“Sands of Iwo
Jima” is the greatest recruiting film ever made by a branch of the
military. The U.S. Marine Corps gave
full cooperation to the film and had script approval. The movie was filmed at Camp Pendleton and
the Corps provided ample equipment. The
Marine Corps hierarchy knew that a successful film could possibly help it
survive potential demotion in the post-war years. Mission accomplished! In the process, the film bumped John Wayne up
to a screen icon and the great American cinematic soldier. It began his long run at the top of the box
office.
the greatest Marine ever |
You know what you are getting
right off the bat as the “Marine Corps Hymn” plays over the credits. A voice-over informs us that this will be a
small unit movie. It is a heterogeneous
squad that is to be trained by the martinet Sgt. Stryker (Wayne). The squad consists of two squabbling brothers
(a running gag) – one of whom is Richard Jaekel (continuing his community
service of having to appear in every WWII combat movie). There is also an Italian wise-guy from Brooklyn
– thus fulfilling three of the required clichés. The unit has not one, but two conflicts. Thomas (Forrest Tucker) had been demoted by
Stryker and Conway (John Agar) is a pacifist with daddy issues who hates
Stryker because he stands in for his equally macho father. How could this impossibly dysfunctional unit
ever fight efficiently? Perhaps tough
love in training is the answer.
The training section of the film
establishes two themes. First, Stryker
is not one-dimensional. He has a broken
family, has not seen his kid in years, and he drinks to overcome his
unhappiness. Second, Stryker is a
“proper bastard” (as the British would say).
He believes it is better to be feared than loved and the Marines need to
hate him more than the ”Nips” (their word). He rifle
butts an incompetent trainee. However,
to reassure the audience, the film tacks on an embarrassing scene where Stryker
teaches the guy how to stab Japs by dancing with him! (Come on, Duke! Hit him again, harder.)
kudos for the sweat! |
The first combat set piece is
the Battle of Tarawa. The men are told
the Japanese Marines are tough and “they’d just as soon die as stick a nickel
in a juke box.” Huh? The invasion is fairly accurate with
amphtracs, the sea wall, the use of flame throwers, etc. The editor deftly blends in actual
footage. Three key plot developments
ensue. First, Stryker goes all John
Wayne and takes out a pill box with a satchel charge, thus establishing his
heroism. Second, Thomas lingers for
coffee on an ammunition run and this causes the loss of two squad members
(redemption anyone?). Third, that night
Stryker declines to allow anyone to go rescue a wounded Marine (?), thus
earning the increased enmity of the men, especially Conway. By the way, the audience is promised a night
banzai attack that inexplicably is not delivered.
Back in Hawaii, there is the
inevitable fisticuffs between Thomas and Stryker and of course, the inevitable
intervention by a higher officer followed by the inevitable non-snitching by
Thomas. Thomas gets his redemption when
he apologizes for his coffee break.
Stryker accepts it and they move on.
One redemption down.
Finally, after a mercifully
short romance and wedding for Conway, it’s off to Iwo Jima. On the transport, one of the Marines looks at
a picture of his gal. Stryker smiles at
him as though to say – “you stupid sap, you’re dead meat now”. “Saddle
up”, “hit the beach” and “lock and load”
(the first recorded use of this phrase).
The fighting is 1940s war movie hellacious. Squad members die. Zoom in on a corpse’s book entitled “Our
Hearts Were Young and Gay”. One mortally
wounded gyrene jauntily says “I’ll get a good night’s sleep tonight”. They are dropping like flies. The deaths are not too Old School. There is little twirling or touchdown
signaling. Conway saves Stryker’s life
and suddenly the heat of combat has forged a bond. Redemption #2 accomplished. Conway has a premonition of death, but
Stryker doesn’t. Psych, audience!
preparing for the awesome night banzai attack that doesn't happen |
The movie closes with the trek
up Mt. Suribachi. Stryker is given a
flag (the actual flag, donated by the Marine Corps) to raise, but first he has
to stupidly say “I’ve never felt so good in my life. How about a cigarette?” A Japanese sniper mistakes “cigarette” for
“bullet” and millions of American males are scarred for life. (But not as badly as Old Yeller.) In lieu of last dying words, a letter to his
son is read aloud. Jerk those
tears! The survivors watch the flag-raising
(which oddly is not the actual footage). Queue Marine Corps Hymn. Stop at the recruiting table on your way out
of the theater.
If you haven't seen the movie and don't want to be scarred, stop the movie now! |
“Sands of Iwo Jima” certainly
falls into the Old School of war movies, but it is not the template that it is
often accused of. Although truly
pro-Marines, it is not overly patriotic or propagandistic. The Japanese are tamely called “Nips” and remain
faceless. They are not demonized. The movie does have several clichés, but it did not invent them. It would be too much to ask a 1949 movie to
forego the redemption angles, for instance.
More importantly, iconoclasm would possibly have tampered with the
Marine Corps cooperation that kept the budget extremely reasonable.
cigarette's kill |
The acting is solid. Wayne gives one of his great performances and
earned a Best Actor nod (competing with Peck of “Twelve O’Clock High”; both losing to Crawford of “All the King’s
Men”). His performance is nuanced and
although most remember Stryker as a one-dimensional supersergeant, he actually
has some very human flaws. The rest of
the cast is just there to carry Wayne’s combat boots. Agar does some scene-chewing and Tucker does
not embarrass himself. The actors were
put through a three day boot camp by a Marine DI at Camp Pendleton. This may have been a first. The stunt-casting of several real war heroes
(including the three surviving flag-raisers and David Shoup who earned the
Medal of Honor on Tarawa) is fun and emphasized to the public that Wayne was
just an actor who never fought in battle.
