The Anderson Platoon

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The Anderson Platoon
La Section Anderson
The Anderson Platoon VHS cover.png
VHS cover image
Directed by Pierre Schoendoerffer
Written byPierre Schoendoerffer
Produced byPierre Schoendoerffer
Starring Joseph B. Anderson
Narrated by Pierre Schoendoerffer
Stuart Whitman English version
Cinematography Dominique Merlin
Distributed by Office de Radiodiffusion Télévision Française (France)
CBS(US)
Release dates
  • 3 February 1967 (1967-02-03)(France)
  • 1967 (1967)
Running time
60 minutes
65 minutes (uncut)
CountryFrance
LanguagesFrench
English

The Anderson Platoon (French : La Section Anderson, released in 1966 in Europe, 1967 in the US) is a documentary feature by Pierre Schoendoerffer about the Vietnam War, named after the leader of the platoon - Lieutenant Joseph B. Anderson - with which Schoendeorffer was embedded. Two decades later, a sequel was released as Reminiscence.

Contents

Background

In summer 1966, France Soir news magazine director and French public channel ORTF producer Pierre Lazareff proposed that war reporter and director Pierre Schoendoerffer complete the "unachieved" war documentary Schoendoerffer began in 1954.

Back in May 1954, Schoendoerffer was covering the First Indochina War for the French army's cinematographic service SCA. At the siege of Dien Bien Phu, he filmed the battle between the French Union forces and the Viet Minh, but his reels were captured when he surrendered to the enemy.

After French forces departed from Vietnam in 1956, the United States increased their support for the south, culminating in full scale military intervention and the Vietnam War.

Arguing that "the war was the same, the French only switching with the Americans", Lazareff convinced the French veteran to return to Vietnam as a kind of second chance to complete his war documentary.

Premise

The French war cameraman and First Indochina War veteran Schoendoerffer (38), already famous for his celebrated masterpiece The 317th Platoon (1965), returns to Vietnam.

On 1 August 1965, the 1st Cavalry Division (United States) is sent to South Vietnam. The following year in September, Schoendoerffer joins it and follows a 33-man platoon of GIs led by Black West Pointer Lieutenant Joseph B. Anderson (24) until October 1966.

Reception

The Anderson Platoon was screened in more than 20 countries and won several prizes, including an Oscar for Best Documentary Feature Film on April 10, 1968, at the Santa Monica Civic Auditorium. [1]

Anderson's comments

Some time after the film was released, Captain Joseph B. Anderson, Jr., the leader of the unit of the US Army's 1st Cavalry Division after whom the film is named, commented on the film (and on his other experiences in Vietnam and in the military, in general). He observed:

After visiting different operations around the country, both army and Marine, he settled on the 1st Cav because of the new approach of our air mobility, or helicopter orientation. And he wound up with my platoon because of its racial mix - we had American Indians and Mexican-Americans - to our success in finding the lost platoon, my West Point background and ability to speak French. He and the film crew stayed with us day and night for six weeks, filming everything we did. They spoke very good English, and I didn't speak good enough French. And Schoendoerffer had as much knowledge and experience about the war as any of us. The film would be called The Anderson Platoon. And it would make us famous. [4]

Captain Anderson discusses the death from friendly fire of a white soldier from California named Shannon, who is also introduced in the film. Anderson states: "I did write a letter to his folks, telling them he did an exceptionally good job. I did not describe the circumstances under which he was killed, because we were directed not to put those kinds of details in letters whatever the case may be." He continues: "The film describes the grenade as an enemy grenade. Which is not the real circumstances."

Captain Anderson notes: "I spent my last months in the base camp at An Khê, an aide to the commanding general. Being featured in The Anderson Platoon had obviously helped my career."

Releases

Television

The Anderson Platoon was broadcast on the French public channel ORTF's monthly show Cinq colonnes à la une on February 3, 1967.[ citation needed ]

CBS premiered the English dub version on television in the United States on July 4, 1967.[ citation needed ] Shortly after its 1968 Academy Award, it was broadcast a second time in France's ORTF.[ citation needed ]

In West Germany, the 62 min. version was broadcast on July 17, 1968, on NDR, SFB, and Bremen III. After the Berlin Wall's fall it was broadcast in Germany, on WDR, on January 15, 1995.[ citation needed ]

Theater

This documentary was originally made for a French TV show and was released in theaters in the United States only.[ citation needed ]

Alternate titles

Home video

The Anderson Platoon was made available on VHS tapes in the United States only.[ citation needed ]

A 60 min. VHS re-edited uncensored video edition was released in December 1987 by Hollywood Select Video. It was re-released by Timeless Video in May 1990. Timeless released a second print in June 1999.[ citation needed ]

By June 2000, Homevision released the original 65 min. French version subtitled in English.[ citation needed ]

Video on demand

In France it was available online April 26, 2006 as a VOD pay-per-view service through the National Audiovisual Institute's website hosting the ORTF archives.[ citation needed ]

Reminiscence

A sequel to The Anderson Platoon, entitled Reminiscence, was released in 1989.[ citation needed ] It depicts Schoendoerffer's meeting the platoon survivors 20 years after the events.[ citation needed ]

See also

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References

  1. "The 40th Academy Awards (1968) Nominees and Winners". oscars.org. Archived from the original on 3 November 2014. Retrieved 11 February 2024.
  2. "Prix Italia (1967)". Internet Movie Database. Retrieved 3 November 2020.
  3. "NY Times: The Anderson Platoon". Movies & TV Dept. The New York Times . 2011. Archived from the original on 21 May 2011. Retrieved 9 November 2008.
  4. Terry, Wallace (1984). Bloods: An Oral History of the Vietnam War by Black Veterans. Random House. pp. 227 225–234. ISBN   0394530284.