Good Morning, Vietnam

    Good Morning, Vietnam
    1987

    Synopsis

    A disk jockey goes to Vietnam to work for the Armed Forces Radio Service. While he becomes popular among the troops, his superiors disapprove of his humour.

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    Cast

    • Robin WilliamsAdrian Cronauer
    • Forest WhitakerEdward Garlick
    • Trần Thanh TùngTuan
    • Chintara SukapatanaTrinh
    • Bruno KirbyLt. Steven Hauk
    • Robert WuhlMarty Lee Dreiwitz
    • J.T. WalshSgt. Major Dickerson
    • Noble WillinghamGen. Taylor
    • Richard EdsonPvt. Abersold
    • Juney SmithPhil McPherson

    Recommendations

    • 100

      Chicago Sun-Times

      Good Morning, Vietnam works as straight comedy and as a Vietnam-era MASH, and even the movie’s love story has its own bittersweet integrity.
    • 80

      Empire

      One of Levinson's best films, and one of Hollywood's best films on the whole Vietnam subject.
    • 80

      The New York Times

      Good Morning, Vietnam, directed by Barry Levinson (Diner, Tin Men) succeeds in doing something that's very rare in movies, being about a character who really is as funny as he's supposed to be to most of the people sharing the fiction with him. It's also a breakthrough for Mr. Williams, who, for the first time in movies, gets a chance to exercise his restless, full-frontal comic intelligence.
    • 80

      Variety

      From the start, the film bowls you over with excitement and for those who can latch on, it’s a nonstop ride.
    • 75

      TV Guide Magazine

      Good Morning, Vietnam stumbles whenever Williams isn't behind the mike, placing him in melodramatic, hackneyed situations that become increasingly predictable and preposterous, and director Barry Levinson's seemingly endless reaction shots of listeners grooving to the DJ's antics become irritating. Levinson manages, however, to be one of the few filmmakers to show the Vietnamese as complex, cultured people, rather than as helpless victims or the faceless enemy.
    • 70

      Time Out

      Offering only hackneyed insights into the war, the film makes for stodgy drama. But Williams' manic monologues behind the mike are worth anybody's money.
    • 70

      Los Angeles Times

      The film itself--a dramatic comedy based on the 1965 Saigon gig of irreverent Armed Forces disc jockey Adrian Cronauer--is good-hearted but shallow. It's a piece of programmed irreverence, photogenic torpor, prefab compassion. But Williams, as Cronauer, is so blazingly brilliant that he detonates the center, exploding it in berserk blasts of electronic-age surreality.
    • 58

      The A.V. Club

      Williams is at his best in Good Morning, Vietnam when he’s pitched between manic and earnest: when he’s reacting to his castmates, who actually are funny. Too much of Good Morning, Vietnam, though, is self-congratulatory without giving any real reason for the applause.

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