Hearts and Minds [DVD]

Hearts and Minds [DVD]

MPAA Rating : R

Year of Release : 1974

"We must be ready to fight in Vietnam, but the ultimate victory will depend upon the hearts and the minds of the people who actually live out there."--President Lyndon B. Johnson

In the nearly three decades since U.S. troops were withdrawn from Vietnam and the U.S.-backed South Vietnamese government fell to the communist North Vietnamese, there have been a plethora of explanations for why the United States failed to win that war. Cultural scholars, military historians, and others have spent years trying to explain why, with the involvement of no less than five Presidents during three decades of various levels of involvement, the greatest military superpower in the world was defeated by the smaller and less-equipped army of a third-world nation struggling out from underneath colonialism.

As Peter Davis' landmark documentary Hearts and Minds shows, the primary problem was that, as Lyndon Johnson said, victory could only be achieved if the U.S. could win the hearts and minds of the Vietnamese people, and that was, in the end, the greatest failure of all. Simply put, the U.S. could never fully justify its involvement in Vietnam, particularly to the civilians whose world was turned upside down in the name of anti-communism. Or, as one person in the film puts it, we weren't on the wrong side, we were the wrong side.

Originally released in 1975, a year after U.S. troops had finally been pulled from Vietnam, Hearts and Minds was a deeply controversial film, particularly when it won that year's Oscar for Best Documentary. Rather than looking at the war solely from the U.S. point of view, Davis looked on both sides, interviewing a vast range of people, all of whom had been involved in the war in one way or another--soldiers, generals, military advisors, politicians, and, most importantly, the Vietnamese people whose hearts and minds were at the epicenter of the conflict. Davis bookends the film with scenes that show some form of disruption on both sides, opening with shots in a small Vietnamese village whose idyll is disrupted by troops marching through and ending with footage of a U.S. parade temporarily disturbed by Vietnam veterans protesting their lack of jobs.

However, Davis avoids a simple us/them dichotomy, showing how there were both Americans and Vietnamese who were for and against the war. Just as there were many U.S. citizens protesting their government's actions, there were Vietnamese who profited from the war and didn't want it to end. And, of course, some people changed their positions over time, evidenced most clearly by several veteran soldiers whose enthusiasm for their job slowly soured into regret.

On the whole, though, it is striking just how stark the difference was between how U.S. officials and ordinary Vietnamese civilians viewed U.S. involvement in Vietnam, and Davis makes expert use of visual juxtaposition to show how the two sides had virtually no chance of finding common ground. While the U.S. politicians and military brass talk of strategic targets and the need to limit the spread of communism, Vietnamese peasants lament the destruction of their villages and croplands, the deaths of their family members, and the painful, desolate tasks of building coffins and digging graves. Probably the most striking and sickening moment in the film is when General William Westmoreland declares in all confidence that the Oriental simply doesn't put the same high price on life that the Westerner does, and Davis then cuts to a Vietnamese man stricken with grief because his children have been killed by a U.S. bomb. In that simple juxtaposition, Davis exposes both the deep-seated xenophobia that fueled much of the war and the ultimate meaninglessness of military terms like "collateral damage."

Davis' camera is trained most often on U.S. soldiers who had returned from the war and were not happy about what they had done. Some of them were paralyzed, others were just resentful at the thought of what war had forced them to do. It is clear that Davis is using their testimony as a way to reach out beyond those who were already against the war in Vietnam at that point, to offer firsthand testimony of just how unconscionable much of war is in general, but particularly one with such vague and unsupportable aims.

Davis does focus on one soldier who doesn't have the slightest hint of remorse--Lt. George Coker, who spent seven years as a prisoner of war and declares that he is willing to go back if asked. He is shown returning to his hometown amid parades and celebration and later giving a deeply xenophobic speech to schoolchildren about how beautiful Vietnam would be if it weren't for the people there. Yet, having endured what he did, it is hard not to feel sympathy for him, which makes his cruelest comments all the more ambivalent, as they have the cadence of something programmed, not felt.

Viewed almost 30 years after it originally debuted at the Cannes Film Festival to great acclaim, Hearts and Minds has not lost its power to provoke and challenge our conventional understanding of patriotism and the necessity of war. It is, no doubt, a deeply antiwar film, although it doesn't point fingers and lay blame in simplistic fashion. Davis wisely realizes that the causes of Vietnam War and its prolongation over three decades are far too complex to cover in 112 minutes. Instead, as the title suggests, he focuses on the people, the human beings whose lives were forever altered by that terrible moment in history, regardless of which side of the world on which they live.

Hearts and Minds Criterion Collection Director-Approved DVD

Aspect Ratio 1.85:1
LanguagesEnglish
Subtitles English
DistributorThe Criterion Collection / Home Vision Entertainment
Release DateJune 25, 2002
SRP$29.95

VIDEO
1.85:1 (Anamorphic)
While the majority of Hearts and Minds is composed of original footage, there is quite a bit of stock footage and old newsreels, so the visual quality of the film is understandably uneven. Transferred from the Academy Film Archive's restored 35mm interpositive and supervised by both director Peter Davis and cinematographer Richard Pearce (who shot most of the original footage himself), this is an outstanding transfer. It has a solid, very filmlike appearance, and use of the MTI Digital Restoration System has ensured that it is almost entirely clean of any nicks, scratches, or dirt. A first-rate job.

AUDIO
English Dolby Digital 1.0 Monaural
The one-channel Dolby Digital soundtrack, which has also been digitally restored, is clean and pleasant.

SUPPLEMENTS
Audio commentary by director Peter Davis
Davis offers a compelling audio commentary that is absolutely required listening. He offers a great deal of additional background, not only about the historical context of the documentary and the people who appear in it, but also about his own work as a documentary filmmaker and the particulars of this film's production. Davis is well-spoken and consistently engaging.

32-page insert booklet
Along with listening to Davis' commentary, reading all the essays in the included insert booklet is a must for a full appreciation of the film. This handsomely designed booklet includes a critical essay on the film by longtime critic Judith Crist; "The Human Connection," an essay about the Vietnamese people by Robert K. Brigham, an associate professor of history at Vassar College; "A Historical Context," an outstanding condensed history of U.S. involvement in Vietnam by George C. Herring, professor of history at the University of Kentucky; "Moving the People," an essay about Vietnamese refugees by Ngo Vinh Long, professor of Asian studies at the University of Maine; and, finally, "Vietnam and Memory," a reflective essay by Peter Davis that has been condensed from a longer piece that appeared in the May 15, 2001, issue of The Nation.

Copyright © 2002 James Kendrick

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