Request input for COIN related movie bits
Thomas Rid at KOW: Great Films on Small Wars
Entry Excerpt:
Great Films on Small Wars - Thomas Rid, Kings of War.
Here is our list of
20 outstanding movies on political violence, insurgency, and counterinsurgency - small wars, somewhat liberally defined. This selection has been included as “recommended viewings” in a forthcoming textbook,
Understanding Counterinsurgency - with a permalink to this post and of course a note of acknowledgement to the fine readers of this blog...
Get the low-down at Kings of War.
--------
Read the full post and make any comments at the SWJ Blog.
This forum is a feed only and is closed to user comments.
The Intimate Enemy / Michael Collins
The Intimate Enemy is a French film (DVD zone 2) which is basically the French version of Platoon in Algeria it has englich subtitles and is a very well thought out and put together film.
Michael Collins with Liam Neilson is also a good one as well.
If you are looking for a good documentary on Algeria all in french with no sub title unfortunately it is called La Guerre Sans Nam The war with no name.
Kelly
WW2 Belorussian partisans
Something different, I think I've seen the film and IIRC it is graphic. It is on show next week @ Oxford University CCW and from their email notice:
Quote:
Come and See; a 1985 film by Russian director Elem Klimov, based on a semi-autobiographical script by Ales Adamovich who fought with the Belorussian partisans against the Germans in the Second World War. Produced to celebrate the 40th anniversary of the Soviet victory, and during the slow transition between the Brezhnev and Gorbachev eras of the USSR, there is an undoubted element of revenge fantasy and Soviet propaganda about the film. The frightening thing therefore is how accurate it actually is.
The film has often topped lists of great war films. It also often appears in lists of horror films. It is not easy viewing, described by Roger Ebert as "one of the most devastating films ever about anything".
See:http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0091251/
In Russian, English Subtitles
Hollywood onCOIN and nation-building during the Vietnam War
From the UK Defence in Depth blogsite a summary of an article in Small Wars & Insurgencies, as it is film and not a book it fits here (there is a thread on Vietnam War books). It opens with:
Quote:
In a
recent article in a special issue of
Small Wars & Insurgencies, we considered the contribution Hollywood has made to our understanding of counterinsurgency and nation-building during the Vietnam War. The war has been the subject of so many blockbuster films that it is inevitable that they play a leading role in shaping perceptions of the conflict. Students who have never lifted up a copy of classic Vietnam books such as Jeffrey Race’s
War Comes to Long An or Neil Sheehan’s
A Bright Shining Lie can be sure to have sat through
Platoon or
Apocalypse Now. But are these films educational as well as entertaining?
In considering this question, we split films on the Vietnam War into three broad chronological categories. The first are those dealing with the earliest period of US involvement, when the focus was on CIA-led ‘political action’. The second is the advisory period, when US forces began to be deployed to advise and support the South Vietnamese military. Finally, we looked at films that deal with the full ferocity of the Americanized war of post-1965. Put another way, the films we looked at have three main groups of protagonists – spies, advisors, and grunts.
Link:http://defenceindepth.co/2015/11/02/...ng-in-vietnam/