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138 out of 147 people found the following review useful:
Still Confident and Brilliant, Still Seeking to Hold the Moral High Ground, 20 December 2003
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Author:
Ralph Michael Stein (riglltesobxs@mailinator.com) from New York, N.Y.
My first encounter with Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara was in
the
late spring of 1966 when, as a young Army Intelligence officer just
rotated
back from Asia, I was assigned to the General Staff in the Pentagon and
directed to brief him. The first of a number of occasions when I either
briefed the secretary or, more often, was a resource aide to a senior
officer, I was cautioned by a nervous lieutenant colonel to expect
questions
but never, absolutely never, to ground my response in "intuition." It
was
the pre-Powerpoint age but all briefers were admonished to either have
facts
best supported by charts and numbers or to simply confess
ignorance.
I acquitted myself reasonably well and there followed almost a year and a
half of observing the nation's highest defense officials and generals in
the
superheated pressure cooker atmosphere of what we called the "Puzzle
Palace."
Gifted documentarian Errol Morris's "Fog of War: Eleven Lessons from the
Life of Robert S. McNamara" is a vital and presciently timely examination
of
a past that can repeat itself with incalculable harm to the United
States.
Interpolating documentary film clips from World War II through Vietnam
with
excerpts from an extensive interview with McNamara, the camera always
focused on the alert, articulate and still (controllingly) brilliant
eighty-six year old former secretary, Morris quickly takes viewers
through
his early life getting quickly to World War II. Then as an officer
specializing in systems analysis he became a significant analyst whose
studies supported the carpet bombing of Japan. His comments about
General
Curtis "Bombs Away with Curt LeMay" LeMay reflect his transition from
wartime admiration for a superb combat leader to distrust of a four-star
Air
Force chief of staff champing at the opportunity to use nuclear weapons
while we still had a commanding edge in what came to be called Mutual
Assured Destruction.
Interesting and important as McNamara's early war activities were, the
crux
of his life and the undying source of charge, defense and recrimination
is
his stewardship of the Defense Department during the early and mid years
of
the Vietnam conflict.
Where Michael Moore wears his views on his sleeve and on the screen
through
entertaining ridicule and now predictable pillorying of his subjects,
Morris
wisely and effectively lets McNamara tell his story, prompted by an
off-screen inquisitor whose tone is neither hostile nor friendly. The
evidence supports McNamara's claim that he sought disengagement during
the
Kennedy years and he repeats the unprovable belief that J.F.K. would
never
have permitted the escalation that followed his death (McNamara's account
of
being Kennedy's right-hand cabinet man during the Cuban Missile Crisis
can
only leave viewers dry-mouthed as the implications of the Cold War
cat-and-missile game clearly emerge as truly bringing the specter of
nuclear
conflagration to near reality).
McNamara frames his eleven life lessons, none startling new advances in
philosophical thought. He joins many scholars and advocates of binding
international law, the majority of whom have never heard a shot fired, in
arguing for the concept of proportionality in the exercise of force. He
never seems to realize that contemporary armed conflict is very
different,
politically and militarily, from his wars.
While stating sorrow for what war has wrought, and recognizing his own
role,
he never apologizes and credibly advances his message for the future
through
the technique of universalizing: mankind has a problem with violence. I
was doing the best I could.
Tapes of conversations with President Johnson, who eventually fired him
with
such subtlety that the Defense Secretary had to ask a friend whether he
had
resigned or been canned, are especially fascinating. Fractal shards of a
once close and then disintegrating relationship, the brief excerpts
illustrate just how little both the President and McNamara actually knew
(McNamara made many trips to Vietnam-I remember them well. Each time he
came back with a positive spin on what was an unraveling military and
political situation).
At the Pentagon I was struck by the almost total concurrence McNamara's
policies and statements enjoyed among civilian leaders and generals
alike.
McNamara, I thought then and now, was not a man who needed sycophants.
He
was simply so sure he was right that it probably never occurred to him to
wonder why he rarely encountered disagreement. I particularly remember
Joint Chiefs of Staff chairman General Earle Wheeler as a mindless echoer
of
the secretary's thoughts.
