In which I revisit old articles from Filmquisition and Unreality.
This week's throwback article was an oddly hard one to choose. I had initially wanted to tie it back to my current revisitation of Marvel's Phase 1, but that would mean either preempting my Captain America review or branching off to non-MCU (or at least non-Phase 1) articles. But after realizing that Netflix has seemingly decided that we've mourned Robin Williams for long enough, I thought that I would dredge up my first Unreality article: a review of the now exiting Good Morning, Vietnam in the wake of Williams' tragic death.
Robin Williams’ death took the whole world by surprise. That affable clown and sometimes father-figure of our youth was now dead. No, not just dead – hanged. It’s as if his finals words were a silent curse: “But Doctor, I am Pagliacci!”
The immediate sting of Williams’ loss has begun to fade
in the nearly three weeks since his death, and we can begin to look back on the
prodigious body of work that he left us with a measure of objective clarity. It is with this goal in mind that I watched
1987’s Good Morning Vietnam, produced
at the cusp of his stardom, in which he plays irreverent D.J. Adrian Cronauer,
assigned to a military radio station in 1965 Saigon. As Cronauer clashes with his superiors over
everything from the military’s suppression of news-worthy information to his
crass brand of comedy, he befriends a young Vietnamese student named Tuan and
romantically pursues the boy’s sister Trinh.
The film basically plays out as what would have happened
if Robin Williams was cast as Randle McMurphy in One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest instead of Jack Nicholson. Cronauer’s irreverent, counter-establishment
comedy, although popular among the grunt-level soldiers, is both resented and
misunderstood by his superiors. The
station’s manager, Lieutenant Steven Hauk (Bruno Kirby), prefers a more
family-friendly brand of humor to Cronauer’s swearing and flippant
impersonations, and would prefer “a good polka” to “wild stuff” like James
Brown, the Beach Boys and Martha & the Vandellas.
Seargent Major Dickerson (J.T. Walsh) is the film’s
answer to Cuckoo’s Nest’s Nurse
Ratchet. Although rightly concerned
about Cronauer’s insubordination and refusal to follow orders, he grows
increasingly unstable in the face of the escalating conflict and Cronauer’s
increasingly popular antics. He
initially attempted to keep him in line with threats and intimidation, which
quickly escalated to replacing him with Lieutenant Hauk and, when that fails,
purposefully sending him into Vietcong territory so that the enemy can take
care of him once and for all.
Although the film features an admirable cast – including
the often under-used Robert Wuhl, an up-and-coming Forest Whitaker and new-comer
Tung Tran – it is Williams’ performance upon which the entire weight of the
film rests. Like the earliest episodes
of Seinfeld, the film is based almost entirely around William’s standup.
Although he is occasionally allowed to riff off of other cast members or
interact with crowds of soldiers, he spends the vast majority of his time
isolated in a sound booth, manically jumping from one persona to another,
making topical, off-the-cuff remarks about Vietnam and whatever public-interest
stories the army censors will allow him to talk about. Even Cronauer’s truly dramatic moments –
arguing against military censorship, defiantly reporting unapproved news,
confronting Tuan when he discovers that he is really a Vietcong terrorist – are
downplayed against the comedy, creating an experience that is essentially an
hour of standup intercut with a half hour of Full Metal Jacket.
Although the film is directed by frequent
Williams-collaborator Barry Levinson (who also directed Diner, Rain Man and Sleepers) and written by Mitch Markowitz
(who wrote for M*A*S*H and Monk), this is far from either’s best
work. The fact that it was produced
early in both men’s careers is actually very obvious when watching it. With the exception of brilliantly juxtaposing
“What a Wonderful World” with a scene
of Americans destroying Vietnamese villages, Levinson is seemingly content with
framing Williams in the shot and letting him do whatever he wants.
Markowitz’s script is basically a substandard
Vietnam War drama that lucked into Robin Williams as a centerpiece. His characters are cartoonish, the romantic
subplot between Cronauer and Trinh is not especially engaging and the climax – in which
Cronauer confronts Tuan about being a Vietcong – is supremely anti-climactic
(Tuan runs away, monologs about how Americans are the enemy, then is never
heard from again).
Good Morning
Vietnam is a good, though not great, film that, while funny, is never
hilarious. Like a blueprint for his
later career, it features the primary elements of what makes a “Robin Williams
movie” – a manic cast of different personas (Mrs. Doubtfire), counter-establishment protagonists (The Dead Poet’s Society) and a
compelling flirtation with drama (Good Will Hunting).
Its central message
of “why can’t we just get along” is earnest, and an interesting counterpoint of
the go-to Vietnam takeaway of “war is Hell,” even if it ends up being
schmaltzier than it probably was intended to be. It succeeds as a vehicle that shows off the
comedic range of its leading man, which is strong enough to make up for its
shortcomings.
Rating: 7/10
Buy on BluRay: Yes
So what's your favorite Robin Williams movie? Share your thoughts in the comment section below.
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Please learn to spell before you put something online. Most can overlook silly mistakes when you say monologs instead of the correct ‘monlogues’. Predictive text helps a lot. But when you are writing about a film which focuses on the US Army, saying Seargent instead of Sergeant is unacceptable.
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