Los Angeles Times

An accomplish­ed mission

Richard Linklater’s daring mix of humor and loss against war backdrop disarms

- JUSTIN CHANG FILM CRITIC justin. chang@ latimes. com

Few American independen­t filmmakers are in the sequel business, but Richard Linklater, the most experiment­al of mainstream directors and vice versa, has long been a fascinatin­g exception to the rule.

His idea of a movie franchise — the decades- spanning romantic trilogy “Before Sunrise” ( 1995), “Before Sunset” ( 2004) and “Before Midnight” ( 2013) — is less an attempt at box- office longevity than a casually profound meditation on time and its paradoxes. The raucous college shenanigan­s of “Everybody Wants Some!!” ( 2016) may not have been a direct response to the highschool high jinks of “Dazed and Confused,” but the near- spiritual connection felt both intuitive and undeniable.

“Last Flag Flying,” Linklater’s warm, ribald and elegiac new comedy about three Vietnam vets having a fateful reunion, is another sequel of sorts, albeit to a picture that he neither wrote nor directed. If you’ve seen “The Last Detail,” Hal Ashby’s 1973 classic about two U. S. Navy sailors escorting a third to a military prison, you will recognize elements of that story haunting this one. If you haven’t seen it, don’t worry. The memory of Ashby’s movie enriches the experience, but “Last Flag Flying ” stands assuredly on its own.

Both f ilms are based on novels by Darryl Ponicsan ( who collaborat­ed with Linklater on the script for “Last Flag Flying ”), but unlike the books, the new movie deliberate­ly blurs the connection­s between past and present. Character names have been tweaked and narrative specifics altered to the point where the stories could be taking place in parallel universes, both of them called America. But the bond between the movies is more than plot- deep; it’s the rich sense of emotional continuity Linklater achieves that matters.

Larry Meadows, the sailor played by Randy Quaid in “The Last Detail,” has be- come Larry “Doc” Shepherd ( Steve Carell), a former Navy Corps medic whose downward- drooping mustache is like a distillati­on of purest tragedy. Richard “Mule” Mulhall, the gunner’s mate embodied by the late Otis Young, is now a veteran Marine and f iery Baptist preacher named Richard Mueller ( Laurence Fishburne), who still lets out the occasional “Oohrah!” in between impromptu sermons.

No nominal similariti­es bind Sal Nealon ( Bryan Cranston) to his “Last Detail” alter ego, perhaps because the name “Buddusky” is as inimitable as Jack Nich- olson’s magnificen­tly rascally performanc­e. But Cranston does what he can, which is plenty; he unleashes a back- slapping, barn- storming, unshackled id of a performanc­e. When we first meet Sal behind the counter of a bar in Norfolk, Va., we feel we know him instinctiv­ely: a hard drinker, a skirt chaser, the lovable, incorrigib­le life of the party.

Doc, the shy, sensitive widower who brings us into that bar, is a more mysterious f igure, and it doesn’t take us long to realize why. More than Sal or even Richard, who got his leg shot up in Vietnam and now hobbles around on a cane, Doc has seen his share of personal anguish. He spent two years in the brig in Vietnam — for reasons that, it’s implied, should have implicated his friends too — and more recently lost his only child, Larry Jr., a 21- year- old Marine reported killed in action in Baghdad.

Now on his way to bury his son at Arlington National Cemetery, Doc wants his old buddies at his side — a request they can hardly refuse, despite Richard’s reluctance to leave his wife ( Deanna Reed- Foster) and congregati­on behind. But the men’s plans change when they arrive at an Air Force base in Delaware and learn the true circumstan­ces of Larry Jr.’ s death, despite the efforts of a hardheaded colonel ( a supremely punchable Yul Vazquez) to spin them in a more heroic direction.

Doc, his grief exploding into fury at the dishonesty of the official response, decides his son will have a civilian burial in his New Hampshire hometown and arranges to transport the body there by train. Larry Jr.’ s loyal comrade Charlie ( a f ine J. Quinton Johnson) comes along for the ride, as do Richard and Sal, who spend most of the movie at each other’s throats, at times suggesting an angel and a devil respective­ly perched on Doc’s weary shoulders.

Linklater’s ear for the boisterous, colorful language of male bonding is almost without equal, and his grasp of the more explosive vernacular of male anger is no less acute. Beneath its off- color jokes and curseladen rants, “Last Flag Flying” offers a pointed considerat­ion of the hard choices that Americans of all generation­s have made to serve their country and of the betrayal they have felt when that country has not risen to the level of their sacrifice.

Linklater has never been exactly shy about giving voice to his politics, and here, with post- 9/ 11 anxiety running high and images of Saddam Hussein’s downfall blasting from every TV screen, he lets his characters cut loose, denouncing the corruption and futility of a U. S. military campaign with no apparent end in sight.

Of course, given all the traumas rattling the body politic at present, a f lashback to the George W. Bush years may f lood even the most unsympathe­tic viewer with a measure of nostalgia.

But if “Last Flag Flying ” plays like a period piece, it never feels musty or dated. On the contrary, it joins a solid company of timeless American movies that have saluted the courage of our troops while casting a hard, ambivalent eye on the government machinery that sends them into battle.

If that strikes you as an irresolvab­le contradict­ion, then so too might this movie’s mix of buoyant buddy comedy and blunt psychologi­cal realism. But it’s precisely those daring tonal juxtaposit­ions that make “Last Flag Flying ” so disarming: It’s a sharp critique of American bluster but also a sincere and funny valentine to everyday American life. Working with cinematogr­apher Shane Kelly, Linklater turns shabby everyday interiors — a U- Haul truck, an Amtrak car, a budget motel room — into spaces of warm, intimate communion.

Next to the realist triumphs that have made Linklater one of the most genuinely independen­t American f ilmmakers working today, “Last Flag Flying,” with its leisurely road- movie structure and grumpy- old- men shtick, inevitably feels more schematic, more self- consciousl­y written. You might roll your eyes whenever Richard, the most strident and least developed of the protagonis­ts, launches into another long- winded religious debate with Sal the swaggering atheist. But if their back- and- forth feels ladled on a bit thick, it also manages — like one piercing scene featuring a gem of a performanc­e by Cicely Tyson — to get at the tough questions looming at the edges of the characters’ experience.

How much do we want to know the real story? When is a consoling f iction preferable to a painful truth? Sometimes, as Sal makes furiously clear, you have to push back against authority and demand honest answers. In Richard’s estimation, you’re better off bending humbly to God’s will.

The quietly shattering final word on the matter belongs to Doc, and “Last Flag Flying,” having spent two hours talking a good, sometimes great game, is wise enough to shut up and listen.

 ?? Wilson Webb Amazon Studios / L i onsgate ?? BRYAN CRANSTON, left, and Laurence Fishburne play Vietnam veterans who reunite with a fellow vet ( Steve Carell) to help him bury his son, a Marine killed in Iraq, in Richard Linklater’s “Last Flag Flying.”
Wilson Webb Amazon Studios / L i onsgate BRYAN CRANSTON, left, and Laurence Fishburne play Vietnam veterans who reunite with a fellow vet ( Steve Carell) to help him bury his son, a Marine killed in Iraq, in Richard Linklater’s “Last Flag Flying.”

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