ÒAmerican SniperÕsÓ
biggest lie: Clint Eastwood has a delusional Fox News problem SOPHIA A.
MCCLENNEN JAN 26, 2015 The insanities and fantasies at the heart of
"American Sniper" explain everything about the state of the 2015 GOP [ http://worldtraining.net/Fox.htm and http://worldtraining.net/Fox3.htm
Much has been made recently about the inaccurate
representation of Chris Kyle in ÒAmerican Sniper.Ó WeÕve learned
that, despite the fact that the film depicts Kyle as a hero and a martyr, the
real American sniper was heartless and cruel. Rather than struggle with moral
dilemmas as we see in the film, the actual man had no such hesitation and no
such conscience. But to focus on ÒAmerican SniperÕsÓ depiction of Kyle is to
miss the larger problems of the film. In addition to sugarcoating Kyle, the
film suffers from major myopia —a complete inability to see the larger
picture. And that is why criticism of the film has to look at its director,
Clint Eastwood, and the troubling ways he represents a dark, disturbing feature
of the GOP mind-set.
In order to
have the bigger picture we need to remember two key moments in recent Eastwood
public appearances. The first took place in 2005 when Eastwood confronted
filmmaker Michael Moore at the National Board of Review dinner, where both men
were being honored. Moore was there for his documentary on U.S. gun culture, ÒBowling
for Columbine.Ó Eastwood had ÒMillion Dollar Baby.Ó After Eastwood accepted his
award, he directed comments
at Moore. ÒMichael Moore and I actually have a lot in common – we both
appreciate living in a country where thereÕs free expression.Ó Eastwood then
added: ÒBut, Michael, if you ever show
up at my front door with a camera – IÕll kill you. I mean it.Ó The
tone was IÕm sort of joking, but maybe
not really joking, provoking nervous laughter from both the
audience and Moore himself. Eastwood
said he would kill Moore if he showed up at his door. This was his response to
a film that raised much-needed conversation about U.S. gun culture. EastwoodÕs reaction tells us a lot about
the way that some members of the GOP treat those with whom they disagree. If
you donÕt agree with me on guns, IÕll just kill you.
The second
event took place at the Republican National Convention in 2012 when Eastwood delivered a
monologue to an empty chair, which supposedly had an invisible Barack Obama
sitting in it. It was, without question, the weirdest moment of the RNC, and
thatÕs taking into account Paul RyanÕs lying and RomneyÕs poor performance. (Also, PerryÕs
forgetting one of three points) While more than 30 million Americans watched,
Eastwood delivered an improvised, rambling monologue that suggested that Obama
was swearing at him and cursing at Romney. It left most of us watching
completely bewildered. Thankfully,
though, Jon Stewart stepped in to make sense of it. On ÒThe Daily Show,Ó
Stewart explained that EastwoodÕs performance could be understood as a metaphor
for the existence of a president that only exists in the minds of the GOP. ÒThis president has issues, and there
are very legitimate debates to be had about his policy and actions and
successes and/or failures -– I mean, tune in next week –- but I
could never wrap my head as to why the world and the president that Republicans describe bears so little resemblance to
the world and experience that I experience. And now I know why. There is a
President Obama that only Republicans can see.Ó
These two
events taken together help explain whatÕs wrong with ÒAmerican Sniper.Ó They
illustrate the combination of delusion and aggressive violence that governs too
much of GOP politics. LetÕs start with the delusion. The film draws a direct
link between the events of 9/11 and the war in Iraq, forgetting completely that
the war in Iraq had nothing whatsoever to do with 9/11. Not one of the
attackers that day was in any way connected to Iraq. Thus to connect 9/11 to
Iraq is delusional. Not even the Bush administration made that overt a link—at
the time they claimed they went to Iraq to keep the Iraqis from using weapons
of mass destruction that were never found.
But thatÕs not
the perceptions of many who watch Fox News. As the Program on International
Policy Attitudes (PIPA) at the University of Maryland reported
back in 2003: ÒThose who receive most of their news from Fox News are more
likely than average to have misperceptions.Ó In their poll they found that 80
percent of Fox viewers held at least one of three Iraq-related misperceptions,
more than any other news consumers, especially those that consume NPR and PBS. The point is that the 9/11-Iraq link is
delusional, but it is also a common link in public perceptions of those on the
right who watch Fox News and clearly it is one that makes sense to Eastwood and
those that think like him. The
second problem is the culture of violence. While the film tries to show Kyle
wrestling at some level with some of his kills, he still very clearly divides
the world into categories. As his father puts it in the film, there are wolves
(those that want to kill you), sheep and sheep dogs (who have to protect the
sheep from the wolves). Not only are there just three categories of life, but
these categories are also defined solely by a logic of violence and aggression.
In the film, Iraqis are almost all depicted as wolves, even women and children.
KyleÕs first two kills are a young boy and his mother. But they posed a threat
and thus needed to be killed. As Kyle later explains, he has no remorse over
any of his kills, just over the lives he wished he could have protected.
At no point
does the film consider the fact that the war was based on false justifications.
At no point does it imagine that those in Iraq might have seen the U.S.
soldiers as invaders in their homeland. At no point does it imagine that the
violence suffered by our own soldiers could have been avoided if we simply hadnÕt
started the war to begin with. The logic of war is completely unquestioned,
making this the most simplistic war film we have seen nominated for an Oscar in decades. But the fact that the film has no
nuance, no context and no subtlety should not surprise us. If anything it is a
terrifying glimpse into a GOP mind-set that couples delusion with violence. We
watch Kyle zero in on a pinpointed target and we are reminded of the ways that
such a narrow, aggressive vision is itself a metaphor for GOP beliefs. This is
a movie thatÕs not just about a sniper, but also about an attitude that
threatens to destroy any chance in our nation for political compromise and
productive debate. And thatÕs what makes this movie really disturbing. Sophia McClennen is Professor at the Pennsylvania State
University. She writes on the intersections between culture and society. Her
latest book with Remy M. Maisel, is, Is Satire
Saving Our Nation? Mockery and American Politics.