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06/12/2005
David Zeiger

Previous features:
For more info on David Zeiger's films, go his website Displaced Films.
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A note from David:

Just a quick reminder about the upcoming premiere of "Sir! No Sir!" at the Los Angeles Film Festival on June 19 and 23. Don't forget to purchase your ticket in advance.
And, if you've got a mind to, forward this email to your own list.
Thank you, and we'll see you at the premiere!
David Zeiger
Please join us for the world premiere of
Sir! No Sir!
At the Los Angeles Independent Film Festival
Sunday, June 19, 7 pm
Directors Guild Theater
7920 Sunset Blvd
Second screening Thursday, June 23, 5:00 pm
Tickets at http://www.lafilmfest.com
Info at http://www.sirnosir.com
There is no more appropriate time than now to tell the riveting, incendiary story of the GI Antiwar Movement during the Vietnam War. Help us launch this crucial film into the world by spreading the word and attending the premiere.
In the 1960's an anti-war movement emerged that altered the course of history. This movement didn't take place on college campuses, but in barracks and on ships. It flourished in army stockades, navy brigs and in the dingy towns that surround military bases. It penetrated elite military colleges like West Point. And it spread throughout the battlefields of Vietnam. It was a movement no one expected, least of all those in it. Hundreds went to prison and thousands into exile. And by 1971 it had, in the words of one colonel, infested the entire armed services. Yet today few people know about the GI movement against the war in Vietnam. |
LA: Film
Sir! No Sir!
Front page of the Los Angeles Times Calendar, Friday,
June 17:
After fighting in Vietnam, they fought to oppose war
'Sir! No Sir!' details how wartime experiences led
some U.S. troops to join the peace movement.
By Anne-Marie O'Connor, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
Donald Duncan is a familiar kind of man, his face
lined and weathered, his husky voice flavored by a
regional American accent. His eyes are thoughtful as
he tells a familiar American story, of how he dreamed
of being a war hero, until the brutality he witnessed
in Vietnam destroyed the convictions that made him
willing to fight and die.
"Everything I grew up with," the former Green Beret
begins haltingly, as if he still can't believe it.
"This is just not the way you treat human beings."
Anyone waging war with American troops might want to
listen carefully to the largely untold story of David
Zeiger's new documentary, "Sir! No Sir!," of how some
of the most dedicated troops became some of the most
damaging supporters of the movement to end the war in
Vietnam. The documentary, which examines a small piece
of the complex puzzle that was Vietnam, is in
competition during the Los Angeles Film Festival, with
screenings on Saturday and Sunday.
The doubts of men like Duncan would eventually evolve
into outright rebellion, with active-duty American
troops refusing Vietnam duty, inciting stockade riots,
joining off-base protests and going AWOL. In Vietnam,
the film links this opposition to the hundreds of
battlefield shootings by American troops of their own
commanders in a notorious practice that became known
as "fragging."
"There is nothing you can do that requires you to
answer the question - 'Is this right or is this
wrong?' - than war," said Zeiger, 55, who left UC
Santa Cruz in 1970 to work with antiwar GIs stationed
at Ft. Hood, Texas. "Vietnam was the first war in the
history of this country in which the soldiers
themselves not only debated that question, but large
numbers of soldiers concluded that the war was wrong,
and played a big role in ultimately ending it."
Opposition to the war within the military began to
surface publicly in 1965. A West Point-educated
special forces officer refused a combat assignment in
Vietnam. Two GIs released as Viet Cong prisoners of
war announced they would "quit the Army and get the
United States out of Vietnam." Punishment was usually
swift and severe - an Army lieutenant who marched in
an El Paso antiwar protest was sentenced to five years
hard labor with a dishonorable discharge.
The documentary traces how opposition within the
military grew as the war deepened the social and
racial tensions building in the barracks and American
society at large. Many troops were disturbed at the
use of American troops to quell domestic riots and
protests. Countless unwilling troops were forced into
the war by the draft, while more fortunate sons found
their way into the National Guard. Black troops were
disturbed by Confederate flags in barracks and a
racial slur commonly used to refer to Vietnamese.
Terry Whitmore, an African American Marine from
Memphis, Tenn., who is interviewed in the film, still
has the smooth-faced looks of the day he was awarded a
Purple Heart by President Lyndon B. Johnson in 1967.
But he has an old man's eyes as he describes the
doubts that grew in his mind as he lay in a hospital
bed in Japan in April 1968, with multiple gunshot and
shrapnel wounds he sustained in combat in the
"demilitarized zone" between North and South Vietnam.
"When you're laying on your back and you can't move,
day in and day out, you had a lot of time to think
about the things that you had done, the people that
you killed and the people who died," Whitmore recalls
in the documentary.
On April 4, the television in his hospital room aired
the news of the assassination of Nobel Prize-winning
civil rights leader the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. in
Memphis. Riots and disturbances broke out across
America.
"I saw more tanks on the streets of Memphis than I saw
in Vietnam," Whitmore said. "All of a sudden, men with
the same uniforms I wore had dogs and tanks in my own
neighborhood, where I had a baby daughter I'd never
seen. Seeing dogs and troops chasing black people up
and down the streets of Memphis, I knew something was
wrong. Suddenly, nothing made sense anymore."
Instead of going back to his base, where he was
scheduled to receive another medal and a new tour in
Vietnam, he went AWOL and made his way to Sweden.
There, he felt uncomfortable when he was greeted as an
icon by other American troops who had become antiwar
activists.
"I was still patriotic," Whitmore said. "As a matter
of fact, I still am."
Other troops like him remained in the military, but
gravitated to cafes near the bases where Jane Fonda
and Donald Sutherland staged antiwar alternatives to
the standard Bing Crosby-serenading-the-troops revue.
The numbers of troops at antiwar protests near their
bases grew with the revelation of the My Lai massacre
of Vietnamese villagers by U.S. troops, and news of
the shootings of students by National Guardsmen at
Kent State University.
American society is still deeply divided over the
choices these Americans made. In the 2004 presidential
election, as American troops fought in Iraq,
Democratic candidate John F. Kerry, a decorated
Vietnam combat veteran, was grilled over his
subsequent antiwar activism. President Bush, who did
not go to Vietnam, weathered scrutiny over his service
in the National Guard, and was reelected.
In "Sir! No Sir!," military men from their generation
reveal the difficult path to their decision to oppose
the war - and why many of them still consider
themselves patriots.
"They went into the military believing they were doing
the right thing," director Zeiger said. "They were
gung-ho. There's a high price to pay for doing what
these people did. It changed everyone's life. It kind
of forced you to come to terms with your conscience."
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