according to CBS News. The buzz around the Clint Eastwood film about Navy SEAL Chris Kyle has not abated since it was nominated for six Academy Awards.
Filmmaker Michael Moore famously tweeted “My uncle killed by sniper in WW2. We were taught snipers were cowards. Will shoot u in the back. Snipers aren’t heroes. And invaders r worse.”
That, of course, caused a wall of responding tweets, including this one from former Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich: “Michael Moore should spend a few weeks with ISIS and Boko Haram. Then he might appreciate @AmericanSniper. I am proud of our defenders.”
And so it went, with reviewers liking the movie more than not. I appreciated Bradley Cooper and Sienna Miller’s acting in my review here Monday. I thought director Clint Eastwood gave both sides of the issue enough thinking space in a really crowded room. Reel Roy’s Reviews on WordPress, on the other hand, wrote: “At times (chiefly during the interminable scenes set in Iraq), I felt I was watching a WW II-era propaganda film blurred into one of those single-shooter video games where jackbooted soldiers blow away any flesh-and-blood creature identified in big, bold font as ENEMY. Has Eastwood finally regressed to his cowboy roots, with a simplistic white hat/black hat approach to world affairs, totally disregarding our messy connectivity – technologically, economically, socially? Sure feels like it.”
Rotten Tomatoes gave it a 73 percent critics ranking. Audiences liked it even more, with a Rotten Tomatoes score of 89 percent.
Chris Kyle-portraying Bradley Cooper said in interviews that the movie had nothing to do with politics, meanwhile, while director Eastwood told the Daily Beast it explains the “plight” of the soldier and provided a “character study.”
Wrote reporter Terrence McCoy for the Washington Post Tuesday: “But this was no ordinary soldier. This was the late Chris Kyle, the much-mythologized ‘deadliest sniper’ in American history. And regardless of what Cooper wants, his movie has become political. Before he was shot to death at a Texas gun range, Kyle, who claimed he killed at least 150 people while working as a sniper in Iraq, oozed conviction and charisma. He wore big boots. He spoke with a languid Texas drawl. He wrote a best-selling memoir. He made millions. And he stirred controversy just about everywhere he went. …
“The film was subject to widespread praise among conservatives for depicting an American soldier at his best and condemnation among some liberals who question the admitted pleasure Kyle took in killing and dehumanizing Iraqis. And then there were the tales Kyle told about himself, which came under increasing suspicion after numerous journalists tried — and failed — to corroborate them. Among them: Kyle once said he shot dead two armed Texas thugs who wanted to steal his truck. He said he traveled down to New Orleans and killed 30 bad guys in the chaos following Hurricane Katrina. And he also falsely claimed he punched out former Minnesota governor Jesse ‘the Body’ Ventura after Ventura, a former member of a U.S. Navy Underwater Demolition Team, disparaged the Navy SEALs.”
Conservatives and liberals. Military and civilian. Hollywood and Washington. Everybody’s talking. And if you think that’s bad in any way, shape or form, keep reading.
American Sniper has become the movie folks love to love or love to hate.
One thing’s certain as lines wound around malls and box office cash registers cha-chinged to the tune of $107 million-plus on the Martin Luther King Jr. Day Holiday Weekend So many shoot their mouths off about ‘American Sniper’
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Yes, it’s damn glorious that we’re free to argue about it all