Times Colonist

PBS to air 10-part Vietnam War documentar­y

- LUAINE LEE

BEVERLY HILLS, California — Ken Burns has gone to war again. The filmmaker, so well known for his documentar­ies on baseball, jazz, prohibitio­n, the national parks and the dust bowl, has already provided definitive films on the Civil War and the Second World War. But on Sept. 17 he launches his most controvers­ial documentar­y yet, The Vietnam War.

His aim, he says, was to tell the story from both sides of the conflict and in human terms. “It’s enough to spend 10 years just trying to wrestle this story to the ground, and we felt that it was hugely important because the story is rarely told from more than one perspectiv­e,” he says.

“Americans like to talk about this seminal event. And we believe that it’s the most important event in United States history since the Second World War. We tend to talk only about ourselves. And the triangulat­ion that we thought we could achieve by having these other voices and other perspectiv­es would lend credence to the idea that there isn’t a SINGLE truth in the war,” he says in a press gathering here.

“In fact, there’s many truths that can coexist, and that might help to take the fuel rods out of the division and polarizati­on that was born in Vietnam that continues to this moment.”

The 10-episode, 18-hour series airs on PBS and includes rare and remastered archival footage, historic news broadcasts, home movies, and even rare audio recordings from inside the White House. It features music from the most famous artists of the era as well as original tunes from Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross and works of the Silk Road Ensemble with YoYo Ma and his mournful cello.

Burns and co-director Lynn Novick, spoke with thousands of witnesses in researchin­g the project, and 79 are featured in the series.

There were also prominent people who they did not interview. “One of the first things we did is we went to John McCain and John Kerry and said, ’We need your help. We’re going to do this, but we’re not going to interview you,” says Burns. “You will be in it in your archival selves, but you’re alive today. And we don’t want you in any way sort of spinning or anything like that.’ We didn’t quite put it that way,” he smiles.

“We weren’t going to talk to Dr. Kissinger or Jane Fonda or a number of other people.”

One of those directly involved in the conflict was retired Air Force Gen. Merrill McPeak, who says he knew the minute he landed in Vietnam that the U.S. could not win the war.

“It was obvious to me that this was a losing effort. The Saigon regime was corrupt. Everybody knew it. We knew it. They knew it. They were not popular in their own country, and I concluded that this just wasn’t going to work because the policy foundation­s weren’t set properly to enable us to win,” he says.

 ??  ?? Soldiers are on patrol in this scene from Ken Burns’ documentar­y, The Vietnam War. The series premières Sept. 17 on PBS.
Soldiers are on patrol in this scene from Ken Burns’ documentar­y, The Vietnam War. The series premières Sept. 17 on PBS.

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