We hear all the time that a movie starts on the page, and while this is true in an overarching sense, for practical purposes, the process of making a motion picture intended to screen in theaters or stream into living rooms starts when youâve raised enough money to hire the actors and crew and so on required to get that page-bound vision before a camera. Itâs at this point that you begin fretting about getting a return on your investment and, just maybe, turning a profit. In this sense, all filmmaking is risk-taking.
This is the movie business, and it didnât used to be of widespread public interest. Once in a blue moon, people would be aware that a film like Joseph L. Mankiewiczâs âCleopatraâ cost a studio-devouring amount of money; meanwhile, they could tell âThe Exorcist,â âJawsâ and âStar Warsâ were making scads of money because they could see the lines out the door at their local theater, and were likely making return trips themselves (because it would be years before they could watch them again, sanitized and broken up by commercials, on network television). But when âEntertainment Tonightâ began listing the top films at the box office after every weekend, an unhealthy obsession was created. People became more invested in the success of their favorite movies than in deriving actual enjoyment from them. Given that it was easier to articulate the former, the box-office-watching game took hold. This is the world we live in now.
This has been deleterious to the health of the film industry in that the public perception of a box office failure turns toxic. The term âflopâ no longer explicitly refers to financial failure; it also means that the movie is a creative failure. Ergo, in the big picture, it was an unwise risk, and this, in turn, makes filmmakers risk averse, which means we get more safe, conventional movies. Worst of all, perfectly good, if not great movies occasionally slip through the cracks as a result. If theyâre talked about, itâs in reference to the gobs of money they lost for the studio.
And this is how a masterpiece like Brian De Palmaâs âCasualties of War,â the greatest Vietnam War film ever made by a major Hollywood studio, gets dismissed if not completely forgotten.
How Brian De Palma amassed the box office clout to make Casualties of War
Of the 1970s film brats (a group that primarily consists of Francis Ford Coppola, Martin Scorsese, Steven Spielberg, George Lucas, and John Milius), Brian De Palma is the auteur who starts the most fights among cinephiles. Heâs a sensationalist and, more often than not, a satirist; he trafficks in pure visual storytelling, both borrowing from and subverting the cinematic language to investigate deep personal interests and convey even deeper personal themes. Heâs as skilled a filmmaker as has ever lived, but his dreamy way with a story doesnât always jibe with the general public. When he connects, he delivers pop culture phenomena like âCarrie,â âDressed to Killâ and âScarface.â And when he works within the constraints of a strictly commercial picture, he can thrive, as he did with âThe Untouchablesâ and âMission: Impossible.â
When discussing De Palmaâs career arc, âThe Untouchablesâ may be the most important film in his oeuvre. The filmmaker was coming off two critical and commercial disappointments in âBody Doubleâ and âWise Guys,â and had earned a number of hostile reviews for his gloriously excessive riff on Howard Hawksâ gangster classic âScarface.â He was also still catching flack from morons who viewed his homages to Alfred Hitchcock as the work of a ripoff artist instead of a master of the form working bold variations on familiar themes (or sometimes just indulging in outright parody Ă la the shower scene in âPhantom of the Paradiseâ). Given that De Palmaâs swooning, big-screen aesthetic benefitted from a certain degree of production value, he needed a hit if he wanted to take on projects with grander aspirations than erotic thrillers.
With its upright T-men taking on a murderous, media-coddled Al Capone, âThe Untouchablesâ played like a hyper-violent âStar Warsâ with Tommy guns. It had a cinematic sweep, grand movie star performances, and a rousing Ennio Morricone score that lifted you out of your seat. Critics mostly dug it, while audiences ate it up. The film grossed $76 million domestically in 1987 and proved to studios that De Palma could deliver a blockbuster crowd-pleaser. He could call his tune with his next feature.
Rather than romp in the studio sandbox again with a managed risk like âThe Untouchables,â he used his just-acquired clout to mount a passion project heâd been pursuing for the better part of a decade. It was not inherently commercial, but if De Palma could hit the bullseye it would most assuredly place him in the pantheon of the worldâs finest filmmakers. So he pushed all in on âCasualties of War.â
One Vietnam War movie too many?
