In the years following the invasion of Iraq, it became a truism that Americans simply didn’t want to hear about the war — especially at the movies. While there were scads of films about Iraq, including Kathryn Bigelow’s Oscar-winning The Hurt Locker, none was able to attract a big audience. Until American Sniper.
Based on the best-selling memoir of the same title, Clint Eastwood’s film about Navy SEAL Chris Kyle has not only pulverized box office records but it has become a cultural phenomenon, especially in places that often get written off as the heartland. Its unexpected success has become the latest reminder that our prevailing image of American culture — the one in which Lena Dunham is an inescapable juggernaut — is largely based on media folks’ idea of what’s cool rather than the whole country’s taste.
Of course, given today’s polarized politics, the film has spawned the usual knee-jerk squabbling. Put crudely, its detractors argue that American Sniper is a right-wing movie that ducks essential questions — like whether the Iraq war was a righteous one — and glorifies a remorseless sniper who killed somewhere between 160 and 250 people. Its defenders on the right accuse such critics of hating America and our troops. The left frets that American Sniper is so popular because it lets viewers stay in denial about Iraq — it doesn’t say that the invasion was wrong, wrong, wrong. The right thinks it’s so popular because it celebrates good old-fashioned patriotism.
Both of these explanations are far too simple for a low-key movie that’s striking in its lack of stridency. As one who opposed the Iraq War, I think American Sniper is good. Skillfully made, if sometimes a tad generic, it’s anchored by a terrific performance from Bradley Cooper, an articulate, thoughtful actor who completely immerses himself in Chris Kyle, a laconic man who doesn’t spend much time questioning things. One reason I like the movie is that it takes me inside a vision of life so very different to my own.
American Sniper gives us the world as it’s lived and understood by Chris Kyle, who’s not especially interested in foreign policy or the daily lives of Iraqis. He’s a Texan raised to ideals of service and drawn to activities like bronco-riding and hunting. For him, the Navy SEALs are a perfect fit, especially after Sept. 11, and when he reaches Iraq, he finds his true metier. Being a sniper is stressful — you’re trying to protect your comrades while not murdering civilians — but Kyle is so good he becomes a legend. Back home, though, between tours of duty, his wife, played by Sienna Miller, feels her husband slipping away.