A brilliant documentary and a fair one too. McNamara clearly wants this
film to be part of his legacy without it being an apologia.He does admit
the
United States was wrong in misjudging the nature of Vietnam and its
history,
wrong about assessing on-the-ground intelligence and wrong in not
securing
support from nations with traditions and values similar to ours (a
curious
and somewhat Europhilic anachronism). At the end he clearly and brusquely
cuts off questions about personal guilt that, I'm sure, he will never be
ready to address. Fair enough.
I generally dislike any music by Philip Glass but in this film the
minimalist score works very well against the documentary images. It
would
have been a big mistake for Morris to use the folk and protest music of
the
past.
Morris is probably the finest, from an intellectual standpoint,
documentarian working today in the U.S.
10/10 (because of its enduring archival and current thought-provoking
value)
112 out of 116 people found the following review useful:
Morris Versus McNamara and the Political Pundits of the Left, 2 February 2004
Author:
Roland Atkinson (psychflix@comcast.net) from Portland, Oregon, USA
If you're like Errol Morris, and you want to make documentaries about
unusual personalities, it's one thing to choose obscure subjects, people
like Fred Leuchter (aka "Mr. Death") or men that excel in topiary hedge
sculpture or the study of the African mole rat (two of the people
interviewed in "Fast, Cheap and Out of Control"). Not many critics out
there
will be waiting to pounce if you don't get things just right about the
likes
of people like these. But it's quite another matter if you choose Robert
S.
McNamara, one of the last century's most towering, controversial, and -
some
would say - evil characters. "Fog of War" distills more than 20 hours of
interviews that Morris conducted with McNamara over a span of two years,
when McNamara was in his mid-80s, and the subjects - all various McNamara
ventures - range from "his" World War II, through his days at Ford Motor
Company, the Cuban missile crisis, and - finally and mainly - his views of
the Vietnam War.
As a result, Morris now finds himself in a no man's land of critical
crossfire. On the one hand, film critics - people like Steven Holden,
Roger
Ebert and J. Hoberman - uniformly praise this work. While political
pundits
of the left - people like Eric Alterman and Alexander Cockburn of "The
Nation" - lacerate Morris, accusing him of being overmatched, manipulated,
not doing his homework (i.e., being naïve and unprepared), and thus
allowing
his film to be nothing but a conduit for the formidably crafty McNamara's
continuing campaign of self aggrandizement and distortions of history.
Whew. I think the controversy here is based on a misconstruction of the
film's purposes by the pundits. First, it is quite clear that McNamara,
in
full command of his fierce intellectual and interpersonal powers, is not
about to be pushed around by an assertive interviewer. McNamara is gonna
say what McNamara wants to say, period. To drive home this point, Morris
gives us a brief epilogue in which he asks McNamara a few trenchant
questions about his sense of responsibility for the Vietnam War, why he
didn't speak out against the war, and so on. And McNamara won't bite. He
stonewalls Morris absolutely, with comments like, "I am not going to say
any
more than I have." Or, "I always get into trouble when I try to answer a
question like that."
More importantly, it doesn't matter very much if Morris or McNamara does
not
get all the facts straight. If the political pundits went to the movies
more often, at least to Morris's films, they would know that his primary
interest is in the character of his subjects - their integrity and beliefs
and ways of explaining or rationalizing themselves and their lives: he's
into people way more than into facts. "Fog of War" is not an oral history,
it is the study of a person. For all that, in my estimation, Morris does
get on film as close to an acceptance of responsibility for his actions in
two wars as McNamara is likely ever to make, short of some dramatic,
delirium-driven deathbed confession. He speaks of the likelihood that he
and Curtis LeMay would have been deemed war criminals for the fire bombing
of Japanese cities, had our side lost. And he speaks clearly when he says
"we were wrong" in not seeing that the Vietnam War was a civil war, not a
phase of some larger Cold War strategy by the USSR or China. What do the
pundits want?
Nor was it Morris's purpose to use Santayana's lesson about repeating
history to rail at Bush's preemptive war in Iraq. In fact Morris decided
to
make this film way back in 1995, after reading several books by McNamara
and
concluding that he was a quintessential man of the 20th Century, embodying
all that was so outstandingly smart and sophisticated and ultimately
destructive. The interviews wrapped sometime in 2001, the year before
Iraq.
