Apocalypse Now!
Apocalypse Now! Francis Ford Coppola’s Apocalypse Now is not a war film in the conventional sense. It does not explain Vietnam. It does not argue policy, strategy, or ideology. It dissolves those concerns almost immediately. What Coppola is after is something far more disturbing: the moment when civilization peels away and reveals that the line between order and chaos was always imaginary. This is not a movie about what war does to men. It is a movie about what men were already capable of, given permission. From its opening moments, Apocalypse Now announces that reality itself is unstable. The ceiling fan dissolves into helicopter blades, napalm blooms like a flower against the jungle, and Jim Morrison’s voice drifts in like a ghost already resigned to madness. Captain Willard is introduced drunk, broken, punching a mirror until blood runs down his hand. The war is not something he is going to—it is something that has already colonized his mind. Coppola begins...