The Anderson Platoon

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The Anderson Platoon
La Section Anderson

Titlescreen
Directed by Pierre Schoendoerffer
Narrated by Pierre Schoendoerffer
Stuart Whitman English version
Starring Joseph B. Anderson
Music by Raymond Adam
Cinematography Dominique Merlin
Distributed by French Broadcasting System
Pathé Contemporary Films
Release date(s) Flag of France February 3, 1967
Flag of Italy 1967
Flag of the United States April 10, 1968
Flag of Germany July 17, 1968
Flag of the United Kingdom 1968
Running time 60 minutes / 65 minutes (uncut)
Country Flag of France France
Language French
English
All Movie Guide profile
IMDb profile

The Anderson Platoon (original French title: La Section Anderson) is an acclaimed documentary feature by Pierre Schoendoerffer about the Vietnam War. Two decades later, a sequel was released as Reminiscence.

Contents

In summer 1966, France Soir news magazine director and French public channel ORTF producer Pierre Lazareff proposed that war reporter and director Pierre Schoendoerffer complete his "unachieved" war documentary he did in 1954.

Back in May 1954, Schoendoerffer was covering the First Indochina War for the French army's cinematographic service SCA. At the siege of Dien Bien Phu he filmed the battle between the French Union forces and the Viet Minh but his reels were captured when he surrendered to the enemy.

After the departure of the French forces from Vietnam in 1956 the U.S. Army replaced it and fighting soon flared again, the beginning of the Vietnam War (known in France as the Second Indochina War).

Arguing that "the war was the same, the French only switching with the Americans", Lazareff convinced the French veteran to return to Vietnam as a kind of second chance to complete his war documentary.

The French war cameraman and First Indochina War veteran Schoendoerffer (38), already famous for his celebrated masterpiece The 317th Platoon, returns to Vietnam.

On 1 August 1965, the U.S. 1st Air Cavalry Division is sent to South Vietnam. The following year in September, Schoendoerffer joins it and follows a 33-man platoon of GIs led by Black West Pointer Lieutenant Joseph B. Anderson (24) until October 1966.

The Anderson Platoon has been shown in more than 20 countries and won several prizes including an Oscar on April 10th 1968 at the Santa Monica Civic Auditorium.

An Air Cavalry member holding a machine gun. (09.1966)
An Air Cavalry member holding a machine gun. (09.1966)
Evacuation of a fallen member of the platoon through a sanitary Bell Iroquois chopper. (09.1966)
Evacuation of a fallen member of the platoon through a sanitary Bell Iroquois chopper. (09.1966)

The Anderson Platoon was broadcasted on the French public channel ORTF's monthly show Cinq colonnes à la une in February 3rd 1967.

The English dub version was premiered on television in the United States on July 4th 1967 by CBS. Shortly after its 1968 Academy Award, it was broadcasted a second time in France's ORTF.

In West Germany, the 62mn version was broadcasted in July 17th 1968 on NDR, SFB and Bremen III. After the Berlin wall's fall out it was broadcasted in Germany, on WDR, in January 15th 1995.

This documentary was originally made for a French TV show and was released in theaters in the United States only.

The Anderson Platoon was made available on tapes in the United States only.

A 60mn VHS video edition was released in December 1987 by Hollywood Select. It was re-released by Timeless Video in May 1990. Timeless released a second print in June 1999.

By June 2000, Homevision released the original 65mn French version subtitled in English.

In France it is available online since April 26th 2006 as a VOD pay per view service through the National Audiovisual Institute's website hosting the ORTF archives.

A sequel to The Anderson Platoon titled Reminescence was released in 1989. Now twenty years after the events, Schoendoerffer met the platoons survivors.

  • La Section Anderson: original title
  • The Anderson Platoon: English dub version title. This is the litteral translation of the French title.
  • 2. Kompanie, 1. Zug, Vietnam 1966 ("2nd Company, 1st Platoon, Vietnam 1966"): West German title. The "Anderson Platoon"'s actual name is "1st Platoon" belonging to the "B" for "Bravo" Company and the documentary was shot in South Vietnam in 1966, hence the German title.
  • Abteilung Anderson ("Detachment Anderson"): German title after the reunification. This is a translation of the original title, "Detachment" being a synonym for "Platoon" in French.

Preceded by
The War Game
Academy Award for Documentary Feature
1967
Succeeded by
Journey Into Self
(after disqualification of Young Americans)
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