- It has the right ingredients: cynicism; satire; drama;
dirty political tricks; foreign intrigue; two fine actors, Val Kilmer and
Derek Luke; and even, a heavily contrived Hollywood-like happy ending.
However, David Mamet's latest flick, "Spartan," misses the target
by miles. It dodges the hard truth. America, which has been feeding off
a Pentagon-inspired hubris that has spawned 725 military bases in over
120 countries, is totally out-of-control (See, "The Sorrows of Empire,"
by Chalmers Johnson).
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- The focus of Mamet's contorted suspense yarn is a moral
corruption of a very benign quality, in a White House occupied by a "Bubba
Bill" Clinton type, or someone else just as shallow. There are some
references to a Homeland Security-like agency and to federal agents, who
think the U.S. Constitution is only a piece of paper. This is the kind
of silly nonsense, however, that you can regularly catch on any episode
of TV's "The West Wing."
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- The reality today is a lot grimmer than
Mamet dares to imagine. His film is drawn on too small a political canvas.
It is too darn nice. It's mildly entertaining, but it is not what is needed
now by a nation headed straight for hell. This country requires a mighty,
slashing jolt to bring it to its senses and Mamet gives it a hug. Unless
America's dangerous trend towards militarism and imperialism is reversed,
it will lead to the demise of our Republic and worse.
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- If only Mamet would have concentrated his tale on a
larger theme: such as the Bush-Cheney Gang's cozy connections to the corrupt
Enron Corporation. Now, there is a topic worthy of Mamet's talents. It
might have then gotten the attention of a country in denial about how things
really work in Washington and who is really in charge. And, it isn't that
cowardly Congress for sure, which is incapable of saying "no"
to the Pentagon.
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- The movie's title,"Spartan," comes from the
ancient Greek City/State of Sparta, famed for its devotion to a strict
code of military values. When another state requested military aid, the
Spartans sent it just "one" of its soldiers! The idea the U.S.
today could replicate the actions of Sparta is unthinkable. We do, however,
regularly export terror, death and mayhem, via sophisticated weapon systems.
For instance, "U.S. arms sales represent 44 percent of the global
market." And, we've trained hundreds of thousands of foreign military
officers and police, particularly from South America, in the art of torture
and assassination, according to Johnson.
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- In the film, the president's daughter is kidnapped from
her college dorm in Boston, and is sent packing off to Dubai, in the Persian
Gulf, by a White Sex Slave racket. In typical Hollywood fashion, Mamet
unfairly demonizes the Arabs as the bad guys here.
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- The president's handlers (William H. Macy and Ed O'Neill)
don't want the word to get out (shades of "Monicagate") that
the president, who was in Boston, too, when his daughter was lifted from
her apartment, was then secretly meeting with his mistress. The kidnappers
are unaware, also, that the blond headed woman that they have seized is
the daughter of the American president. Talk about a dumb bunch of gangsters!
The president's men then order the Pentagon's Special Operation robots,
Kilmer and Luke, on the case, with instructions "to stop at nothing
to get the girl back." Translation - it's okay for them to cheat,
steal and kill anyone that gets in the way. Then, more conspiracies and
more lies intervene as the plot goes from serial shoot outs to a disappointing
thud of an ending.
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- When the military characters were doing their bravado
spoutings in the "Spartan," I couldn't help but think of one
of the Secretary of Defense, Donald Rumsfeld's Orwellian-like cracks, made
back in 1983. He was then operating as chief arms supplier to Saddam Hussein,
on behalf of President Ronald Reagan (www.nogw.com). Rumsfeld insisted,
"The defeat of Iraq in the three-year-old war with Iran would be contrary
to U.S. interests," (p. 225 of Johnson's book). Johnson then documents
the radical metamorphosis in U.S. policy towards Iraq. He shows how, on
March 20, 2003, the Bush-Cheney Gang launched the invasion to serve the
interests of the Neocons, Halliburton, "Big Oil," getting the
American people to forget about how it had stolen the 2000 presidential
election and to satisfy the compulsion of the Military-Industrial Complex
to secure yet more bases around the globe (AmericaForSale.org).
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- Mamet, in his tepid film, paints the president's handlers
as amoral. His fiction, however, doesn't come close to describing the extremist
warmongers embedded in our Department of Defense, who have close ties to
Zionist Israel (p. 234 of Johnson's book). What is also disturbing about
America's present situation is how our foreign policy, and our gathering
of foreign intelligence, is becoming more and more a function of the Pentagon.
(Also, along the same line, see, "The New Pentagon Papers," by
Karen Kwiatkowski, 03/10/04, Salon.com.)
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- Johnson reminds us, too, of the notorious, "Operation
Northwoods." This was a draconian state-terrorism-modeled scheme,
devised by the Joint Chief of Staffs, in the 60s, to "clandestinely
shoot innocent people on American streets," and to use it as an excuse
for the U.S. to invade Cuba. Fortunately, the then-Secretary of Defense,
Robert McNamara, turned it down. What else has the Pentagon suggested,
along the same blood stained lines, since then, that hasn't been refused?
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- Now, you can see why Mamet wasn't even close to portraying
the awful, deeper and darker truth about America. In fact, his "Spartan"
film, with its pie-in-the-sky attitude, is more likely to mislead the people
into thinking, that they are relatively safe. He strongly implies, that
all the country has to do is to elect a good man as president, (supposedly,
it will be one that can keep his pants on), and everything will then be
just fine.
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- Oh, yea! I strongly suggest instead, that the people
read Chalmers Johnson's prophetic book, "The Sorrows of Empire,"
and think again!
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- © William Hughes 2004
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- William Hughes is the author of "Saying 'No' to
the War Party" (Iuniverse, Inc.). He can be reached at: liamhughes@mindspring.com.
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