As usual in Morris's films, the editing is superb, with seamless use of
archival footage and special visuals created for this film. I do think
Morris gratuitously flattered McNamara by organizing the film around 11
platitudes of his - many of them banal aphorisms known to most high school
graduates, students of martial arts, or your grandmother (e.g., "get the
data," "empathize with your enemy," "rationality will not save us,"
"belief and seeing are both often wrong").
Political pundits, mired in interpreting concretisms from the historical
record, not only see too few films but also don't take seriously the
symbolic visuals and sounds offered here. Philip Glass has created an
edgy,
anxious score that feels just right, just creepy enough for the macabre
subjects at hand. I'm also thinking of the scenes when McNamara is
recounting his pioneering (he claims) studies of auto safety. As we
listen
to him, Morris shows us human skulls wrapped in white linen being dropped
several floors through a stairwell to smash upon the floor below, all in
slow motion. The effect is chilling and speaks volumes about McNamara's
famed passionless capacity to treat human carnage as a matter of
statistical
calculation. It is through such poetic characterization that Morris keeps
the game with McNamara in balance.
64 out of 69 people found the following review useful:
Fascinating and Compelling, 9 February 2004
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Author:
Howard Schumann from Vancouver, B.C.
Educated in the best Ivy League schools, successful leaders in the business
world, they were the best and the brightest, the core of John F. Kennedy's
administration. They came to office in 1961 with high hopes that the world
would become a better place. When they left, these expectations lay
shattered amidst the rice paddies and jungles of Vietnam. Considered the
architect of what came to be known as "McNamara's War", Robert S. McNamara,
Secretary of Defense under both Kennedy and Johnson, was one of the
brightest but had the reputation of being aloof and arrogant. This public
image, however, may not have been the whole story. In the fascinating
Oscar-nominated documentary, The Fog of War: Eleven Lessons from the Life of
Robert S. McNamara, Errol Morris (The Thin Blue Line, Dr. Death) interviews
the now 86-year old Defense Secretary in an effort to come to terms with
what led to the quagmire of Vietnam and reveals a more complex, even
strangely sympathetic man.
Interspersed with archival footage, actual news broadcasts, and
tape-recorded conversations from the period, the interview documents
McNamara's personal account of his involvement with American policy from WW
II to the 1960s. Culled from 20 hours of tape, the interview is separated
into eleven segments corresponding to lessons learned during his life such
as "Empathize with your enemy", and "Rationality will not save us". The
Secretary does not apologize for the war, saying he was only trying to serve
an elected President but is willing to admit his mistakes. He says that he
now realizes the Vietnam conflict was considered by the North Vietnamese to
be a civil war and that they were fighting for the independence of their
country from colonialism, (something opponents of the war had been trying to
tell him for over five years). Morris never undercuts McNamara's dignity or
pushes him into a corner yet also does not slide troubling questions under
the rug and there are some questions McNamara does not want to discuss.
Though his reputation is that of a hawk, previously unheard tape-recorded
conversations between McNamara and both Presidents reveal that he urged
caution and opposed the continued escalation of the Vietnam War. In 1964, we
hear Johnson say. "I always thought it was foolish for you to make any
statements about withdrawing, but you and the President thought otherwise,
and I just sat silent." McNamara also discusses his role in World War II,
the Cuban Missile Crisis, and his accomplishments as President of the Ford
Motor Company. In talking about Cuba, he reveals how close the world came to
nuclear annihilation, saved only by the offhand suggestion by an underling.
McNamara repeats over and over again, demonstrating with his fingers, how
close we all came to nuclear war. He talks openly about his involvement in
World War II under General Curtis Le and how he helped plan the firebombing
of 67 Japanese cities including Tokyo in which 100,000 Japanese civilians
were killed. In a startling admission, he says that if the allies had not
won the war, both he and Le May could have been tried as war criminals.
