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Friday, September 4, 2020

"Da 5 Bloods"

Right from the very beginning, I thought that this was a sort of mockumentary because it opens up like a Civil Rights doc where more black people were being sent to Vietnam than white people. Then it goes to four retired vets, in their seventies, returning to Vietnam. Throughout the film, there are snapshots of often little-known, or unknown to white people, black heroes whenever they were brought up to prove a point in the group's bravery, which I'm pretty sure the pictures are there to show white people that they were real people.
This is probably a white thing to say, but I didn't think it was going to be good. Five young men discover treasure in a gunned down plane, that Uncle Sam has been sneaking to the NVA. It's like someone watched The Goonies and Without a Paddle and thought: What if they were black?
But I did wind up liking the movie. Underneath the silly plot that it is, the film shows that racism knows no boundaries, and former VC soldiers haven't forgiven the American soldiers. We have seen PTSD in movies before, but this kind of takes to a new level where one of the guys is haunted by his dead CO because he killed him with friendly fire. And honestly, it's rather humbling to see seventy year old men, no matter what color, cry with joy, and perhaps respect, for when they find his remains.
This is basically a Vietnam film of a new era. In the past, it was often played for laughs when an older person suddenly transforms from a kind and quiet person who does the crossword to one of the most feared leaders in the land. Everything floods back to them. It's like they never left. The last thirty minutes of the film is where it truly gets real, when one of the members finds redemption in killing his CO while digging his own grave. In the final shootout, a grenade is thrown, and another member throws himself on top of it without a second thought. There's a sense of brotherhood that has never been lost, even when they were at each other's throats. When it came down to it, there is nothing that will tear the spirit of Da 5 Bloods apart.

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I hope you liked this. Be sure to subscribe and leave a comment about what you thought or if you want to recommend a movie for me to review. Thank you for reading. I'll return next week with another movie. See you then.

Released on Netflix: June 12, 2020
Rating: R
Stars: Delroy Lindo, Jonathan Majors, Clarke Peters, Norm Lewis, Isiah Whitlock Jr., Mélanie Thierry, Paul Walter Hauser, Jasper Pääkkönen, Jean Reno, Chadwick Boseman
Director: Spike Lee
Rotten Tomatoes Score: 92% Certified Fresh
IMDb Score: 6.6/10

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