Countless reviews of Francis Ford Coppola’s cinematic
masterpiece Apocalypse Now cite
Dante’s Inferno as an inspiration.
I’ve included two such reviews in this post, but I don’t think either of them
go far enough to explain the parallels between Apocalypse Now and Inferno. They only mention in passing what is essentially Apocalypse Now's backbone. The film, which chronicles an American riverboat captain’s journey through
hostile territories in the Vietnam War, is essentially a modern re-telling of
Dante’s classic text. This explicit, gritty war picture gives us a journey
through the darkest depths of humanity that strikes many of the same chords as
Dante’s Inferno.
The
film begins with a monologue by Capt. Willard, the protagonist, as he is
stationed at a military base in Vietnam. He explains that he has already gone
back home, but returned because he couldn’t function in the normal world after
having seen so much action. During this monologue he is seen lying in his room,
in the dark, crying out in despair. This is already so much like Dante, who at
the beginning of Inferno finds himself lost in darkness, without hope. Willard
is called up on a mission to assassinate a colonel who has gone insane and
created his own army of Vietnamese natives. For this mission, Willard has to
navigate a riverboat deep into enemy territory. He accepts, and embarks on a
journey that displays some of the most horrifying aspects of humanity. Again,
like Dante, Willard is called up from a higher power to embark on a perilous
journey.
As he carries out his mission and
goes deeper and deeper into enemy territory, eventually reaching Cambodia,
Willard encounters a variety of sinners; among them are his army brethren. They
display sins of lust (notably when they are going crazy for two playmates who
arrive on a U.S. open tour), drug abuse, anger and violence. He also faces attacks
from Viet Cong and various locals. Despite certain similarities between the
people Willard encounters and the various sinners and demons in Inferno, what really strikes the viewer
is Willard’s spirituality. As Willard continues through this hellacious
landscape and witnesses more and more depravity, he appears to grow less afraid
of death. As he begins to deteriorate physically, he becomes more introspective
and spiritually aware. Also noteworthy is the lack of hope seen throughout the
film. As the men on Willard’s riverboat witness more and more horrors, they
become fully dispirited and let themselves get killed. Willard also comes to
understand that the man he was sent to kill went crazy because he lost hope in
his society, and everything he had previously stood for. This lack of hope we
see is like a punishment for sins committed, as in Inferno. Some soldiers also exemplify a disconnection from reality
that is rampant in the condemned souls of the Inferno. A number of men go
surfing during an air strike, and carelessly ride through waves while
sustaining heavy enemy fire. This comedic myopia is reminiscent of the sinners
in Canto VII, who are made to push heavy boulders around a ring until they
collide with one another.
Maybe Coppola made this film to
show us that war is the closest thing we have to hell on earth, not just
because of the fire and pain and misery, but because it’s where we see the
extent of the darkness that lurks within the human spirit. That, I think, is a
large part of what Dante wanted to convey in Inferno. This fantastic film has held up so well over time,
probably because its creators had read and understood Inferno, transcending some of its main points into this modern
horror story.
I've never seen the movie, but I'd be interested in seeing a comparison of it to Sandow Birk's puppet film, as both are designed to be modern adaptations on Dante's work.
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