Mr. McNamara has spoken out a bit late to save the lives of 50,000 Americans
and several million Vietnamese but at least he has spoken and we can learn
from his reflections. Though the Secretary does not apologize for the war,
saying he was only trying to serve an elected President, to his credit he
has looked at the corrosiveness of war and what it does to the human soul
and we are left with the sense of a man who has come a long way. While his
lesson that "In order to do good, one may have to do evil" sounds
suspiciously like "the end justifies the means", his sentiments are clear
that the U.S. should never invade another country without the support of its
friends and allies. He says, "We are the strongest nation in the world
today", he says, "and I do not believe we should ever apply that economic,
political or military power unilaterally. If we'd followed that rule in
Vietnam, we wouldn't have been there. None of our allies supported us. If we
can't persuade nations with comparable values of the merit of our cause,
we'd better re-examine our reasoning." A valuable lesson
indeed.
58 out of 62 people found the following review useful:
mostly McNamara, but just enough Morris to make it a masterpiece, 8 November 2004
Author:
Perini from Bozeman, Montana
People who watch Errol Morris' Fog of War will be left with a lot to
think about. There are a number of parallels to be drawn between what
Americans faced during the Vietnam War era and what Americans face now
with middle-east conflicts. Morris has directed several controversial
documentaries, but Fog of War is very different. He allows the subject
of the documentary, Robert McNamara, to remain the focus of the film
from beginning to end. Fog of War is very stylish but the artistic
features don't take away from the social and political commentary.
Instead, they add to it and make the film more enjoyable. This is an
important film and while McNamara deserves most the credit for its
success, Morris presented the content of this film in a way that made
it both provocative and entertaining.
When Morris had an opportunity to interview Robert McNamara, he had no
idea what was about to happen. Morris was making a film about Vietnam,
not McNamara specifically. However, what was intended to be a 20 minute
interview turned into a several hour candid conversation. This
interview turned conversation became the backbone of Fog of War. It is
obvious that something like guilt has been bugging McNamara and for
whatever reason, Morris brought it out.
As a former secretary of defense for John F. Kennedy and then Lyndon
Johnson, McNamara was one of the most important figures from the
Vietnam War, in charge of things like bombing campaigns and overall
military strategy. Before that, McNamara was a brain behind figuring
out how to kill lots of people in World War II. At one point, McNamara
says directly to the camera, '
we were behaving as war criminals. What
makes it moral if you win but immoral if you lose?' He's making a point
about the way the U.S. and allied forces bombed the hell out of Japan,
sending hundreds of thousands to fiery graves, mostly civilians.
Morris uses what he calls the 'Interrotron', a device which allows the
subject, here it's McNamara, to look directly into the camera and see
the interviewer, here that's Morris. To the audience, it seems like
McNamara is looking right at us, which makes it seem even more
confessional than it already is. At certain times in Fog of War,
McNamara seems so happy that he has an opportunity to talk about his
experiences, but at other times, he seems like he's so defensive about
his reputation. All of that seems to have something to do with the way
Errol Morris asks questions. Morris is friendly but asks pointed
questions that McNamara has a tough time avoiding.
Probably the most important moment of Fog of War is when McNamara talks
about mankind and its inability to learn from history. He seems very
pessimistic but has moments where he seems to think people can learn
from the past. It's easy to think about Donald Rumsfeld and wonder what
sort of conversations he might have with McNamara. Another great moment
in Fog of War is when McNamara gets to meet a general from the
Vietnamese army, one of McNamara's adversaries from 30 years ago. It's
then where we see that McNamara still doesn't accept much
responsibility for what he did during the Vietnam War. He thinks of
himself as just being an employee working for the president.
Fog of War makes people think about a lot, but that's because of Robert
McNamara more than Errol Morris. This was McNamara's film and Morris
just happened to hold the camera in place when he probably felt like
cringing or even laughing at times. During his famous acceptance speech
for Fog of War, which won an Academy Award for Best Documentary, Morris
reminded the worldwide audience to be careful, because the United
States seems to be making the same mistakes it made during the Vietnam
War. That's up to the audience to decide, but Fog of War definitely
makes everybody think about that.
43 out of 45 people found the following review useful:
Grappling with a Difficult Film, 7 November 2004
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Author:
Philip (pwallach@wesleyan.edu) from Middletown, CT
If you possess an especially smug view of history's finality, this film
may not do a great deal to impress you. For the rest of us, however,
Errol Morris presents a truly complex picture of a clearly complex man.
