News and Opinion from Sisters, Oregon
"Charlie Wilson's War" is a movie about a world where unintended consequences define the course of history yet good intentions can still prevail. Our world. It's a fine film, in many ways an important film, based on the true and unlikely story of how we "won" the war in Afghanistan.
Charlie Wilson was a hard drinking, womanizing congressman from Texas, who may have been more important to the defeat of the Soviet Empire than Ronald Reagan. Wilson was the reason tribesmen of Afghanistan were able to defeat the mighty Soviet army, causing the Soviet retreat and possibly leading to the fall of the Berlin Wall.
Director Mike Nichols' résumé goes back to "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf" and "The Graduate" of the 1960s and extends to the more recent "The Birdcage" and the disturbing "Closer" of 2004.
Nichols shapes the film brilliantly. He urges the movie right along, propelled by the series of unlikely events it describes. And the events are true, chronicled in the book "Charlie Wilson's War" by George Crile that describes the remarkable story of how "Charlie did it," defeating the Soviets from his chair in an appropriations committee and meetings in Israel, Egypt and Pakistan.
The primary cast delivers well, with Julia Roberts, Tom Hanks and Philip Seymour Hoffman comfortable in roles that are true in feel to the book.
The profane script was written by Aaron Sorkin, writer of "West Wing" and "Sports Night." If you follow Sorkin, you will recognize his work: smart; fast; and funny.
One review warns potential viewers that the movie contains drug use, drinking, smoking, nudity and strong profanity. True. All true. It was the '80s.
The film also captures why the war in Afghanistan was probably a battle, not a war, for democracy. The war for democracy is never over, and we are fighting other battles today because we failed to see that one through.
After filling the country with guns and training its already ferocious people as fighters, we left behind guns; we left behind a country torn by war; we left behind poor teenagers expected to fight like men; we left behind mines masked as toys designed to maim children; we left behind tribes with centuries of hatred and no means to resolve conflict; we left behind Muslims who had come from around the world to fight, including Osama bin Laden.
We did not build schools or hospitals or power plants or sewage plants or roads or courts or democracy. We just left. Possibly nothing would have prevented the Taliban from taking over Afghanistan. But we did not try. We were done; we just left. This may have been amoral; it was definitely shortsighted.
But that is our history in the region - our "can do, mission accomplished," history. Unfortunately, history has a longer point of view and will return again and again the phrase, "We'll see," when the obvious conclusion is also too easy, a Zen parable, "We'll see."
Caveat: This writer is biased: having traveled in Afghanistan and Pakistan five years before the Soviets invaded in 1979, I closely followed the war in whatever news media offered coverage at the time. Yet not until I read Crile's book did I understand the essential story of how the war played at the highest level of our government, and that of Pakistan.
"Charlie Wilson's War" is important, because it describes why we have today soldiers dying in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Starts January 11 at Sisters Movie House.
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