
Da 5 Bloods 5 stars
I only recently found out about Spike Lee’s new movie, Da 5 Bloods that was released on Netflix back in June. With the pandemic it didn’t get a lot of attention this past summer. It has been described as an action movie about four black American soldiers returning to Vietnam, but it is much more than that. Lee brings this fictional story to the screen that gives us a history lesson and expresses the anguish that black men have gone through in giving their service to a country that doesn’t repay them. Lee starts with some archival footage of events leading up to the sixties and the Vietnam War that sets the tone. The four men in their seventies, played by Delroy Lindo, Norm Lewis, Clarke Peters and Isiah Whitlock, Jr. have journeyed to Vietnam in the present to reclaim the body of their fallen comrade and squad leader, Stormin’ Norman (Chadwick Boseman). Only they are also there to claim the treasure of gold that the US intended to pay to local Vietnamese to fight against the Vietcong. The men had buried the gold in the jungle during their tour during the war. Lee gives us scenes of the jungle fighting but in an interesting casting choice the older men also play the young versions of their characters in the war in 1968. The men, who call themselves Da Bloods, are all emotionally traumatized by the war and other events in their lives, especially Paul (Lindo) who has never gotten over the death of Norman as he blames himself for the loss. The movie is probably the best performance that Lindo has done. Chadwick Boseman who died this year gives us a fine performance in one of his last roles. There are several Vietnamese characters in the movie that give us their point of view of the war. They typically refer to it as The American War. Not only do we get plenty of emotional drama from the characters, but there is plenty of shooting and action when some rogue Vietnamese officers get wind of the mission. The outcome is reminiscent of other classic movies like The Treasure of the Sierra Madre when greed overcomes loyalty. (If you listen carefully you may hear a reference to that film.) There is no shortage of graphic scenes and the movie clocks in at two and one half hours so the dedicated viewer is in for quite a ride. Da 5 Bloods is another fine achievement by director Spike Lee and is destined for multiple awards in the awards season.