Many of the reviews I read of the film complain that there doesn't seem
to be a main point that emerges from the film or its eleven "lessons,"
which are admittedly too cute by half in many cases. The point, though,
is the complexity itself. The point is that history is bigger than its
main players, and inscrutably difficult to judge in a definitive moral
sense. I don't think I will ever forget McNamara's probing, clearly
emotional questioning of the rules of war or the lack thereof, when he
discusses how one evening he and general Curtis LeMay decided to burn
to death 100,000 people in the Tokyo firebombing. The portrait of
McNamara, as well as the two presidents he served, is one of human
beings through and through, with all the fallibility and conflictedness
that entails. The central quandary of war emerges for the viewer to
see: it is the business of killing people, and that means that mistakes
cause people to die needlessly.
As I said, this film, taken in the right spirit, is deeply challenging.
I would recommend it to anyone who has grappled with the enormity and
awfulness of the history of the twentieth century.
48 out of 60 people found the following review useful:
Flawed but still relentlessly interesting, 27 June 2004
Author:
bob the moo from Birmingham, UK
At the age of 87, Robert S. McNamara sits to be interviewed by
documentary maker Errol Morris. He relates his experiences over his
lifetime and talks about his success and his failures and the lessons
he has learnt. Starting out as the youngest professor at Harvard
university, McNamara talks about his drafting into a special unit
during WW2 where bombing sorties were statistically analysed and
looking for improvements. The team's findings and recommendations
resulted in a change of bombing strategy that was so efficient that it
killed 1.9 civilians in 67 Japanese cities. Following the war he
carried these same skills to accident and sales analysis for Ford
before becoming JFK's Secretary of Defence. It was in this position
that he publicly advocated the Vietnam War which led to the deaths of
47378 US soldiers and over 2 million North Vietnamese.
I came to this film with high expectations of it being very barbed and
sharp. I didn't know who McNamara was prior to this film but I was very
quickly able to get a feel for him through the old footage, even if I
doubt I held the clear view of him that many Americans do of him when
he was in office. The film is mostly him talking to camera and this
appears to have been its main weakness in one regard as well as being
its main strength. In terms of strength, this approach gives us the
intimacy of a conversation with McNamara and, while he is very guarded
and clearly still very careful about how he presents himself, I found
some of the statements he made to be quite honest and damning. However
at the same time it seems like Morris has simply had a long list of
topics and just left the camera running while he lets McNamara chat
creating two problems.
The first problem is the '11 lessons' aspects; these feel like an
afterthought some way of giving a conversation a structure. However
they don't all work as the headings don't always fit what is being said
and it causes McNamara to jump around a little bit (time wise). Talking
of jumping around the long shoots that Morris must have had must have
produced very long sentences for he has had to edit them down almost
into cuts of a few words and, as McNamara is an animated talker it
means that he jump-cuts all over the shop very distracting and hard
on the eyes at some points! Despite these problems the film still works
because it is consistently interesting. McNamara seems happy to talk
and he is very easy to listen to even with Morris' frantic editing.
While I was aware that he was still the same name who had
professionally glossed over a lot of things (and at times refused to
get into things in the interview) he did say some things that surprised
me with his honesty. For example, admitting that, had the Allies lost
WW2, those involved in the firebombing of Japanese cities would likely
have been tried for war crimes was a shock and was only one of several
similar statements he made. However these are rather offset by how
careful he is to not blame himself too much and to rather justify what
he did; the film helps him out a bit as well and seems to go rather
lightly on him. The only thing that makes this acceptable is that
Morris has gotten his hands on recently released White House records
and tapes that back up McNamara's claims that he was not totally in
support of Vietnam (although how he has the nerve to wear a dove on his
lapel is beyond me!) and the recordings of ex-presidents in
conversation are worth hearing.
