“Billy Lynn’s Long Halftime
Walk” is Ang Lee’s attempt to revolutionize the war movie. Not content to bring Ben Fountain’s acclaimed
novel to the screen in a standard format, he went radical on the filming
process. Normally, cinematographers
shoot at 24 frames per second. Lee
(“Ride with the Devil”) went with an eye-popping 120 per second. This broke Peter Jackson’s record of 48 for “The Hobbit: An Unexpected
Journey”. Ang Lee must have a very tiny
penis. Because of the necessary
technology, the film was shown in its new format in only six theaters worldwide
(only two in America). Based on the box
office receipts, don’t wait for more theaters to install the expensive
technology necessary to show the film “the way it was meant to be seen”. I saw the movie in a mortal theater so I did
not have to pop my eyes back in (or take a bottle of aspirin for a
headache). I also was not distracted
from the plot. Let’s see if that was
fortunate.
Billy Lynn (rookie Joe Alwyn)
and his squad mates (referred to as Bravo Company) have been brought back to
the States from Iraq for a bond tour or today’s equivalent of such. It is a publicity stunt to remind America
that we are still at war in Iraq and our soldiers are forgotten heroes. They are famous for their performance in a
fire fight that was recorded by an embedded news crew. They lost their beloved and loving Sgt. Bream
(Vin Diesel) and Lynn was awarded the Silver Star. The movie centers around their participation
in the halftime show at the Dallas Cowboys Thanksgiving game.
The movie is shown with flash
backs to their time in Iraq. These
scenes attempt to establish that war is hell and Iraq was its ideal
location. We learn that Billy was your
typical Generation X foul-up who turns out to be good at soldiering, but does
not really take much pride in it. He has
a mentor in Bream, who is called “Shroom” because he dispenses wisdom as though
he is on mushrooms. He tells Billy to not reason “why?” He also tells him a variation of the old “you
can’t avoid the bullet that has your name on it.” We get the obligatory house search by the
arrogant Americans which will breed more terrorists. This leads up to the fire fight where the
adrenaline flows, the training kicks in, the bonding pays off, but leads to
heartbreak. It earns the boys a trip away from their real home (the Army) to
their underappreciating home – America.
On the plus side, the “dog and pony show” could be financially lucrative
if a movie deal comes through (and provided the producers don’t blow the budget
on a new filming process).
Back at home, Billy is reunited
with his sister Kathryn (Kristen Stewart playing the literally scarred sister –
Oscar please!). Kathryn represents all
the modern hippies who think the war is a big mistake. She pushes the seemingly normal Billy to see
a psychiatrist for PTSD. A sister just
knows these sort of things. She also
wants him to avoid going back. This will
mean abandoning his mates. What’s a dude
who has bonded with his comrades to do?
The trip to Cowboy stadium is a
real trip. They have an agent named
Albert (Chris Tucker playing Chris Tucker) who is on the phone to Hollywood
trying to arrange a movie deal.
Meanwhile they are being treated like the heroes America insists they
need to be. Cowboys owner Norm “Jerry
Jones” Oglesby (Steve Martin) channels Fox News and so he doesn’t have to do
all the heavy lifting, an oily oilman is thrown in as a cherry on top. This Odyssey includes a press conference where
the men say all the right things. This
is a metaphor for the movie as all the characters say the right thing for
characters in a war movie of this type.
When asked how he was able to act in a way to deserve the Silver
Star, Billy actually says: “I did what I had to do”. Then Billy passes by the island of the Siren
when he hooks up with a cheerleader named Faison (Makenzie Leigh, who acts
about as well as a real cheerleader). Several
other episodes lead up to the big halftime show which features “Destiny’s
Child” with an actress playing Beyonce’s ass.
Why Destiny’s Child? Because when
Lee googled songs about soldiers, their name came up and actresses with nice
booties come cheap. Did it matter that
the song is definitely not about soldiers in Iraq? No.
Unless this is another example of the movie’s theme that America cares
more about thugs than grunts. If so,
well played! As though the booty shaking
is not enough sensory overload, how about throwing in a lot of fireworks
culminating in a rocket effect? Give me
a P – give me a T – give me an S – give me a D…
The second half goes about as well for the squad as it does for the
Cowboys.
“Billy Lynn’s Long Halftime
Walk” never connects. Lee’s frame rate
may have been revolutionary, but the script was certainly not. It is full of clichés and very
predictable. The themes are tired. Their presentation is heavy-handed. If you want to see these themes presented
well, watch the vastly superior “Flags of Our Fathers”. It even has the football scene. “Flags” mined new ground by showing that even
in the “good war”, the government used soldiers to gin up support for the war
and Americans on the home front could be uncaring and clueless. But “Billy Lynn’s” is not exactly breaking
new ground with the Iraq War. We may not
have known in 2004 what dicks we were, but by now it is not exactly a news
flash.
I have not read the book yet,
but I assume it is more competent in advancing its themes. It surely has better dialogue. The movie gets the soldier banter right, but
the rest is from the “what would this type of character say at this point?”
school of screenwriting. It is replete
with gems like: “I’m not a hero. I’m a soldier.” The actors manage to spout their lines with
straight faces. This is especially true
for Alwyn who plays Billy as G.I. Joe’s kid brother. He is adequate (like Ryan Phillipe in
“Flags”). His skills do not include
portraying PTSD. The movie gives little
support for his need for a psychiatrist.
In fact, the movie curiously does not make a good case for how horrible
the squad’s experience in Iraq was. It
“tells” us, but the scenes set in Iraq do not advance this theme. The only thing really bad that happens to
them is the death of Shroom. That one
combat scene is fine, but you expect more from Ang Lee. At least he avoids the recent spate of
extreme combat scenes like in “Hacksaw Ridge”.
The only thing I enjoyed was the
soldier camaraderie. The squad members
have a lot of chemistry and their interaction feels authentic. Their ragging is not forced. None of the actors is big league, but they
fit together well. One caveat is there
is no dysfunction in the group. So there’s one cliché that Lee eschews. Compare this to the trio in “Flags” and you
can see where dysfunction can be compelling and entertaining. Lynn and his boys are all on the same
page. There is little tension.
“Billy Lynn’s Long Halftime
Walk” is a war movie that wants to be more important than it is. There is nothing special about it except the
frame rate and most of us average joes will not even be able to see it in that
format. After seeing the standard
version, I’m not planning on booking a flight to NYC to see the “whole shebang”
(Lee’s words).
GRADE = C-
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