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thedrifter
10-04-06, 07:31 AM
Eastwood On 'Flags Of Our Fathers'

LOS ANGELES, Oct. 3, 2006

(CBS) One of the most famous images captured during World War II is a photo of a group of six Marines planting the United States flag on Iwo Jima's Mt. Suribachi.

"It was the biggest battle in Marine Corps history, the most loss of life of any Marine campaign," director Clint Eastwood tells CBS News correspondent Bill Whitaker in an exclusive interview.

Eastwood's new movie, "Flags of our Fathers," based on the book of the same title, is the true story of how one image electrified the nation.

It turned the flag raisers into instant heroes. The government used the heroic pose to raise money at a critical point in the war, never publicizing that this wasn't exactly what it seemed.

The Iwo Jima battle was a bloody, inch-by-inch battle to take the volcanic island, which had airstrips that were crucial to the planned U.S. invasion of Japan. With the Japanese hiding in miles of underground tunnels, Marines said Iwo Jima was like hell.

John Huffhines was with the 5th Marine division at the time.

"You never get over it. It’s always with you," Huffhines says.

It was on the fifth day of the invasion that the Marines took the high ground and planted a flag on Mt. Suribachi. The first flag is the one the Marines remember, they said at a recent reunion.

"The fighting stopped when the flag went up... It was quiet. Everybody stood up and cheered," Bob Day says.

Raymond Jacobs helped raise the first flag. He said an officer wanted it as a souvenir and ordered a bigger one to replace it. The raising of the second flag happened so quickly, the Marines thought it was nothing special. But it was.

"We often said that the first flag raising was for the Marines on the island on combat, whereas the second flag raising was for the American people back home," Jacobs says.

The battle for Iwo Jima raged for another month. Three of the six Marines in the famous picture lost their lives there. One of them, Sgt. Mike Strank, was fighting next to Ralph Griffiths.

"A shell dropped in front of him. It took Sgt. Strank’s heart and chest right out. Killed him, wounded me," Griffiths says.

As for the three Marines who survived the island, the pain of war would follow them until the end of their lives.

"I think they were all heroes," Eastwood says.

Eastwood says he's finishing a second movie on Iwo Jima, this one from the Japanese perspective. He wants the American audience to walk away from that movie thinking that "they are the good guys."

But by the same token, Eastwood wants Americans to know "that the price is pretty heavy and that the price is something the military people are always ready to stand by and pay ... and (the) American people should be appreciative of that."

Ellie

ggyoung
10-04-06, 11:18 AM
Ellie=========That was a very good post. Thank you. The Marine LT. who got the 2ed flag was from a little town 7 miles from where I live. His name was Lt. Tuttle. Manti, Utah.

thedrifter
10-05-06, 10:58 AM
'FLAGS' DRAPED IN OSCAR BUZZ

By LOU LUMENICK

October 5, 2006 -- THE Oscar race is picking up steam as screenings begin for Clint Eastwood's "Flags of Our Fathers," which has been leading handicappers' lists for Best Picture for months, based on the director's past performance.

An early look at this beautifully crafted, emotionally resonant and intellectually stimulating epic - due for release Oct. 20 - only fuels such speculation. But there is an interesting political twist to this story behind one of the most iconic photographs of all time.

While the primary focus is on the members of the Greatest Generation who raised the flag on the Japanese island of Iwo Jima during a crucial and bloody battle of World War II, a major secondary theme is the lies perpetuated by the U.S. government about that photo in service of the war effort.

Because two different flags were raised, there was initial confusion about the identities of the five servicemen (four Marines and one Navy corpsman) pictured in the famous photograph by Associated Press photographer Eddie Rosenthal, which did not show their faces.

In the film, the three surviving flag-raisers - played by Ryan Phillipe, Adam Beach and Jesse Bradford - try repeatedly to correct the record, but are rebuffed by government officials. Not only has the mother of a dead Marine who did not participate in the photo been notified that her son was in the picture, but the photo is being used to rally the war-weary nation to buy bonds.

The three servicemen - increasingly guilty about not only the deception but also about being labeled as heroes when so many of their comrades died - are sent on a bond tour, where they are seen "re-enacting" the flag-waving on a papier-maché mountain in Chicago's Soldier Field.

The emotional center of "Flag" is Ira Hayes (Beach), a Pima Indian who endures ugly racism even while being hailed as a hero.

The left-leaning Academy is likely to be receptive to the movie's skepticism about the government's truthfulness, which many will likely relate to the current administration's role in Iraq.

It wouldn't be the first time Oscar voters were tickled by a political twist in one of Eastwood's movies - 2004's "Million Dollar Baby," with what many took as a stealth pro-choice message, won the Best Picture Oscar.

Ellie