This painting of history makes the film very effective as a sobering
look back at historical conflict. The most unnerving part of the film
for me was McNamara's continued assertions that the men involved were
all 'rational men' and not crazy James Bond villains. The fact that
these rational men came 'this close' to nuclear war is a very scary
thought. Similarly, other memories of his are quite scary but funny at
the same time in the same way as Dr Strangelove was for example. In
fact one memory sounds like it could have come straight from the mouth
of General 'Buck' Turgidson himself and that's where McNamara suggests
that the US could keep its missile advantage over Russia by imposing a
mutual limit on testing only to be told that the Russians would cheat
by 'testing on the dark side of the moon'! At that moment Turgidson's
line about a mine shaft gap did not seem so fanciful!
Although his points were not as sharp and relevant towards today's
Administration as I had expected it was still pretty interesting as a
look back with hindsight and, while he is far from broken about what he
has been involved in, he certainly is not too proud to look back and
judge the overall actions that occurred (even if he was reluctant to
accept any more than a little bit of responsibility for his part). He
is a great subject though and, like many men who have lived a life, is
worth listening to even if you get the impression that he is not as
reflective as he think he is. Morris is pretty much an off screen
presence for the whole film, only really being heard once or twice
prompting for more information.
Overall this is a must see documentary simply because it picks back
over the bones of some terrible conflicts and some terrible events and
we do it with one of the men who was part of plans and decisions that
killed millions. I would have liked him to be pressed more about this
(he cries over JFK's death but not over the millions killed in 'his'
war) but the film goes a little too easy on him, even supplying us with
White House tapes that back up McNamara's claims that he was often a
voice of reason certainly JFK's immediate successor is very critical
of him in a phone conversation. The lack of real structure is a big
problem and it may have better to pick another tack than the 11 lesson
thing it doesn't really work and it causes some of the film to feel
rather aimless and disappointing when his words don't actually match
the 'lesson'. However, for all it's flaws, the film is consistently
interesting and I could honestly have sat there for hours and just
listened to McNamara talk away he is a mystery and has carved out a
terrible place in history but he is also a big reason that this
documentary is well worth seeing at least once.
34 out of 36 people found the following review useful:
Lessons Learned, 11 July 2004
Author:
Roland E. Zwick (magneteach@aol.com) from United States
For his award-winning documentary, `The Fog of War' a study of the moral
complexities of war and those who wage it - Errol Morris has found the
perfect subject in Robert S. McNamara, the man who served as Secretary of
Defense in the early days of the Vietnam War. McNamara is astute,
articulate, lively and thoughtful, and as a wizened man of 85, he is able to
look back on the events of his life with the kind of analytical clarity and
sober-minded judgment that only old age can provide.
Wisely, Morris allows McNamara to speak for himself, providing very little
in the way of poking and prodding as interviewer and filmmaker. McNamara
looks at his long and varied career through the prism of eleven lessons he's
learned about life and human nature. Each of these revelations is tied into
a specific chapter of that career and life. We see McNamara taking stock of
his actions as they relate to World War II, the Cuban Missile Crisis, and
most notably, of course, the Vietnam War, in each case ruminating aloud
about the moral imperatives and ethical decisions he faced on a daily basis
as his crucial role in all of these events played itself out. Some may find
his comments to be a bit self-serving, an attempt to whitewash the facts and
minimize his own responsibility, particularly as concerns his involvement in
the Vietnam War. Yet, in many instances, McNamara accepts the judgments of
history and admits his culpability, even if he generally does so in a
broader war-is-a-necessary-evil context. There are moments during his
reminiscence when McNamara actually wells up with tears, thinking about the
immense loss of life and personal tragedy that inevitably result from man's
insane obsession with destroying his fellow man while all the time
acknowledging that at times wars must be fought and casualties endured for a
greater cause. All throughout the film, McNamara returns to this refrain,
additionally warning us that, in the nuclear age in which we live, the human
propensity for warfare could very easily lead us over the precipice to
global devastation and annihilation as a species. We have little reason to
believe that McNamara is not being sincere in his comments, although some
more cynical viewers may wonder if he isn't merely saying what he thinks he
should be saying in order to secure a more favorable reputation and image
for himself as his life comes to a close. If that is, indeed, the case,
Morris seems blissfully unaware of it, since he basically accepts McNamara's
statements at face value. As an added and perhaps unintended bonus much
of what McNamara says has a pertinent, timely, almost prescient ring to it,
as the U.S. struggles through yet another foreign engagement, this time in
Iraq.
