REVIEW: Powerful Tillman Story Explores the PR War Behind the War

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Bar-Lev -- whose previous directing credits include the 2007 My Kid Could Paint That -- trusts his instincts enough to know that he doesn't need to embellish or intensify any angle of this story to make it more dramatic or more affecting. His treatment of Tillman's parents is particularly low-key. Dannie Tillman, who has since written a book about her son's case, speaks at one point about how uncomfortable it is to be a parent grieving intensely and privately in the midst of a grand and glitzy public outpouring of grief. Against that, Bar-Lev shows footage of Dannie, Patrick Sr. and Marie standing stiffly and politely on a football field as earnest speeches are made and marching-band music is played. At one point, incomprehensibly, a team of prancing and high-kicking dancers line up before them, a truly weird way of honoring a fallen soldier.

The Tillman Story is often painful to watch, even when the images in front of us are nothing more than military documents that have been marked, by Dannie, with a highlighter. Dannie was given thousands of pages of official reports and documents by the U.S. military, a sea of pages with every significant name or detail blacked out; the presumption was that once she started going through this material, she'd simply become exhausted and give up. But with Goff's help, Dannie unearthed many of the more excruciating secrets surrounding her son's death, notably the fact that the soldiers responsible for it (their story isn't told here, and appears to be wholly shrouded in secrecy) explained their actions by saying, "I was excited," and, "I wanted to stay in the firefight" -- details the U.S. military wouldn't be particularly eager to publicize, for obvious reasons, and which can only intensify a parent's suffering.

Bar-Lev recently lost an appeal to have the MPAA ratings board change the rating for The Tillman Story from an R -- for the movie's use of, as the ratings board so delicately puts it, "excessive language" -- to a PG-13. That's particularly cutting considering that one of the most piercing revelations in The Tillman Story is that Tillman's last words, shouted out as a last-ditch effort to keep his fellow soldiers from shooting at him, were "I'm Pat f*cking Tillman." Sometimes the use of an expletive, beyond being a sticking point for a group of de facto censors, really is a matter of life and death.

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Comments

  • bierce says:

    Pat Tillman: Selfless American Hero
    Pentagon: Clueless Ass-Covering Idiots
    There, I just saved you ten bucks.

  • Eric says:

    Tillman is such a hero...I think the writer of this story misses a huge point. PR in wartime is extremely important. It's important for morale and it's important to wear the enemy down. Let's face it, the only way America loses a war, and thus more American lives, is to lose the PR war. Our enemies know they can't beat us on the battle field, but in the battle of public opionion. Our enemies also know far too well that we don't have the stomach for war. They, on the other hand, love to send their children into the arms of Americans as exploding body parts. Get a clue!

  • Patrick McEvoy-Halston says:

    Re: The subtext — so blatant you can hardly call it a subtext — is that the military had spun this sad event to serve its own purposes, using the death of this by all accounts likeable, intelligent, principled soldier as a public relations tool, a way of polishing up, in the public’s eyes, the glory and integrity of the American military.
    It's not PR, per se -- more a matter of myth-making -- but there is still something reality-drifting about the way you've put this. He was by all accounts likeable, intelligent, principled -- he was the ideal soldier ... of our imagination: the one, that is, that WE JUST KNOW (that in every story / account) is going to be used and disposed of, just as soon as we hear of this set-up. We all know there is an impulse to see him as pure virtue, so that the villain seems more awfully indifferent / caring -- let's be careful / human-enough not to use him so that the parental figure / authority-figure seems just right for our hatred (and perhaps, even, for some -- eventual eager acquiescence).

  • STARCHY says:

    uhm its not a "story", its a documentary film - I know because I WATCHED it (unlike you I presume?)
    I suggest you "get a clue" and watch the film - you just might learn something about the "PR war" you are so quick to support.
    And while you are at it - check out "Fog of War" and "Why We Fight" - two other excellent documentaries about the Military/Industrial complex that continues to suck away the moral core of our great country.