Director's
Statement
I didn't go to film school – I went to
work, raised a family, built a business. I
don't know or care what post-modern anything
is and while I subscribe to the New Yorker,
I can tell you there’re not enough pictures
for me and I don't get the cartoons. I like
a thick steak, and tequila over ice, and I'm
beginning to think my wife isn't as smart as
I thought she was since she hasn't divorced
me yet. I know what my IQ is but I'm not smart enough to understand what it means.
And I don't make films, I make movies – about
real life, not what passes for real life
in Hollywood. No one's going to lose a guy
in ten days in any of my movies.
Courage Doesn't Ask is a movie about honor, duty and service
in the military, and the courage it takes to serve, no matter who you are or
what you do. The U.S. Government has refused to support Courage citing the Don't
Ask, Don't Tell policy against gays serving in the military.
But Courage is not a movie
about gays in the military – this
isn't "Brokeback Army"; in fact, there is no gay character or storyline in the
entire movie. It is, rather, a movie about the kind of men and women who volunteer
and serve with dedication and honor. It is a movie about the realities of service
in an all volunteer military; where men and women from all walks of life join,
driven largely by the triad of duty, pride, and service – those
elusive qualities we call honor, be they
exhibited by straight or gay soldiers, sailors
or marines.
Courage is
not a movie
about lifestyle,
nor is it
a polarized
version of the military à la John Wayne or Oliver Stone that asks you
to believe the military is inherently good or evil. Instead, Courage asks you
to consider that the military does and should represent the civilian population
it serves and protects: white, black, brown, straight, gay, men, women.Part of
our cast includes actual gay veterans, which we included in the movie to put
a face on the issue. Most Americans don't agree with the Don't Ask, Don't Tell
policy, but neither do they want Jack from "Will & Grace" defending our country.
Parenthetically, I can assure you that neither do any of the gay veterans with
whom I’ve spoken.
By ignoring a gay storyline but identifying the actors as gay veterans, Courage
Doesn't Ask stands for the proposition that being gay in combat is as transparent
as being black, brown, white, Democrat, Republican. It just doesn't make a damn
bit of difference and shouldn't disqualify otherwise honorable service.
This is the right movie to make and the right
time to make it. Rather than focusing on
a gay storyline, it focuses on the mission
of the military and asks the question, "If
our national defense is really an issue,
don't we want to engage the best and most
dedicated people to defend us?"
Courage isn't straight or gay, it just is ... courage runs toward danger, not
away ... courage doesn't ask, it shouldn't have to.
– Joe Acton
Summer 2006 |
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