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       #Post#: 1766--------------------------------------------------
       IN THE VALLEY OF ELAH (2007)
       By: agate Date: July 26, 2017, 8:53 pm
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       IN THE VALLEY OF ELAH (2007)
       It is 2004, and in Tennessee, Hank (Tommy Lee Jones), who was
       once an MP in the military, is notified that his son Mike is
       AWOL though his unit arrived in the US only 4 days before, from
       the Iraq war.
       The rest of the movie is devoted to Hank’s quest to learn what
       has happened. He finds out, and it is horrible, especially since
       Hank and his wife Joan (Susan Sarandon) have already lost their
       older son to the military.
       The movie closes with a dedication: “For the children.” The
       viewer will probably have no doubt about the meaning of the
       dedication, and it doesn’t just pertain to this particular sadly
       bereft couple.
       Hank reveals himself to be very much a military man, down to the
       way he treats his shoes and the way he makes his bed. This man
       has been formed by the military and has the deepest respect for
       it. Hank loves the Bible and the flag and has tried hard to be a
       good father. That he is bigoted in his views comes out in one
       stressful scene but we suspect that ordinarily he makes an
       attempt at being more fair-minded than the grief-crazed Hank who
       calls his son’s Army buddy a wetback.
       He hasn’t got very far in his investigation before he encounters
       Emily, whose work as part of the city detective unit is made
       more tense on account of the jeering she is routinely  subjected
       to from some of her fellow cops in the office. She appears to be
       the only woman there, and the others insist on treating her as
       if she is soft–too kind to animals, a mere joke as a cop.
       We see her trying to meet their expectations of toughness as she
       deals with a young woman who keeps trying to tell her that her
       husband’s drowning of a dog in the bathtub, while their child is
       looking on, indicates that the man has an abusive, dangerous
       streak. The woman is sent away, after being told that after all
       her husband hasn’t actually harmed her or the child, but much
       later Emily witnesses the scene after the same man has drowned
       that woman in the bathtub–whereupon Emily, who by now has
       established herself as very much in control of her emotions,
       starts to cry.
       This story-within-a-story has little connection to the main
       plot–Hank’s search for the truth about his son, but it is very
       directly related to a more general point that the movie is
       making, in its quiet but definite way: A country that teaches
       its young people to admire thugs and violence is in big trouble,
       and the wars it sends them to fight will have a way of turning
       them into calloused shadows of their former selves.
       –As we find out only slowly, as Hank visits sleazy places to
       question people who might remember his son. He has traveled to
       Arizona, where his son’s base is, and what we see are bleak
       little diners, chicken shacks, strip clubs, the kinds of places
       found near a military base, hangouts for the soldiers during
       their time off.
       Hank’s encounters with the topless women are a study in a guy
       who has been trained to be “decent.” He keeps his eyes away from
       their inflated bosoms though the young men who constitute the
       rest of the customers stare appreciatively. Hank might have been
       like them when younger. Now he’s older–and looking for a son
       who’s disappeared.
       The bleak scene is at its bleakest when we see the crime scene.
       A couple of times we see a bunch of tumbleweed pulled away from
       a hole where it has been concealing some of the horror. The
       tumbleweed is one of the few bits of nature visible. Some of us
       might be reminded of one of the famous cowboy Roy Rogers’s
       signature songs, “Tumbling Tumbleweed,” and recall that the
       tumbleweed is one of the symbols in the Western movies, also
       known as shoot-em-ups, that were the steady diet of our US
       childhood.
       Off in one corner of that desert landscape is a neon sign:
       GUNS.
       Midway through the movie we are prepared to accept that Mike has
       met his death in a horrible way, probably at the hands of some
       of his buddies. But the movie doesn’t let us off so easily.
       There is more horror yet to come.
       As if it isn’t bad enough for Hank and Joan Deerfield to have
       lost both sons to the military, they (or at least Hank–we’re not
       sure he will tell his wife all of the details he eventually
       learns) are going to have to realize that Mike himself was as
       brutalized by the military system and its rules as the others.
       Whether or not the scene where Mike calls Hank just after having
       run over a child with his military vehicle actually happened or
       is Hank’s idea of something that could have happened doesn’t
       much matter. What matters is that in that scene, Hank probably
       let his son down badly. The son who was appealing to him for
       help didn’t really get it.
       The movie opens with Hank, the proud veteran, showing a man, who
       happens to be from El Salvador, how to do his job of hoisting
       the US flag, which was hanging upside down. He lectures the man,
       much as he himself was probably lectured in military training,
       on the meaning of a flag flown upside down: “It means we’re in a
       whole lot of trouble, so come save our ass because we don’t have
       a prayer in hell of saving ourselves.”
       The movie’s eye is on the upcoming generation, but in an
       understated way. There is Emily’s son David, who hears a bedtime
       story from Hank–the story of David and Goliath, in which Hank
       emphasizes David’s courage in being willing to tackle the giant
       with just five stones and a slingshot.
       Later we see Emily retelling the story to David, who asks, “But
       why would he let him fight a giant? I mean, when he was just a
       boy?”–to which she replies that she doesn’t know. David
       persists: “Wouldn’t he have been scared?” Her answer–while the
       scene shifts to Hank looking somberly at Mike’s Army photo):
       “Yeah, I think he would’ve been really scared.”
       When Hank makes his last trip to his son’s barracks to pick up
       his duffel bag, he stops to stare at the young man who is just
       coming in to take the empty cot and locker. We get only a
       glimpse of him but he is clearly very young, with his freshly
       cropped Army haircut. Earlier in the story, during Hank’s first
       visit to the barracks, he notes an empty cot–and is casually
       told, “We lost a man.”
       The extent to which the war has dehumanized Mike and his buddies
       is clear enough when one of them blithely tells how hungry they
       all were right after murdering their buddy–and how they all went
       to the chicken place to eat. The pale stricken faces of Emily
       and Hank upon hearing this brief account speak volumes: Now they
       know just how grim things have become.
       The acting is superb throughout this movie–particularly Charlize
       Theron as Emily and Tommy Lee Jones as Hank.  It is one of the
       best movies I’ve seen in a long time.
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