From Hell To Eternity-With The Film Adaptation Of James
Jones’ From Here To Eternity In
Mind
By Zack James
“You know I never got too deeply involved in the nuts and
bolts of Army life when I was drafted into that branch of the service in 1969
during the heart of the Vietnam War but I do know that down at the base of the
Army, down at the platoon, company, brigade level that the “top kick,” the
First Sergeant was the guy who made everything work. Forget the supply
sergeants who just stole whatever was not nailed down and sold what they could
to whoever would buy it. How do you think all those Army-Navy stores that we
bought our de riguer World War II surplus Army jackets, knapsacks and boots got
their inventory? Forget that foolishness too about how an “army travels on it
stomach,” the mess sergeants put out swill, keeping the good stuff for themselves
and the officers, always the officers getting their kick-backs, and there is
special place in hell for every freaking “mess” the way they have ruined
generations of young men’s appetites. It was the “top kick” and no other who
kept things going. That part of the film was straight up as far as I could
tell,” long-windedly as was his wont when he got “tagged” on a common subject answered
Sam Lowell to the question that Laura Perkins his long-time companion had asked
about the movie that they had just watched.
The movie; the classic black and white film adaptation of
James Jones’ just prior to American involvement via the dastardly deeds at
Pearl Harbor World War II book, From Here
To Eternity. Laura had at fist nixed the idea of seeing this film (brought
to them via the beauties of Netflix mail delivery-not streaming) because the
way the film had been described in the blurb it was a “war” film something she
shied away from. Sam told her that while it was a war film in the generic sense
it was much deeper than that, not some The
Longest Day or Saving Private Ryan
“blood and guts” and so he had persuaded her to watch it with him one Saturday
night after she had come home from a short but necessary stay in the hospital
and they had decided to just take it easy that night. She had liked the film so
much that she had immediately afterward asked the question about how true to
life it had been and had not been peeved as she had occasion to be many times when
he did his long-winded wont.
Knowing only a little of Sam’s checkered military career,
knowing basically that he had been in the military during the Vietnam War
period like her younger brother and a lot of other guys from Riverdale where
she and Sam had grown up during that turbulent time Laura had asked the
question after observing that “Top,” Sergeant
Warden played by hulky Burt Lancaster (“hulky” Laura’s term) seemed to have
been running the show quite nicely and efficiently while the philandering
Captain went off base to some rendezvous with some dishy dame (Sam’s term).
That seemed counter-intuitive to her since she had thought that officers, the
higher up the better, ran the show.
You know Sam’s answer and for a guy who was seven kinds of
hell to the Army in his time he had the “Army way” down pat. That was what
amazed Sam about seeing the film again after maybe forty years. How despite the
difference in time periods (pre-World War II and Vietnam, hell, from stories
that he had heard from younger “vets” from Afghanistan and Iraq in his work for
Veterans for Peace later too), the pre-war voluntary army versus a basically
conscripted army, and advances in the killing machine methods the same
“chicken-shit” stuff had happened back then. The same freaking stupid stuff
down at the base of the Army where it lived.
“Sure I knew guys like Prewett, the main antagonist played
by Montgomery Clift who was given the “treatment” because he did not want to
box for the company, a company whose only existence seemed to be so they could
win the regimental boxing tournament for the Captain who figured to ride that
to a Major’s rank, The tourney set for, get this, December 15, 1941, you knew
once you saw that date no damn tournament was going to happen. Yeah there was
no damn place for an odd-ball like Prewett despite the fact that he loved the
Army. Not many guys during my short time were thinking about making it a
career, about being “lifers” but Prewett out of the sticks down in Kentucky
where he probably didn’t even have shoes, didn’t get three “squares” a day
[three meals a day, okay] had it all mapped out. Figured on thirty years and an
easy grift. But he was only fooling himself, because even “from hunger” guys
who don’t toe the line don’t have long careers in that man’s Army-where do you
think the whole idea of “go along, to get along” came from. Sure the Army, the
politicians just picked it up later.”
“Guys like Maggio too?,” echoed Laura [Played by Frank
Sinatra in a great and underrated performance which should be mentioned since
we are now in the centennial of his birth.]
Sam chuckled, “Especially guys like Maggio, guys who half
the time like my brother had the “choice.” “The “choice”? queried Laura. “Yeah,
guys, guys for the neighborhoods, working-class ethnic guys, Italians, Irish,
maybe Eastern European, would get the choice. Not blacks, not many anyway who
were in segregated units at the time period of the film, although not in my
time hell blacks and Latinos were over-represented since the kids from the good
schools and neighborhoods took a pass on induction. You noticed you didn’t see any
black faces in high or low places in the film. Usually a guy like Maggio, my
brother, got into some trouble short of murder, one. My brother’s was for armed
robbery of a gas station for about fifty stinking bucks. He was seventeen and
so the judge, like a million judges handed the “choice” out. In my brother’s
case it was either three to five hard at Norfolk, you know about Norfolk,
right? [Laura nods silently.] Or join the Army, no that was not the way it was
put my brother told me, you would sign up for military service and you could s
choose the branch.”
“Needless to say that didn’t happen as much during the later
stages of the Vietnam War when going to that country was like a death warrant
but it happened. Still does even with a volunteer Army,” Sam continued. He
could see though that Laura’s eyes were glassing over so he moved on to some of
the other aspects of the film that seemed true.
