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Hearts and Minds (1974)
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Overview
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Release Date:
17 November 1975 (Sweden) morePlot:
A documentary of the conflicting attitudes of the opponents of the Vietnam war. full summary | add synopsisAwards:
Won Oscar. Another 1 win & 1 nomination moreNewsDesk:
Re-visit The War In Vietnam With Hearts And Minds(From ReelTalkTV.com. 20 March 2009, 10:40 AM, PDT)
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This is to the Vietnam War as Bowling for Columbine is to Violence in America moreCast
(Credited cast)| Georges Bidault | ... | Himself | |
| Clark Clifford | ... | Himself | |
| George Coker | ... | Himself | |
| Kay Dvorshock | ... | Herself (also archive footage) | |
| Daniel Ellsberg | ... | Himself | |
| Randy Floyd | ... | Himself | |
| J. William Fulbright | ... | Himself (as J.W. Fulbright) | |
| Brian Holden | |||
| Robert Muller | ... | Himself | |
| Khanh Nguyen | ... | Himself | |
| Walt Rostow | ... | Himself | |
| William C. Westmoreland | ... | Himself |
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Add content advisory for parentsRuntime:
112 minCountry:
USAColor:
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1.85 : 1 moreSound Mix:
MonoFun Stuff
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In a Moviefone interview, Michael Moore cites this as one of his inspirations to begin making films. moreMovie Connections:
Referenced in Easy Riders, Raging Bulls: How the Sex, Drugs and Rock 'N' Roll Generation Saved Hollywood (2003) moreFAQ
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Peter Davis' Hearts and Minds does it's best to try and get both sides of the issue on America's military involvement in Vietnam, and like Bowling for Columbine the film can be accessible to an audience on each side of the coin (though with this film Davis isn't in front of the camera at all). This is perfectly filmed in the end credits sequence in which a march is being held for Vietnam veterans while the protesters line the adjacent streets. What makes the film all the powerful is that there isn't a bias going on to either side- while one scene will show a Vietnamese civilian being interviewed about how the devastation from the bombs have ruined his family and home, another will show prisoner of war George Coker explaining things to American children. In the end what gets Hearts and Minds to the level of great documentary film-making is that all of the footage of old speeches and old military movies, and all the interviews with various political figures and Vietnamese personnel, all add up to delivering an objective stance for the viewer. The facts of which are presented as such: America went into Vietnam, left their mark, and while America had two sides to the issue so did the Vietnamese, and that's what made the whole deal one of the most controversial topics of the 20th century. Overall, this is an intelligent and compassionate look at the effects of War in general. A+