Good Morning Vietnam

Year Released
1987
Region
Subject
Rating
2
Average: 1.5 (2 votes)

Reviews

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Great Film to view; Useful for studying colonialism

Field of Interest/Specialty: english as a second language
Posted On: 05/01/2017
0

This film deals with the colonial era of Vietnam when the French had become the colonial power. The specific tale involves a French woman who has amassed a huge rubber plantation somewhere near Saigon. She has lived life to its fullest without ever marrying but her prime interest is this plantation. Enter a young French navy captain who sweeps Eliane off her feet: the two begin an affair which Eliane terminates quickly. Eliane has adopted a young Vietnamese girl when her parents both die in a crash. Camille, the young girl is groomed to become the wife of a rich powerful Vietnamese family but she falls for the handsome young navy captain her mother has dumped. Even though Camille marries the young Vietnamese boy who has studied abroad bringing Communism back to Vietnam, she plans to run away from this traditional union to connect with Jean-Baptiste, the young navy captain. They have a baby boy which Eliane raises as both parents are jailed. When Camille is finally released, she refuses to return home. This leaves her son with her mother. Eliane sells the huge rubber plantation to bring the Vietnamese young man back to France. The love triangle has unfolded to reveal the colonial era Vietnam. The film is superbly well done and the plot is gripping. The setting of Saigon during the French colonial period reveals much social and political history! It is a great film just to view but shows how Vietnam has come to be what it is today. The film might be used in classes to reveal the results of colonialism-especially if studying Vietnam

Review of Good Morning Vietnam

Field of Interest/Specialty: Social Studies
Posted On: 04/28/2017
3

Good Morning Vietnam tells the story of an American DJ and member of the Air Force, Adrian Cronauer (Robin Williams) assigned to the Armed Forces radio network during the early phase of the American intervention in Vietnam (around 1965). The story opens with Cronauer arriving in Vietnam. Cronauer quickly shakes things up at the radio station by disobeying orders from his superiors and playing Rock and R&B songs instead of the classical, polka and sedate pop music that is standard fare on the network. He also introduces satire, comedy, and cynicism into his broadcasts seen as subversive by officers at the station.
While Cronauer does eventually form meaningful bonds with a number of Vietnamese and begins to understand the true nature and complexity of the Vietnam War, some scenes, especially those involving his animalistic oggling and pursuit of Trinh and the portrayal of a Vietnamese bar owner as almost offensively flamboyant (some stereotypical Vietnamese characteristics are also included), stuck me as offensive.
The most meaningful parts of the film occur as Cronauer develops a deeper understanding of the Vietnam War and its impact on both American GIs and the Vietnamese. Notable scenes include Cronauer's traffic-jam interview of GIs shipping out for the front lines and the montage of Vietnam War scenes, shown to the music of Louis Armstrong's "What a Wonderful World" - the juxtaposition between sight and sound is stunning. Also powerful is a scene at the end, when Cronauer finds out his ‘friend’ is a Communist sympathizer and, feeling betrayed, yells "we're here to help this country," showing the contradictory nature the Vietnam War. I will definitely be showing at least one of these scenes in class during our Vietnam War lessons.
Over all, Good Morning Vietnam is worth using to examine the American perspective in Vietnam, our own sins and confusion about the war, as well as how much American culture was changing during this time period.

Review of Good Morning Vietnam

Field of Interest/Specialty: Social Studies
Posted On: 04/28/2017
0