Donald Trump uses 'Full Metal Jacket' clips to portray his ideal
military
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[October 15, 2024]
WASHINGTON (AP) — Donald Trump is embracing perhaps
Hollywood's most memorable drill sergeant to portray his vision of a
hardened military and mock the Biden administration's embrace of the
LGBTQ+ community serving openly.
Trump's recent rallies have featured a video with clips of R. Lee Ermey
as Marine Gunnery Sgt. Hartman in Stanley Kubrick's 1987 classic Vietnam
War film “Full Metal Jacket.” Ermey's character was known for his vulgar
and at times racist outbursts as he taunts and bullies recruits.
Those clips, captioned “THEN," are juxtaposed against clips of people
expressing support for LGBTQ+ rights and drag performers, captioned
“NOW” and “THE BIDEN HARRIS MILITARY.”
The video ends with a shot from the movie, a scene before the recruits
were sent to Vietnam, captioned with “LET’S MAKE OUR MILITARY GREAT
AGAIN.” The video was shown at several Trump rallies before he posted it
on social media on Saturday.
Trump often rails against the growing acceptance of transgender people,
including the use of pronouns and transgender women in women's sports,
drawing some of the biggest applause lines at his rallies by pledging to
restrict them.
Trump earlier this month hailed the performance by Ermey, who served in
the Marines as a drill sergeant before acting.
“He was supposed to get the Academy Award,” Trump told his audience in
Wisconsin, saying he was denied the honor because “he wasn’t part of the
establishment.”
In using the movie to illustrate Trump’s ideal military, the campaign
borrowed from what is recognized as an anti-war film. Never mind that
the film is about Vietnam, for which Trump received medical deferments,
despite having attended high school at New York Military Academy.
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Republican presidential nominee former President Donald Trump
gestures at a campaign rally at the Findlay Toyota Arena Sunday,
Oct. 13, 2024, in Prescott Valley, Ariz. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)
Vivian Kubrick, the late filmmaker's daughter, said she believes her
father would have embraced Trump and forgiven his use of an anti-war
film to make his point about building a powerful military.
“That’s primarily what FMJ is about, the shocking and complicated
paradoxes of human nature,” Vivian Kubrick wrote Sunday on the
social media platform X.
“And thus, on this tooth and claw planet, you need a very strong
military — so I’m going to stick with the idea that FMJ footage was
used primarily because of its powerful, realistic portrayal of boot
camp, juxtaposed with the entirely demoralizing and inappropriate
injection of WOKE ideology into the USA military,” she added. “Which
I agree with myself and which I’m certain my father would have
agreed with.”
Ermey's “Full Metal Jacket” co-star Matthew Modine, who played
Private Joker in the film and is in some of the clips included in
Trump's video, saw things differently.
“Ironically, Trump has twisted and profoundly distorted Kubrick’s
powerful anti-war film into a perverse, homophobic, and manipulative
tool of propaganda,” Modine told Entertainment Weekly.
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