There are many common picks for the greatest war movie ever made. Steven Spielberg’sSaving Private Ryanopens with an intense, PTSD-triggering recreation of the D-Day Landings and maintains that pace and momentum for nearly three hours. Michael Cimino’sThe Deer Hunterexposes the harrowing effects of war by limiting the actual warfare to around a half-hour of screen time and dedicating the rest of the movie to exploring the psychological impact of those experiences. Stanley Kubrick’sPaths of Gloryhas been dubbed the ultimate anti-war film, starring an impassioned Kirk Douglas as a colonel who has to defend his decision to save his men from going on a suicide mission as ordered.

Plenty of war films have been called the greatest ever made. But the title that comes up more than any other is Francis Ford Coppola’sApocalypse Now. There are many things that makeApocalypse Nowa masterpiece. The term “every frame a painting” is overused, but the cinematography ofApocalypse Nowis so mesmerizing and carefully crafted that it adheres to the old adage. Martin Sheen and Marlon Brando anchor the movie with a pair of captivating performances that are just as raw and intense as one another but in different ways. But above all, the thing that makes itthe ultimate war movieis that its surreal visual style transcends the trappings of a standard war film and deviates into full-blown horror.Apocalypse Nowis so bleak and unrelenting in its gonzo, psychedelic depiction of the horrors of warfare that it’s as shocking and disturbing as any horror movie.

Marlon Brando as Col Kurtz in the shadows in Apocalypse Now

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The novella that John Milius used as the basis for hisApocalypse Nowscript – Joseph Conrad’sHeart of Darkness– follows a sailor’s journey upriver. Along the way, he discovers the monster within himself along the way. Like Captain Willard’s mission to assassinate Colonel Kurtz, this sailor’s journey is symbolic of a descent into Hell. Minus the usual supernatural forces,Heart of Darknessis a classic horror story.Recontextualized in a Vietnam settingand realized on the big screen, it’s an even more startling tale of humanity’s inhumanity.

Dennis Hopper at Kurtz’s compound in Apocalypse Now

The Horror… The Horror…

Coppola dreamt up some of the most unsettling images ever put on film duringthe hellish years-long production ofApocalypse Now. A wounded Viet Cong soldier begs for water as he desperately tries to contain his entrails with a pot lid. There’s a jump scare when Chef stumbles across a hungry tiger in the jungle. Later, at Kurtz’s compound, Willard is presented with Chef’s recently severed, still jittering head. Willard’s climactic murder of Kurtz is cross-cut with the ritualistic slaughter of a water buffalo (which was filmed for real in a village where that was happening regularly).

“Ride of the Valkyries,” the most recognizable piece by Richard Wagner – Adolf Hitler’s favorite composer – ironically blares out of the helicopters’ speakers over the fascistic image of American troops raining bombs and hellfire down on innocent Vietnamese civilians with pure delight in their eyes. Brando’s creepy, unnerving performance manages to live up to the hype after the first two acts of the movie build an air of mystique around Kurtz. Kurtz is alwaysconcealed in the shadows like Nosferatu. His iconic final words, delivered perfectly by Brando, telegraph the other genre that this movie belongs to: “The horror… the horror…”

Perhaps the scariest thing aboutApocalypse Nowis that veterans who fought in Vietnam have called it one of the most accurate cinematic portrayals of the war. With severed heads and tiger attacks, some audiences might have assumed – or even hoped – that Coppola had exaggeratedthe horrors of the Vietnam Warfor cinematic effect. But, shockingly, a lot of this stuff is rooted in fact.

Charlie Don’t Surf

Apocalypse Nowwasn’t the first war movie to evoke horror imagery to realize the horrors of war in a cinematic medium. The midpoint twist inFull Metal Jacketis a shocking murder-suicide.The Deer Hunter’s Russian roulette scene caused widespread controversy. InSaving Private Ryan, a bewildered soldier picks up his own severed arm while he’scaught in the crossfire on the beaches of Normandy. InInglourious Basterds, the “Bear Jew” mercilessly beats Nazi officers to death with his baseball bat (and Aldo “The Apache” carves swastikas into the survivors’ foreheads). 2008’sRambois one of the goriest movies ever made, with a record-breaking kill count that topped slasher villains like Michael Myers, Freddy Krueger, and Jason Voorhees.

But in these cases, the gore and the jump scares offer a brief, unsettling detour from a standard war epic.Apocalypse Nowisa horror moviefrom the opening shot of jungles going up in flames to the climactic killing. With its uncompromisingly ugly portrayal of soldiers losing their humanity and American troops gleefully attacking helpless Vietnamese civilians, Coppola’s war epic is easily as terrifying asAlienorHalloweenorThe Texas Chain Saw Massacre(if not even more so).

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