeling that I'd already seen the whole movie in the preview and the video on MTV. I wish it would have had a more complex message.

Rich
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