December 2, 2007...12:15 am
The Cu Chi Tunnels, Produced and Directed by Mickey Grant ** HIGHLY RECOMMENDED
“During the war in Vietnam, thousands of people in the Vietnamese province of Cu Chi lived in an elaborate system of underground tunnels. Originally built in the time of the French, the tunnels were enlarged during the American presence. When the Americans began bombing the villages of Cu Chi, the survivors went underground where they remained for the duration of the war. The secret tunnels, which joined village to village and often passes beneath American bases, were not only fortifications for Viet Cong guerillas, but were also the center of community life. Hidden beneath the destroyed villages were schools and public spaces were hospitals where children were born and surgery was performed on casualties of war: underground were schools and public spaces where couples were married and private places where lovers met. There were even theaters where performers entertained with song and dance and traditional stories.
THE CU CHI TUNNELS, a Mickey Grant film, is the story of life underground told by the people who lived the experience. It is a story told by a surgeon, an artist, and actress, an engineer, and the few survivors of the guerilla band who left the tunnels each night to fight against an enemy of vastly superior strength. Attached to the guerilla bands were Viet Cong documentary cameramen and camerawomen whose footage of the war from the Vietnamese point of view and of love, life and death in the tunnels has survived and is used in the film. This extremely rare footage povides a fascinating kind of echo; we see and hear an actress perform in the wartime tunnels and then hear her describe the experience nearly thirty years later. “
I’d always wanted to know about these tunnels since I was a child. I never dreamed they could be as complex and vast as they actually were. Incredible story, a moving and brilliant film.















4 Comments
January 9, 2008 at 2:14 pm
[...] Posted by Dave On Fire on January 9, 2008 Hollywood eventually made a few excellent anti-war films about Vietnam, but even the best of these focussed on the suffering of American troops. Even today, the Vietnamese people are excluded from the mainstream narrative of the war. This 1 hour film by Mickey Grant is intended to rectify that imbalance (h/t RadicalFilms.co.uk). [...]
July 29, 2008 at 9:40 am
Who was the intended audience of this film?
July 30, 2008 at 10:09 pm
Do you mean Vietnamese or American? Personally, I think neither. To have an intended audience would imply some emotive ideological sub-text was involved. The film, however, appears to fairly clearly and simply document the lives of those that lived in and used the tunnels.
Here’s Mr. Grant’s website… http://www.creativehat.com
August 5, 2008 at 9:53 am
But why was it created? what was the purpose of creating the film? And who did they create it for?
Leave a Reply