“I’ve been waiting 40 years for this film!” was a common refrain among the Vietnam War veterans and the South Vietnamese Americans – most with tears streaming down their faces – who gathered to witness their powerful story finally making it onto the big screen at the wildly popular premiere of “Ride the Thunder: A Vietnam War Story of Victory and Betrayal” – and now the cutting-edge film is expanding with showings in at least four states in May.
As WND reported, the vividly accurate film about one of the most shockingly misunderstood wars in American history took Westminster, California, by storm when it premiered in from March 27 to April 2, selling more than $30,000 in tickets in just three days during its limited release at a single movie theater. The film soared to No. 1 in the nation for box office revenue from March 27-29 on a per-theater basis.
And now the film is coming to the following theaters in California, Texas, Arizona and Nevada:
This is only the first stage of a national roll-out. More locations will be announced for June and July. Film makers encourage Americans to contact veterans, family and friends to spread the word about the film and share the website. Profits will support four charities: Semper Fi Fund, Agape International Missions, Field of Dreams and Allegiant Giving.
As WND reported, some South Vietnamese attendees at the Westminster premiere recalled their own heart-wrenching memories of more than a decade of starvation and torture in prison camps after they fought to keep their country free of communism. Separated from their wives and children, they saw friends and loved ones brutally murdered by North Vietnamese guards during their communist “re-education.”
And 40 years after the fall of Saigon and the end of the Vietnam War, U.S. Marine and Army veterans remembered harrowing fire fights alongside their South Vietnamese brothers in arms – and their return to a nation that turned its back on its own freedom fighters.
But the momentous event wasn’t about re-opening old wounds.
Instead, it was a heartfelt celebration of brotherhood, a long overdue welcome home and a chance to finally tell the incredible story of unparalleled sacrifice that most Americans have never heard.
“The film record of the Vietnam War is what will determine history 10, 20, 50 years from now when all the Vietnam veterans are gone,” Richard Botkin, executive producer of “Ride the Thunder,” told WND at the red-carpet event.
Watch the trailer for the film:
Many popular films dealing with Vietnam – such as “Apocalypse Now,” “The Deer Hunter,” “Platoon,” “Good Morning, Vietnam,” “Rambo” and “Full Metal Jacket” – serve as great entertainment, Botkin said, but they often grossly distort the reality of the warriors who fought courageously to stop the spread of communism.
“Those films portray our troops as victims, as dupes,” he said. “It marginalizes them, shows them very unfavorably and the leadership unfavorably. It shows our Vietnamese allies as even worse. Our film is an effort to begin to turn the tide against that so that, in the future, people will realize that America was right to fight in Vietnam, to stop communism, and that our South Vietnamese allies were worthy of our sacrifice and that they fought well also.”
The main character of the film is South Vietnamese Marine commander Le Ba Binh, who was a prime example of enduring courage in a battle of David and Goliath proportions as his battalion of only 700 men held 20,000 communist invaders in Dong Ha.
Binh, a man with few equals in the war-fighting profession, served 13 years in heavy combat (1962-1975) and another 11 years in communist prison camps. Despite numerous battle wounds and lost comrades, he showed unwavering courage in the face of extreme hardship.
“Americans, when they went to Vietnam, if they were a Marine, they went 13 months for one tour. If they were in the Army, 12 months. Some men went two or three times, but very few,” Botkin explained.
“The Vietnamese generally had one tour that ended with death or dismemberment, so they fought forever. My main character, Binh, fought forever – 13 years, wounded nine times. At the end of the war, the communists put him in prison – they called it euphemistically ‘re-education camp’ – for 11 years. He comes to the U.S. because he’ll never get ahead in Vietnam. He comes to the U.S. with nothing and prospers. That’s the Vietnamese story in America – suffering, hardship, come to America, work hard and succeed. It’s a great story.”
Botkin traveled to Vietnam seven times to do research for the film and the WND book that inspired it, “Ride the Thunder: A Vietnam War Story of Honor and Triumph.” He and Binh visited Saigon and toured battlefields where the South Vietnamese Marines and their American advisers had fought so valiantly.
