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Ah, I see your point. I didn't relish the horror. I didn't even understand the horror. When I was growing up, I was taught in a way that minimized or disregarded suffering. SPR did not do that. It showcased it and in a horrendous way. While some may relish in that, I didn't and it made me reconsider my childhood support of any armed conflict as justified. I didn't understand the costs involved. While I'm sure the movie didn't capture everything, what it showed was horrendous.
Idk about your point of justification. It's been a while and I don't remember that.
Weaponized masculinity portrays the horrors of war as some kind of "test" of masculinity - you'll see this in a lot of fascist propaganda. It's literally what fascists mean when they spew their "blood and soil" bullcrap. It's pretty sick - I grew up in Apartheid-era South Africa, and they brainwashed us like that.
The problem I have with movies like Saving Private Ryan is that they don't address the central conceit of the vast majority of "war media" - ie, that war is an activity primarily waged by armed combatants against other armed combatants. This is absolutely not the truth - wars are primarily waged by armed combatants against unarmed non-combatants. This is especially true when we discuss colonialist warfare - it is being literally demonstrated right now in Gaza.
You remember Tom Hank's little line about "earning it?" The more you think about it, the sillier it becomes.