Individualism In Vietnam

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Platoon excels in the depiction of historical authenticity in terms of clothing and panoramic details, however it’s a fictional story set in the Vietnam War leading to deviations to occur from the actual history. Platoon treats the Vietnam war as a solely American vs North Vietnamese instead of a civil war as the film forgoes the existence of the South Vietnamese military as there’s seemingly not a single Vietnamese helping the Americans in terms of being a translator, or a foot soldier even though a majority of the fighting forces were Vietnamese in the war. The Viet Cong depicted in the film are treated as hive minded creatures without any sense of individualism attached to them as they all look similar, and act the same which wasn’t the case as in reality they were as dynamic as US Soldiers with fears of the jungle and thoughts on the war they found themselves in “Many of us (including me) came from border towns and grew up in the hills or the mountains. We had no more mastery over the jungle than a kid from Oregon has over Death Valley.”-Nguyen Hoa Giai, Cracked. …show more content…

Oliver Stone’s Platoon may romanticize aspects of the war through its characters like Chris and exaggerate traits of certain characters, but overall the film displays a great deal of historical authenticity in a fictional story set in the Vietnam war that encouraged public interest into the