It's been a while since I've chosen a film- I think this is actually only the second or third time that I have. I chose Peter Davis'
Hearts and Minds for a couple of reasons. I've been wanting to watch a documentary and I recently read the book
Bloods, which is a collection of black Vietnam veterans' oral accounts of their experiences in Vietnam. Not only did they deal with the atrocities of the actual war, but they also delt with racism from their fellow soldiers and the knowledge that they were fighting for a country that was not fighting for them. It was a great book, and I wanted to learn more about the war and the events surrounding it, including its ties to the Cold War.
Hearts and Minds seems to encompass all of that and more, and appears to be the most widely acclaimed documentary of the war. If any of you have already seen it please let me know because I can always pick another- I've got months of not choosing anything to make up for.

A landmark in documentary feature films, this Academy Award-winning documentary is an insightful critique of the US's cataclysmic involvement in Vietnam. The film exposes the duplicitous nature of the American government, obsessive in its quest to squelch Communism and advance its own imperialist agenda, documented here in a media-savvy trail of propaganda ranging from archival footage, excerpts from press conferences, newsreels, and clips from jingoistic Hollywood war pictures. Director Peter Davis also uses damaging interviews (including disturbingly racist comments from US soldiers and General William Westmoreland), pop music from the period, and material he shot himself in Vietnam to create an indelible visual essay against war. Eschewing narration, the film has a cinema verite style, which gains its power from juxtaposition and the severity of its images. Released only two short years after the January 1973 agreement that brought home U.S. troops, the film stands as one of the strongest films condemning the war and the America's involvement in it. HEARTS AND MINDS's title derives from a now-infamous speech given by former President Lyndon Johnson in which he stated, "The ultimate victory will depend on the hearts and minds of the people who actually live there."