Apocalypse Now (1979)
  - Information at Internet
    Movie Database
- 
  
  Looking Closer, review by Jeffrey Overstreet, "searching for truth, beauty 
  and meaning in the movies."
- Themes
  
    - Apocalyptic
- Confrontation with Evil,
        Interconnectedness
    
      - Willard's confrontation with Kurtz is a
            confrontation with the evil and ambiguity within himself: Willard:
            "I was going to the worst place in the world and I didn't even
            know it yet. Weeks away and hundreds of miles up a river that snaked
            through the war like a main circuit cable - plugged straight into
            Kurtz. It was no accident that I got to be the caretaker of Colonel
            Walter E. Kurtz's memory - anymore than being back in Saigon was an
            accident. There is no way to tell his story without telling my own.
            And if his story really is a confession, then so is mine."
- Kurtz: "It's impossible for words to describe
            what is necessary to those who do not know what horror means.
            Horror. Horror has a face, and you must make a friend of horror.
            Horror and moral terror are your friends. If they are not, then they
            are enemies to be feared. They are truly enemies."
 
- Despair
    
      - "The whole movie is a journey toward Willard's
            understanding of how Kurtz, one of the Army's best soldiers,
            penetrated the reality of war to such a depth that he could not look
            any longer without madness and despair." (Roger Ebert, Chicago
            Sun Times Review)
 
- Fear
    
      - Kurtz: "It's impossible for words to describe
            what is necessary to those who do not know what horror means.
            Horror. Horror has a face, and you must make a friend of horror.
            Horror and moral terror are your friends. If they are not, then they
            are enemies to be feared. They are truly enemies."
 
- Journey
    
      - Willard's journey into the jungle and confrontation
            with Kurtz. 
 
- Judgment
    
      - Kurtz: "I've seen the horrors, horrors that
            you've seen. But you have no right to call me a murderer. You have a
            right to kill me, you have a right to do that, but you have no right
            to judge me."
 
- Moral Ambiguity/Difficulty Discerning
        Evil
    
      - Kurtz: "Then I realized they were stronger
            than we. They have the strength, the strength to do that. If I had
            10 divisions of those men, then our troubles here would be over very
            quickly. You have to have men who are moral and at the same time who
            are able to utilize their primordial instincts to kill without
            feeling, without passion, without judgment."
 
- Scapegoat
    
      - Willard: "Everybody wanted me to do it, him
            most of all. I felt like he was up there, waiting for me to take the
            pain away. He just wanted to go out like a soldier, standing up, not
            like some poor, wasted, rag-assed renegade. Even the jungle wanted
            him dead, and that's who he really took his orders from
            anyway."
 
- Truth/Truthfulness
    
      - Willard: "It's a way we had over here with
            living with ourselves. We cut 'em in half with a machine gun and
            give'em a Band-Aid. It was a lie. And the more I saw them, the more
            I hated lies."
 
 
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