This shouldnât matter, but the prevailing sentiment in Hollywood at the time Columbia Pictures greenlit âCasualties of Warâ was that Vietnam films were mostly out of fashion. The industry would give Oliver Stone a pass because he was a veteran of the war whoâd prompted the nationâs reckoning with the conflict via the Best Picture-winning âPlatoon,â but, really, after âFull Metal Jacket,â âHamburger Hill,â and âGood Morning, Vietnamâ the constant banging on over Americaâs aimless slaughter felt like overkill.
David Rabeâs screenplay for âCasualties of Warâ was different. Based on Daniel Langâs The New Yorker article detailing a repugnant war crime wherein a group of American soldiers kidnapped, raped, and murdered a young Vietnamese girl, this film would forefront the wanton depravity of the conflict. There had already been a sobering documentary from Michael Verhoeven (âo.k.â) on the subject, and a forgettable 1972 Elia Kazan feature called âThe Visitors,â but De Palma and Rabe saw clearly the opportunity to make moviegoers witnesses to a horrific, isolated act. And De Palmaâs selection of Michael J. Fox â Alex P. Keaton and Marty McFly â to play the âcherryâ G.I. who takes a lone stance against his fellow soldiersâ monstrousness would give us a beloved, fresh-faced surrogate through which to helplessly view a series of crimes he and we cannot stop.
As the ranking officer who hatches the plan to acquire some âportable R&R,â De Palma cast Sean Penn, whoâd hit a rough patch in his career with box office failures like âAt Close Rangeâ (a superb movie) and âShanghai Surpriseâ (one of the worst movies of the 1980s). He filled out the platoon with new faces like John Leguizamo, Don Harvey, and, in his first significant role, John C. Reilly. Behind the camera, he mostly rolled with his guys: cinematographer Stephen H. Burum, editor Bill Panko,w and Morricone.
De Palmaâs confidence was soaring after âThe Untouchables,â and it shows in every single frame of âCasualties of War.â This is the film of a master orchestrating at the height of his powers. Columbia Pictures had a major Oscar contender on its hands. Alas, the studio repaid De Palma by bungling the release of the film in a way that ensured its obscurity.
An immoral war that turned young men into monsters
The consensus critical opinion of Brian De Palma in 1989 held that he was the brattiest of the film brats, an unabashed provocateur more interested in stirring up controversy than stirring the soul. âBody Doubleâ felt like a scuzzy nadir to some (theyâre wrong, itâs great), which forced them to knock âThe Untouchablesâ for its gratuitous violence. De Palma got off on this stuff, which they deemed off-putting in a film adaptation of an old television show. So when presented with a serious, non-satirical Vietnam movie from this bad boy of cinema, they had concerns.
If you walk into âCasualties of Warâ without preconceived notions, itâs a singular, scalding experience. De Palmaâs fluid visual sense has never been more nimbly balletic (credit is due to his frequent Steadicam operator Larry McConkey, the best to ever man the apparatus), which makes the soldiersâ moral rot all the more nauseating. But the whole tragic affair does not occur in a vacuum; Pennâs Meserve seems like he could be an honorable, tough-love leader of men until his buddy Brownie (Erik King), days away from going home, gets killed in an ambush. This incident twists Meserve. We see his humanity is long gone in a mesmerizing split-diopter shot where he shaves with a straight razor in the foreground as his charges hang out in the background; they canât see his maniacally focused gaze, but we can and we want to scream at them that this man is not well.
Not that it matters. When Meserve orders the men to kidnap Oanh (Thuy Thu Le), they nearly all go along with it. Itâs not just about following orders; theyâre keen to get some, and they donât view Oanh as a human being. Foxâs Eriksson does, but heâs outranked and outflanked. Whatâs to come is not in question. When it goes down, and how Meserve crudely justifies it is all that remains.
