MovieChat Forums > Generation Kill (2008) Discussion > Day late and dollar short

Day late and dollar short


So I just discovered this series and started watching based on the high rating of DMDB. I am a career USAF service man ( still active) and served in Iraq (2007). This show is hard to get through. Perhaps because I am watching it way late. I know what happened and how it happened. Maybe that is my issue....I see nothing new. But I must say this....the actors and the direction were very good and I started to believe the actors were really Marines. But the story line is a day late and dollar short for me. Just wished I had seen this in 2008 when it came out. It is hard for me to watch as I was expecting (sad to say) some sort of good over evil story. But sadly this is not. But it does show the conflict well on how the ROEs were to be followed and how modern warfare is not so black and white like in WWII. My comments are only on the show and my expectations.....not trying to start a political piss-off. Considering the lateness of my comments....I don't really expect to see replies.

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Well man, the story was from 2003, so you kind of know what to expect anyway. Same thing with the Band of Brothers, you know we won the war, but you can still watch it.

For me, what never gets old is the dialogue, the camaraderie, the grunt point of view and the authenticity of it. I was a Navy man, separated in 07, so its been awhile for me. But I do remember an E1 and questioning and talking sh!t about everyone else who was above me, and thinking they were all retards :)

Some things never change though, you know, the banter, the hurry up and waits, the officers trying to make a name for themselves and so on. You might watch this again after you get out of the military and realize how much you miss it.

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Agree....it does have a realistic feel to what life in the military is actually like. Right down to the Sgt Maj screaming his head off. I had an Army Sgt Maj scream at me (comm guy) simply because he didn't have a cell phone and had to wait at the air terminal for 3 hours before he learned who he was waiting for was coming in the next day. My Maj was standing next to me so I looked at him and and walked back into my work trailer. He took the full force of the Sgt Maj and came back to me later to tell me "Thanks" with a very sarcastic tone. Fear the Sgt Maj.

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The events from the miniseries and the book happened almost 10 years ago, and at the time there was no "good vs evil" story to tell in any good way.

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True....on that subject, I am surprised at myself for thinking there would be an actual good-vs evil there here. Then again, I was also expecting some sort of theme with the embedded report but the show doesn't really count him as a main character.

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Actually, if you are familiar with David Simon's other work (mostly the Wire), you will notice that good vs evil is not a theme that he is interested in. His is more concerned with showing things from the middle management or bottom level workers prospective.

In this case, you see the war from the grunts pov. So StgMajor is an ahole most of the time (even though he has his moment of redemption in the last episode for a split second), most officers are incompetent and everything is hurry up and wait and does not make sense.

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Well, I don't have much to add to what all of you have said. I honestly knew very little of what had actually taken place during the invasion and US involvement in Iraq. Yet this miniseries has a very authentic feel to it, and it appears to actually be authentic, as one of the posters here has explained. The acting is not amazing, but after awhile you don't notice it anymore, it's good enough and there are very good dynamics between the characters. And yeah, I felt the character of the embedded reporter was a little too tight lipped, too withdrawn, it bothered me a little.
I'm really happy there was no "good versus evil" theme in this series. I don't believe the movies or books that have it, I feel they are trying to advocate some sort of ideology, sell me something. Life is complex and full of grey areas.

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I found this series very easy to watch (multiple times). True there are slower episodes than others, but all in all I found new things on different veiwings.

Maybe your perspective is skewed by your branch where your enemy is dry pixels on a distant screen vs enemy you can see and touch that more traditional ground force branches of Army and Marine experience.

As a line medic in the army, I laughed at the SGM rallying the troops via minutia, related to the bull *beep* of long road trips on convoy, and the various combat acheivements (combat squat, jacks etc...)