As a documentary filmmaker, Morris demonstrates his usual skill at combining
archival footage with one-on-one interviews as a way of bringing his subject
matter to life. The caveat here is that Morris provides no counter voices
to challenge any of McNamara's statements or his interpretation of events.
Yet, as McNamara relates the story of his life, a fascinating history of
20th Century American foreign policy emerges in the background. We see many
of the seminal figures from McNamara's time playing out the roles history
and the fates assigned to them, from John Kennedy to Lyndon Johnson to
Nikita Khrushchev to a whole host of other key players on the world stage.
In addition, Philip Glass and John Kusiak have provided a haunting score to
go along with the haunting images.
As the title suggests, this is a complex film on a complex subject and
McNamara and Morris leave us with no pat or easy answers. That is as it
should be.
30 out of 37 people found the following review useful:
Here Comes Santayana., 19 December 2004
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Author:
Robert J. Maxwell (rmax304823@yahoo.com) from Deming, New Mexico, USA
Where are you when we need you? A President from Texas acts upon faulty
intelligence and gets the endorsement of Congress to use whatever force
is necessary and then invades a country whose destiny is more or less
irrelevant to the security of the United States. The war generates
opposition at home and abroad. The President's domestic programs are
cut in order to fund the war. Fifty thousand American lives are lost,
and countless indigents die, despite the application of America's high
tech weaponry. Having committed himself, not to mention the troops, the
President is unable to back down because he doesn't want to lose. "Cut
and run" is the expression he uses. In the end the country is united
under an anti-American government and forgotten about.
This really should be required viewing for voters who may not remember,
or may not choose to remember, Vietnam. Those who do not learn from
history are condemned to repeat it, to roughly quote George Santayana.
It's easy to get into a war, and much harder to get out.
And we should bear in mind that the subject of this interview, Robert
Macnamara, didn't stand on the sidelines. He was at the center of the
Vietnam conflict, which lasted about ten years. He was Secretary of
Defense during eight of those years, until fired by Johnson for his
increasingly public dissent. He organized the logistics of the war,
gave JFK and Johnson advice. Sometimes the conflict was referred to as
"MacNamara's War." So he's nobody's idea of an armchair analyst.
The most telling and relevant moment comes at the beginning, during the
Cuban missile crisis of October, 1962. President Kennedy has received a
letter from Chairman Krushchov, saying, basically, that if the US
promises not to invade Cuba, the Soviet missiles will be withdrawn.
Then a second letter arrives, taking a much harder line than the first,
implying a Soviet attack on America.
What to do? Curtis LeMay, the Chief of Staff, thinks that since a war
with the USSR is inevitable, let's begin it now while we have a 17 to
one missile superiority. Another adviser suggests responding to the
first, softer letter, while ignoring the second one. Kennedy demurs.
What will that get us? He doesn't want to be seen as backing down. The
adviser tells him, "Mister President, you're wrong about that."
(MacNamara comments, "That took guts.") Kennedy finally gives in and
agrees to follow the diplomatic route and responds to letter number one
only. We wind up dismantling some obsolete missile bases in Turkey and
in exchange the Soviets withdraw their missiles and war is averted. Who
is the sage who would now tell the President, if a similar situation
arose, that he was wrong? MacNamara comes across as a sympathetic and
compassionate guy. He cusses a bit and his eyes tear up when he
remembers picking out JFK's grave site in Arlington National Cemetery.
He also describes -- without at all boasting about it -- his valuable
contributions to the bombing campaigns of World War II.
I don't see any bias in Errol Morris's editing, although who knows what
wound up on the cutting room floor? It's MacNamara's show all the way
and he's candid, keeps the secrets he feels necessary, and never loses
dignity. He wrote a book about his period in office admitting that he'd
made many mistakes in the run-up to and execution of the Vietnam War.
The general reception by the liberal reviewers was that apologies
weren't enough. Nothing was enough. The reviewers showed a lot less in
the way of compassion than MacNamara shows here.
The music is by Philip Glass, who is neat. It's hard to comment on the
photography because so much of the footage is from newsreels or TV.
