Father Soldier Son - Documentary

Started by wilder, July 18, 2020, 03:23:59 AM

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wilder


This intimate documentary from The New York Times follows one military family over the course of ten years, becoming an intergenerational exploration of the meaning of sacrifice, purpose and American manhood in the aftermath of war.

Directed by Leslye Davis & Catrin Einhorn
Release Date - Now on Netflix

NYT's lengthy companion piece led me to this

Quote from: The New York TimesIsaac and Joey Eisch would not remember a time when the United States was not at war.

When their father, Brian Eisch, left for Afghanistan in 2010 as a sergeant first class in the Army, he became one of the more than 775,000 American troops who have served in the longest war in U.S. history. Isaac and Joey became two of the countless children waiting anxiously at home.

The costs of war are often tallied in troops lost or wounded, but there are other consequences that are harder to measure.

The New York Times has followed the Eisch family for a decade, as their relationships were tested through Brian's deployment, his homecoming and the aftermath. We watched the boys grow up in the shadow of their dad's military service, while he struggled to reclaim his identity. Over the years, Isaac and Joey were shaped not only by his sacrifices, but also by his deeply held beliefs about what it means to be a man and an American.

When we began, we didn't know how much joy and tragedy we would witness.

Comparisons to Boyhood will be inevitable, but what I felt that film lacked in dramatic purpose this documentary more than made up for.