“Ride the Thunder” Executive Director Richard Botkin at the premiere of the film:
The film cast includes many Vietnamese “boat people,” refugees who came to America’s shores on overcrowded boats. They endured violent storms and even vicious attacks by pirates. An estimated 250,000 refugees would die at sea in their unwavering pursuit of freedom.
“No one dies breaking in to communist countries,” Botkin said. “They all die breaking out. These people broke out. They were the risk takers. Those are the people who came to the United States. We got the best of the best. The risk takers came here, and that’s why they’ve done so well.”
Botkin’s name was on the lips of most veterans and Vietnamese-Americans attending the premiere, all of whom said they were profoundly grateful that he and Producer Fred Koster endeavored for so many years to finally bring the untold story to the big screen.
One Vietnamese couple, Kim Ly and Thomas Ly, was filled with emotion after seeing the film.
With tears welling in her eyes, Kim told WND, “There were a lot of memories. We cried so much when we were watching that movie.”
Thomas said his brother, an Army of the Republic of Vietnam general who was famous for his leadership at the Battle of An Loc in 1972, is his “first hero.”
“But Richard Botkin, he’s my second hero,” Thomas said. “When I watch this film, I am so proud.”
See the emotional reactions to the “Ride the Thunder” film:
WND also interviewed Col. Gerry Turley, member of an all-star American team of advisers who found the moral courage to persevere when he was forced into one of the highest positions of leadership in the midst of a brutal and bloody confrontation.
Turley, whose real-life story is told in the book, admired Binh’s determination and sacrifice.
“I think that Col. Binh was illustrative of all of those other Vietnamese officers who served their country,” he said. “He really laid his life on the line so many times. Then he became a prisoner. All he had to do was say, ‘I accept communism.’”
Another leading character in the book and film is the late U.S. Marine Capt. John Ripley, who showed exceptional physical strength and courage when he took on the superhuman task of detonating a steel bridge at Dong Ha on Easter Sunday, 1972 – before the enemy could cross with its tanks and 20,000 invaders.
Ripley had not slept or eaten a solid meal in four days when he shimmied up and down the I-beams of the bridge for nearly four hours, rigging them for detonation. His legs dangled like moving targets, inviting enemy fire from snipers and North Vietnamese tanks. While most people might never have dared attempt the monstrous feat, Ripley never backed down, purchasing critical time for allied forces.
Hollywood actor Eric St. John played the part of Ripley in the film. He said he drew all of his inspiration and insight on Ripley’s character from the WND book, “Ride the Thunder.”
“It was a tremendous honor to play this great man. There’s a responsibility when you play such a great person, a historical figure,” he told WND. “There’s an abundance of great material about him, his life, his family, what he did in the war. It makes the job easier as an actor when you have a book with such rich details about this person’s life. Usually you’re using your imagination and also your life experiences, but … it was great to have that book to go to and get all those details. I hope I did him justice.”
Capt. Ed McCourt, who served in Vietnam in the 3rd Battalion, 3rd Marines, knew Ripley personally. McCourt, who grew emotional when recalling his time in Vietnam, told WND the film accurately depicted Ripley, the war heroes and the reality of the battles they fought.
“John Ripley was a real Christian type of individual,” he said. “Fidelity was number 1 on his list. He was a super individual, inside and out. … His troops would follow him to hell and back just because he asked them to go. That’s the kind of leader he was. … When his company would go out, he was like a [North Vietnamese Army] magnet. Every time they’d go out, they’d get in a fire fight.”
McCourt said his Marines liked to go with Ripley on patrol because “we knew we’d get into something and not just walk around for six or seven days.”
McCourt lamented that the U.S. military is still enforcing the same rules of engagement he says handicapped the warriors in Vietnam.
“We’ve got the same thing happening right now,” he said. “We send Marines, soldiers, airmen, Navy SEALs and whatever to combat, but we’ve got rules of engagement that will not let them win. This is ridiculous. We didn’t learn anything in Vietnam when it comes to that.”
Read more at http://www.wnd.com/2015/05/vietnam-war-story-takes-america-by-storm/#JhWuJxgWBaGgbzdy.99
http://www.wnd.com/2015/05/vietnam-war-story-takes-america-by-storm/#jClVyp87xWiH2pob.01
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