“You know every guy was forever thinking about weekend
passes, passes to get away from the bases. Passes to go into some Army town
like in the film, or like Anniston down in Alabama where I took Advanced
Infantry Training (AIT) which would have put me in a unit just like Prewett’s
and Maggio’s except in 1968, 1969 nobody, no grunt, no canon-fodder, was being
sent to Hawaii as a final destination. The only place, or practically the only
place where 11 Bravos, infantry, were wanted and needed was hell-hole Vietnam.
Period.,” Sam prattled on nervously.
“You didn’t go to Vietnam, did you? You never told me much
about your military stuff, said it was in the past. Said the Veterans for Peace
stuff was what was important when we reconnected after all those years at our
fortieth class reunion back in 2006. I
heard something about you back then, back in about 1971 I think, about you
being arrested in some protest but I thought that was after you got out of the
service. My brother said something about it, and not in a nice way either. You
know how gung-ho he was.”
Sam red-faced as he answered said “he would talk about it
later.” “Yeah, going to town even in the hell-hole Deep South was something to
look forward to, to see girls, even if they were tramps and ‘skags’ Go get
drunk and drown in the sorrows of the hard fact that they were being trained to
be nothing but killers.” [Laura laughed remembering that old time term for the
less attractive girls in the class back in the 1960s.]
Then Sam turned sullen as he thought about the question that
was really being posed that night, posed beyond the film and the true aspects
of the film from the parade marching and drilling, the chow lines, the
rinky-dinky stuff, and the overlay of romance-Army style-foremost between “Top”
and the Captain’s wife, played by Deborah Kerr and in the background between
Prewett and Lorene, played by Donna Reed who would in turn in the 1960s become
a very loud Hollywood opponent of the Vietnam
madness. He chuckled silently no way the Army, peacetime or wartime, was
built for romance. Those love affairs were doomed just as his marriage to his
first wife was doomed when they hastily decided to do get married during the
heat of the Vietnam War. Mistake.
That was not what was agitating him just then but that scene
of Maggio escaping from the stockade all battered and half-dead (a few moments
later he would be dead but “free,” free from the brutal stockade). This night
under the spell of this film he would finally tell Laura about the end of his
Army career and be done with it.
“I freaked out a little at that scene of Maggio all battered
and bloody after he escaped from the stockade. I “served” two terms in the Army
stockade up at Fort Devens, you know up in Ayer mostly gone now as far as I know
so I know that it was no easy trip. I never ran into anybody as brutal as Sergeant
Judson (played by Ernest Borgnine) but it was no picnic even though I was being
held in a separate area for “political prisoners” and other malcontents whom
they didn’t want in the “general population” of the stockade.
Laura interrupted, “Are you serious?”
“Yes, let me tell the highlights now and some other time
when I have thought about how much I more I want to tell you I will go into
more detail. I am only going to tell you this much because of this damn film,”
Sam told Laura with a certain dry-voiced low tune.
“I didn’t resist the draft, didn’t have my head on straight enough
before I got inducted, got drafted, like your brother, like a million other guys
who when called-went-like it, hate it, you went and you know that was true in
Riverdale like in a million other towns. I had my anti-war views more lightly
held then, not enough to be a conscientious objector, a Quaker or so I thought.
About three days into basic I knew that I had made a mistake that my anti-war
views were a lot stronger than I realized (mixed in with confusion, a desire
not to die and a few other not always unconfused feelings). Needless to say as the
die got cast with me as an 11 Bravo my reactions got more intense. But not
enough until I got orders for Vietnam in the summer of 1970 to do anything
about it.
“Then I got “religion,” decided to go see the Quakers in
Cambridge that somebody told me about to see if they could help. In the meantime
I got married to Josie and I don’t want to talk about that tonight, please, okay.
I was supposed to report to Fort Lewis in Washington state for transport to
Vietnam but I was “advised” that if I went absent without leave (AWOL, like
Prewett) for a period that I would be “dropped from the rolls” out there and
could turn myself in to Devens and up there place my conscientious objector application
in. I did so. As basically a Catholic “just war” objector then the damn thing
was turned down then and I was set for orders back to Vietnam again.
“In those days, 1969, 1970 the war had gone on so long that anti-war
protestors were tired of the same old, same old demonstrations in Washington each
spring and fall and were beginning to demonstrate at military bases. I joined in
one of those in front of Devens one weekday-afternoon in my uniform. That was
the first special court-martial- (and stockade time-six months the maximum for
such a tribunal). At this time I had been given a civilian lawyer through the
Quakers who was pursuing my CO case in the federal court in Boston in a habeas
corpus action for illegal detention-basically that they should have approved my
CO application which was kind of a complicated legal argument more suitably to
be told later.
“I did the time without too much hassle, actually did a lot
of reading and thinking so it wasn’t a total bust. Then I got released after my
six months were up-no good time either since I refused to work and so on so I
got the full kick. When I got out though I was right back in because I refused to
wear the uniform. I am getting tired so let me finish up. I got another six
month sentence most of which I served when the federal courts came through on
that habeas action, I was discharged and told never to darken their, the Army’s,
doors again. Get this-with an honorable discharge which was right since they
should have discharged me prior to the stockade-that is what the court said. I’ll
tell you more sometime but just remember that look on Maggio’s face when he broke
out of the stockade. Free, free at last. That was me when I got out, okay.
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