A brutally honest look at atrocities
Enough cannot be said about Morriconeâs anguished orchestral score, which is lovely and jarring sometimes in the same cue. Heâs just as scandalized by the film as we are, and thus gives a mournful voice to the atrocity. Thuy Thu Leâs performance is equally astounding. Her emotional pitch ranges from horrified to dead inside. There is nothing close to calm because she is only ever certain of her fate. She cannot communicate with these men, and sheâs seen what these savages have done to her people.
Once the ordeal comes to a harrowing end on a railroad bridge, Eriksson, who intends to inform his superiors about his companionsâ crime, becomes the hunted. His troubled conscience is deemed an inconvenience to the higher-ups, who want no part of this scandal at this juncture of the war. Nevertheless, Eriksson presses forward, and the men are court-martialed. But itâs not enough. Eriksson will never be able to live with himself for having been privy to Oanhâs rape and murder, which we see in the San Francisco scenes that bookend the film. Yes, the young woman who reminds him of Oanh tells him that his nightmare has ended, but thereâs no comfort coming. He is stained forever, as is the country that sanctioned this immoral war.Â
In this way, heâs a much more fitting protagonist for non-veterans than Charlie Sheenâs Chris Taylor in âPlatoon.â He canât poeticize what he saw. He can only suffer.
Casualties of War was impossible to ârecomendâ
âCasualties of Warâ was never suited to the summer movie season, but it was especially baffling that Columbia Pictures chose to release it in August of 1989. This was the year of âBatman,â âIndiana Jones and the Last Crusadeâ and âLethal Weapon 2.â Yes, âDo the Right Thingâ thrived in this climate, but it was bathed in the heat of a sweltering summer. That felt right. Going to see âCasualties of Warâ while escapist entertainment occupied every other screen in the multiplex felt wrong.
When Columbia saw how this season was playing out, they shouldâve tried to find a more welcoming landing spot for the film in the fall (swapping out their prestige non-starter âImmediate Familyâ for âCasualties of Warâ in October wouldâve been ideal). But they allowed the NRG-led testing process to shake their belief in De Palmaâs masterpiece. âCasualties of Warâ isnât a film you score by conventional testing means. âDid you enjoy this movieâ and âWould you recommend it to friends?â are not questions you ask of someone after theyâve experienced a movie like this. Itâs obscene. Moreover, at a studio level, if you sit through this movie and donât see a major awards contender (Picture, Director, Screenplay, Supporting Actor, and Supporting Actress) to which you should be ecstatic to affix your studioâs logo, profit be damned, youâre incompetent.
Columbia inexplicably stuck with their release strategy. âCasualties of Warâ opened over the weekend of August 18, 1989, and despite rave reviews from some of the nationâs most respected critics (Pauline Kael, Roger Eber,t and Michael Wilmington) performed poorly. The film topped out at $18.7 million on a budget of $22.5 million. By the time year-end awards were being handed out, it didnât exist. 35 years later, itâs rarely discussed. Even Noah Baumbachâs documentary âDe Palma,â which sparked renewed interest in the auteur, failed to raise the filmâs profile.
Youâve seen Batman five times, now see ⊠Casualties of War?
De Palmaâs career was not immediately damaged. He signed on to direct the buzzed-about adaptation of Tom Wolfeâs classic 1980s novel âBonfire of the Vanities,â and leaned surprisingly earnest when he shouldâve been more barbed. The film was shredded by critics and died loudly at the box office. After a two-year break, he quietly returned to form with the gonzo thriller âRaising Cain,â which boasts one of the greatest single-take Steadicam shots (McConkey again) youâll ever see.
De Palma would rebound commercially years later with âMission: Impossible,â but he never took a risk on the scale of âCasualties of Warâ again. Why f***ing bother? Heâd knocked out a world beater and watched the studio consign a towering work of art to the box office scrap heap. Why? Because people who didnât know what they were talking about possessed the impoverished vocabulary necessary to measure âCasualties of Warâ on its commercial performance, but they lacked the moral wherewithal to contend with what it said about our ever-failing humanity. In that regard, it will remain forever relevant and necessary.