It's a fine documentary and ought to be shown in political science
classes. It should keep the students interested because it blends the
human element with the political. The statistics that were so important
to the President of the Ford Motor Company and the Secretary of Defense
don't play much of a part in this documentary. What will keep the class
attentive is the reenactment of all those human skulls bouncing down
the staircase of a dormitory at Cornell University.
25 out of 33 people found the following review useful:
The parallel to the war in Iraq is painful., 3 March 2004
Author:
John DeSando (jdesando@columbus.rr.com) from Columbus, Ohio
Errol Morris's `Fog of War' may be the best documentary that fuses a
controversial historical figure (in this case, Robert McNamara) with his
grandest moment (The Vietnam War). `Grand' is ironic because 58,000 dead
soldiers cannot be `grand,' the US exit was hardly so, and McNamara's
ambivalence about the event and his responsibility give the film an
authenticity and humanity that last year was shared only with `Capturing the
Friedmans.'
Morris, letting McNamara narrate almost the entire film, cuts between the
fit 85 year old Aspen skier recollecting the 60's and 70's and footage from
that time when he served as secretary of defense under Kennedy and Johnson.
That he is a Harvard--educated, clean-cut, brainy bureaucrat easily changing
from leading Ford Motor Company to the Pentagon is obvious. That he allowed
the US to go deeper into the war than he personally believed it should is a
possible inference from his carefully-crafted dialogue about
`responsibility.'
He has no problem admitting his major role in firebombing Tokyo in WWII,
killing 100,000 Japanese in one night; his boss, General Curtis LeMay, would
have had it no other way. But when he almost wistfully speculates that
President Kennedy would not have let the war escalate, it is clear what
McNamara also wished. But why he didn't criticize the war after he left the
Johnson administration he let's us speculate, hinting only that he had
information we don't.
Throughout the interview (Morris now and then is heard asking questions,
especially about McNamara's responsibility), Morris keeps him in the right
side of the frame, off center as a metaphor for the confusing war and this
secretary's ambivalent role. Like any top-rate documentary, applications to
human nature and current events abound.
The cool necessary to operate under murderous circumstances is reflected in
this wonk's slick hair, rimless glasses, and self-serving dialogue. He is
animated when he most seems to have missed the point and embraces the
romance of evil, which one of his `lessons' says may be necessary to have in
order to do good. The parallel to the war in Iraq is painful. He warns in
his first `lesson' we must learn from our mistakes. The inference for us
could be, if Vietnam was a great mistake, why are we forgetting it
again.
For the former secretary, Ernie Pyle's words could hold special meaning:
`War makes strange giant creatures out of us little routine men who inhabit
the earth.'
21 out of 27 people found the following review useful:
Honest Account of Important Lessons Learned, 8 June 2004
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Author:
Gary Murphy (glm@hilbertinc.com) from Olathe, KS, USA
I just watched the movie the "Fog of War". It is a candid interview with
Robert McNamara. He is an 85 year old veteran of WWII and was Secretary of
Defense under John Kennedy and Lydon Johnson. Of course, that made him
Secretary during the Viet Nam war.
It is an amazing account of the lessons learned from a man who lived in
interesting times in a powerful position of influence. I get the sense that
it is exceptionally honest - about both the success and failures. It was
directed by Earl Morris and has a kind of refreshing balance that is NOT
present in the films of Michael Moore. I highly recommend this
movie.
Perhaps the most disturbing aspect of the movie is that the lessons McNamara
learned are still not understood by the Bush administration with respect to
the Iraq conflict. The parallels to that conflict and the conflict in Iraq
are scary. Once of the eleven enumerated lessons are a need to respect and
understand the culture of the people with whom you are engaged in conflict.
He made the statement that he believes that the reason that the Cuban
Missile Crisis in 1962 ended peacefully was that they reached a point where
they really tried to understand the Soviets. The reason that Viet Nam
failed is that we never learned to understand the culture of the people of
Viet Nam. He also mentioned that none of our allies with largely shared
values were opposed to our involvement in Viet Nam. We should have
recognized that as a warning sign that perhaps we were doing something
wrong.
Scary, isn't it!
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