Just kidding.
the movie's reenactment |
The movie is technically
sound. The score is typical for a 1940s
war movie, but it is not intrusive and is sparingly used. The cinematography is nothing special, but
the editing in of the actual footage is outstanding. This movie possibly uses a higher percentage
of actual footage than any other WWII film.
It deserved its Editing nomination as well as its Best Recording for its
realistic sounds of battle. The other
nomination was for its screenplay which was written by Harry Brown (“A Walk in
the Sun”) and Wayne’s friend James Edward Grant. The dialogue is not sappy and there are some
good lines. However, they certainly stay
within the box.
The movies’ themes include
camaraderie and the benefits of tough love.
The movie is very predictable in its development of these themes. You get two redemption arcs that are both
sappy. The hatred of Stryker evolving
into respect is not exactly ground-breaking.
On Iwo Jima, the film shifts to a “who will survive?” vibe. Thankfully, the deaths are not maudlin and
accurately reflect the randomness of death in battle. As with all war movies, the percentage of
deaths to wounded is shockingly high.
But even the new VioLingo style of movies are noted for this.
The biggest flaw in the film and
the reason why I find it to be overrated is the lack of combat. The movie builds its raison d’etre around two
famous battles yet it shortchanges both.
Tarawa lasted three days and was a fascinating first taste of a disputed
landing under extremely difficult combat conditions. The movie briefly dwells on the chaos at the
sea wall and throws in the pill box scene, but otherwise blows the chance to
show the horrors of that battle. The
film battle is much too easy. Bizarrely,
the screenwriters prepare the audience for action in the form of a night battle
and then simply move on to Hawaii! Big
letdown. Iwo Jima gets more coverage,
but again we get only the opening stages of the battle. The combat is PG-rated intense with
nongraphic deaths. Compare this to the
Iwo Jima episode of “The Pacific” and you can clearly see the vast difference
between Old School and VioLingo.
In conclusion, although I am not
willing to kiss it’s ass like many critics, “Sands” belongs on the Military
History 100 Greatest War Movies list. As
I have made my journey through that list, I have often been chagrined at some
of the inclusions and sometimes I just have to chalk it up to the panel putting
a high emphasis on the historical importance of the film. This might explain including films like “They
Were Expendable” and “Guadalcanal Diary”, but how do you explain an important
film like “Sands” being left out. Not
only is it better than many of the other films on the list (including the two
above), but you could argue it had a great influence on war films made in the
1950s. Certainly, Stryker is one of the
seminal war movie heroes. Seriously,
“Guadalcanal Diary” and not “Sands of Iwo Jima”?! Give me a break.
GRADE
= B-
the trailer
the flag raising
Judging from what you write I agree that this would have been a better choice than many others on your list. On the other hand I'm surprised that you'd include it in your Top 100. I think you will come up with better movies. Was Eastwood inspired for his two movies or are thye very different?
ReplyDeleteYou misunderstood. I say that it belongs on the Military History 100. Considering some of the other Old School WWII movies that made the list. I was not referring to my eventual 100 Best list. I am not a big fan of the older movies. Both of Eastwood's movies are much better than this. They are also vastly different. SoIJ is positively quaint in comparison.
ReplyDeleteThe lack of banzai attack is surprising but I think the point of that scene was to show Stryker's integrity in respecting military discipline as he does not help - and prevents others from helping - his friend who was wounded in no-mans-land because it was vital that his unit not give away its position and hold the line against an anticipated attack. The scene would have worked just as well even if the expected attack had not come but it is strange to not discuss it one way or another.
ReplyDeleteThe wartime footage is as you say skillfully blended in with the rest of the movie but no amount of skill can completely erase the differences - the vegetation is notably more shot up, the soldiers look skinnier and often go topless, and the military maneuvers make less sense to the observer but seem more hazardous (in one scene, two soldiers stand close to the edge of a building while a third peeks around with his gun; in another, a blocky tank in the distance throws streams of fire over a small ridge).
The second point - the difference in the size of the soldiers - is especially interesting to me. When modern actors play World War II soldiers they almost always seem unrealistically beefy, which I put down to the fact that modern Americans tend to be fatter than their ancestors and modern American male actors are probably doing weight training to achieve a muscular look. But even in this film, shot in the '50s, the difference between actors and soldiers is obvious. Maybe some of it comes from differences in age between actors and real soldiers; some of it may be a side effect of months of military rations, constant stress, and heavy smoking; or it could be that the postwar actors were enjoying the postwar boom just like everyone else. In any case, it reminds me that it is unlikely that we'll ever see a completely accurate depiction of World War II battles because we don't have enough actors who look like the guys who were actually there.
I agree with your points, but to tell the truth I really don't have a problem with the actors being too fit. It's sufficient for them to go through a boot camp so they move like a soldier. I don't expect them to lose 50 pounds. I have more of a problem with their hair being nicely shampooed and the lack of sweating.
ReplyDeleteReference to size of soldier's in WWII, US Quartermaster Corps records for clothing orders indicate that the "average" size of the US GI in WWII: 5'8", 148 LBS, SZ 36 chest, with a 32 " trouser size!!
ReplyDeleteThe actor Hal Baylor, whom the Strykercharacter butt strokes in the jaw was in fact a real US MARINE in WWII. He probably could have taught John Wayne a thing or two about bayonett drill!