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I really loved this series (and the book) because it was such a close and "real" look at the life and work of these marines (and by extension, the entire military). In the interest of full disclosure, I am female and outside the viewer demographic for this series. Nevertheless, it effected me greatly. It helped me to see what war is really like--mostly waiting around followed by horrible, adrenaline-spiking terror and confusion. Talking sh!t about other people and messing around because you're bored and/or stressed out. Depending on your fellow marine/soldier/airman/sailor and him depending on you. All of you having each others' backs and understanding each other in a way no one else can. Honestly, and this may sound odd, it gave me hope and often it touched me profoundly--in a way no other military film/series ever has. It was real. Or at least as real as it can get. It was Wright's intention to bring that reality to the American public and to be as scrupulously honest and unbiased as a human can be. Of course no human can be, but Wright has a special talent for searching out the truth, even when it is personally painful. He is a very honest writer--and one who calls himself on his own mistakes. I think this is part of how he came to be respected by 1st recon. Another big part of this series is that is fleshes out what is the nature of war--and that is wanton destruction that tragically includes the destruction of more and more civilians with each war. right and wrong are grappled with heavily in the book--and by some of the marines.

I have to disagree about WWII. WWII was modern warfare, one of the hallmarks being gigantic casualty rates for civilians. It wasn't as black and white as we think, or at least as it has been presented to us in film, etc. There was some truly wicked crap going on in WWII on both sides. Why? It's the nature of war. This is what GK helped me understand--that all generations of soldiers are, in essence, the same people. They'd all understand each other--they're the same guys in different wars. Sure, WWII was much more a "freedom vs. tyranny" war (and as such the only war of the 20th century, IMHO, that needed to be fought by the US) and that was much more black and white. But when the question of war is NOT freedom being threatened that direly by a true foe on the same footing as you, the war is not justifiable. Why? the loss of civilian life will never be reconcilable with the gain. Of what? Regime change? Oil fields? Strategic position? Sheer greed? All of it is folly. That we have lost such great men and women to such folly is unbelievable to me--but I would never call their sacrifices a waste. because those men and women would've fought the same as the WWII generation. they fought for their country because they believed in it--even as it betrayed them. this makes them truly great people and I feel lucky to have them as defenders. I am honored by that. But I feel nothing but shame at my government for its disgusting exploitation of a great military force which consists of my fellow citizens. Nor do I forgive the American people of 2002/3, who lay down and accepted war as an answer largely without even questioning the reason or the cost. As Wright said, correctly, "we misuse [the military] at our own peril." And we misuse our military whenever we send them into war with no exit strategy, no real planning and no way to have as much a stake as the inhabitants of the country they invade (see Vietnam). We send them in expecting them to win when they have been set up to fail. The government will not stop doing this--it's up to us, the American people, to care enough about these men and women to tell the President (whichever one) and Congress, "Absolutely not--it's not worth the life of one American soldier."

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Chairforce knew the ending in advance because he watched CNN? Shocker.

Everything about this show speaks to Marines and Soldiers that served in a combat MOS. I watched this series AFTER I got out of the service and it was a very emotional experience for me. This is hands down the most realistic you can get without just showing unedited war footage. All the supply problems, morale issues, incompetent officers and crazy retard privates. All of it is 100% accurate. I swear I've had some of those exact same conversation while spending endless hours rolling around the desert in, you guessed it, a soft top HMMWV.

You mentioned ROE's and good vs evil....I believe you have totally missed the point of this series. It is an insight on the culture and the struggle of the common Soldier in the chaos of war. There is no right/wrong, good/evil just a series of challenges, choices and hard decisions that must be made by men under extreme physical and emotional stress.

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...the funny thing is while I watched the series about 5 years after it was shown on television, and maybe around a decade or so after the start of the second Iraq invasion, I still found the series engrossing. Much of it has to do with the story being told, but I also found it fascinating looking back at the start of the invasion with the knowledge of what occurs, at least broadly, after the series ended. Some of the dialogue between Fick and Colbert foresee the sectarian violence that would occur, and the moment when they discover the passport of a Syrian amongst the dead in the firefight at the bridge portends to the influx of foreign fighters, such as Al Qaeda, that would make up the insurgency. A couple of moments near the end, when Fick comes out with a list of needs from the Iraqis, hints at the counter-insurgency strategy that would be adopted later.

Like many have mentioned, David Simon and Ed Burns don't really do "good over evil" stories. Similar to "The Wire", the conflict and tension can come from those within the Marine Corps (such as "Captain America"), and their own internal struggles regarding civilian deaths, as well as the external Baathist loyalists / insurgents.

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