Fulvue Drive-In.com
Current Reviews
In Stores Soon
 
In Stores Now
 
DVD Reviews, SACD Reviews Essays Interviews Contact Us Meet the Staff
An Explanation of Our Rating System Search  
Category:    Home > Reviews > War > Soundtrack > Vietnam > Green Berets (Limited CD)

Green Berets (Limited Edition CD Soundtrack)

 

Sound: B     Music: B-

 

 

Let’s face it, though it was a hit in its time for reasons of people not knowing what to think of the Vietnam fiasco, John Wayne’s self-directed The Green Berets (1968) is not a good film and has problems beyond what was intended to be a pro-Vietnam presence film.  Like the recently reviewed DVD of Wayne’s 1940 howler Three Faces West, which was supposed to be the anti-Nazi story about refugees coming to America to integrate with Wayne’s help, this film instead degenerates into the Wayne film formula that has hurt his credibility as much as any of his politics.  This includes wall to wall clichés and his patented down-to-earth persona that just kills so many of his films.

 

Even if Green Berets is a directorial, screenplay and logical mess, there is the music by Miklos Rozsa, now issued for the first time ever as a soundtrack.  This latest scoop form the FSM label of Film Score Monthly Magazine offers a loaded 31 tracks that fill almost the entire single CD here.  Though we will not review the film much further until we decide to look at the DVD, like Wayne’s helming of The Alamo (1960), historical inaccuracies galore reign, but at least that film was a majestic 70mm production that was more effective despite its many mistakes.

 

Outside of the problematic film, the music gets to stand alone without the distraction of the pictures many problems.  Not having seen the film for a while, which is very forgettable and drags on like crazy, I honestly could not remember the scenes the tracks went to.  That was good, though the title song, a remake of the infamous hit by Barry Sadler that has the father of the song say to his son if he did not fight in Vietnam, he was not his son anymore.  With a no-good father like that, life may have been like Vietnam to begin with, and what kind of father betrays his son over something he himself is clueless about?  Talk about a generation gap!  Rozsa wisely did not want this crap in the film, but it landed up in the end credits anyhow.

 

Focusing on Rozsa’s instrumentals, he understood what he was doing and that the film was so shallow, that much like in the American Military’s approach to the real thing, the “Indians” were replaced by the Viet Cong.  Though it sounds like as simple as the TV ads where the restaurant coffee is replaced by Folgers Crystals, that little thing called genocide makes the real difference.  Unlike the recent Mel Gibson film We Were Soldiers (2002), which tells of the first Vietnam battle without going into the catastrophe that was ahead, this film ignores anything outside of its narrow boundaries and gets worse with age.

 

The use of “ethnic” signifier music and instruments like the zither would almost be the stereotypical use of such signifiers of foreign cultures in more naďve Hollywood product, but Rozsa integrates them in a more naturalistic and active way throughout that sets this score a step ahead of such fare.  With the film, it still seems at least quasi-racist, but it stands out better without it.  Rozsa in one respect was fighting a losing battle making music for this film, and without him, it would have been far worse than it already is.

 

What happens is that the master composer still gets trapped in the repetition of the film and it limits what he would have done if the film actually dealt with Vietnam correctly.  Though the “country” (read establishment) could not deal with discussion of the situation at the time, all you have to do is compare the film to the music in Michael Cimino’s 1978 masterwork The Deer Hunter to get the difference between what Rozsa was up against and not.  Even what The Beatles were doing with new instruments at the time exceeds this film, through not fault of Rozsa’s own.  Either way, this CD is limited to only 3,000 pressings, so those interested should go to www.filmscoremonthly.com and find out about how to order, plus more information about it and the many other great FSM CDs available.

 

And now a final word on a vital point in the booklet.  As noted, Rozsa did this score when so many great, key veteran composers were getting loss ion the shuffle of new filmmaking, new composers and the decline of the original Hollywood studio system.  The loss of the work of these masters, especially their lack of use, has had long term negative effects on world cinema that in a few ways it never recovered from.  Part of cinematic literacy is understanding film music, and while there were so many great new innovators (unlike now, a separate essay for another time), the later work they did do was still extraordinary often because of their excessive talent.  It is as sad as new filmmakers not knowing how or why to turn to so many great veteran actors.  Arrogance, intended or not, never helps filmmaking.  As much as The Green Berets can be trivialized, which is very much, the talent of the craftpersons who worked on it should never be forgotten.  That is why having Rozsa’s score finally out for the film is a fitting tribute to him above all else.

 

 

-   Nicholas Sheffo


Marketplace


 
 Copyright © MMIII through MMX fulvuedrive-in.com