A Bright Shining Lie
A Bright Shining Lie
| 30 May 1998 (USA)
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Something in his past keeps career Army man John Paul Vann from advancing past colonel. He views being sent to Vietnam as part of the US military advisory force a stepping stone to promotion. However, he disagrees vocally (and on the record) with the way the war is being run and is forced to leave the military. Returning to Vietnam as a civilian working with the Army, he comes to despise some South Vietnamese officers while he takes charge of some of the U.S. forces and continues his liaisons with Vietnamese women.

Reviews
TeenzTen

An action-packed slog

Pacionsbo

Absolutely Fantastic

Robert Joyner

The plot isn't so bad, but the pace of storytelling is too slow which makes people bored. Certain moments are so obvious and unnecessary for the main plot. I would've fast-forwarded those moments if it was an online streaming. The ending looks like implying a sequel, not sure if this movie will get one

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Billie Morin

This movie feels like it was made purely to piss off people who want good shows

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sfdphd

This film is interesting in comparison with Go Tell the Spartans, which came out 20 years earlier in 1978. The earlier film starred Burt Lancaster, who is less than gung-ho, unlike Paxton in Bright Shining Lie. What is similar in both films is the way both men begin to realize that what is really happening on the ground in Vietnam is quite different than what the administration is telling the public and the administration refuses to hear the truth from the soldiers on the ground, giving orders that actually get soldiers killed. Paxton's character just keeps upping the ante, refusing to back down, insisting that he can somehow win this war and work around the military leaders. Lancaster gives up on fighting the military leaders and just stays with his men in the field. In Court-martial of Billy Mitchell, Gary Cooper is another gung-ho soldier in an even earlier time period, the 1920's, just after World War I, when airplanes were new to the military. He wants to create an entire Air Force, which both the Army and Navy think is unnecessary. He somehow predicts a future when the USA's fleet at Pearl Harbor is attacked by bombs from Japanese airplanes (how did he guess that?) and foresees the need for a modern air force. He is willing to sacrifice his military career to get that message across. Again, a fascinating film in which the top military leaders refuse to listen to the soldiers in the field (this time in the air vs. on the ground) and these soldiers die because the leaders refuse to listen. These three films certainly show that the military is a pretty bad place for soldiers whose lives may be unnecessarily sacrificed by the commanders who refuse to listen to the people actually fighting the war.

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okieindian

Who benefits from attempts to tarnish the US Military, Political leaders, American allies and America's need to BE involved in keeping the world safe from those who would destroy us. Could it be the idiot journalists that were there, who benefited, even though they never left the "parties" of Saigon except to visit secure areas? Journalist that provided the stories that the "media" wanted. Could it be the media that benefited, and if so, what was their motive? Could it be the same motive they have today which is to destroy the image of this country all over the world. Could it be the ringleaders of the Peace movements who were nothing more doped up morons who spent much of their time seducing underage girls, getting high and raving regarding things they knew nothing about. Could it be the educational "communities' which have long been a hot bed of radicals (read that those with communists leanings? There are a lot of foreign "professors" who have been planted in American universities, as well as American born morons, who constantly "preach" against America, against God, against family values, patriotism and all the things that made America what was once upon a time. All the above and all anti-American, anti-military, anti-freedom morons, benefit greatly from their attempts to destroy a country that allows EVEN the, most simple minded, inexperienced and do nothing scum of the earth to express the most uninformed opinions.I enjoyed the movie, because it had just enough fact to show that there was a war going on. However the Bright Shining Lie is the one told by the one who wrote the book, the ones who made the movie and those who seem so eager to make John Paul Vann look like a slime ball by presenting unproven and unwarranted "episodes" of his sexual activities and presenting him as an arrogant asshole. However if one were to check those who attended his funeral, among them were some of the war's most outspoken critics and they must have thought that John Paul Vann deserved a little respect. All things considered the movie is one continuous lie, tied together with disguised bits and pieces of factual information and combat footage. The simple minded will watch it, believe it and think that's the way it was. That's a shame!!

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Alex

This movie may have low budget production values, but they did a fairly good job. Actual wartime footage is intermingled for good effect, especially in the opening sequence.I had a bit of a hard time taking Bill Paxton serious in this role at first, but I was pleasantly surprised to see that he did a very credible job portraying Lt. Col Vann with the required swagger.Though a bit over dramatic at times, and almost falling into cliché, I would have to recommend this movie. My only other criticism would be of the portrayal of the ARVN when under fire. The offices may have been beneath contempt, but when called to duty, the ARVN could mix it up with the best of them. They have been getting an unfair reputation for many years now.

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Alex-372

This movie recounts the life and times of John Paul Vann, one of the movers and shakers of the US's non-military programs in the then South Vietnam. Although made in 1998, the movie has a very early to mid-1980s feel to it where production values are concerned and seems to be ignorant of and learned nothing from any movies and series made on the subject since (Tour Of Duty, Off Limits, 48 Charlie Mopic, even Hamburger Hill). The only really good effect was the artillery explosions when Vann apparently called in artillery on his own bunker.A much more interesting and exciting movie could have been made of another book on the non-purely military aspect of the Vietnam conflict (which was essentially economic and political in nature and solution) is Orrin DeForest's "Slow Burn", a book about the much neglected area of military and political intelligence. It has intrigue, suspense, intelligence, (real) romance and comradery that in this movie is only touched on.Anyway, because this movie is based on a book, it has a rather shallow feeling, because again (as usual) the director tries to put in too much, and doesn't connect the material and scenes in a way that is anything other than chronological. He should have picked the ones that could have blended together into a more interesting story.

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