STACK#127 May 2016

4 0 6 0 | 8 0 | 2 0 | 4 0 | 6 0 | 8 0 | 2 0 | 4 0 | 6 0 | 8 0 | 2 0 | 4 0 | 6 0 | 8 0 | 2 0 | 40 | 6 0 | 8 0 | 2 0 | 4 0 | 6 0 | 8 0 | 2 0 | 4 0 | 6 0 | 8 0 | 2 0 | 4 0 | 6 0 | 8 0 | 2 0 | 4 0 | 6 0 | 8 0 | 2 0 | 4 0 | 6 0 | 8 0 | 2 0 | 4 0 | 6 0 | 80 | 2 0 | 4 0 | 6 0 | 8 0 | 2 0 | 4 0 | 6 0 | 8 0 | 2 0 | 4 0 | 6 0 | 8 0 | 2 0 | 4 0 | 6 0 | 8 0 | 2 0 | 033 DVD & BD FEATURE any big regrets – not a lot of feeling sorry for yourself there. Quite the opposite, in fact. BC: Yeah, they knew what to expect going into it. Bradley, can you talk about the experience of working with Clint? BC: Well, he’s one of the reasons I wanted to be an actor. The truth is when I was growing up, I always thought there were two guys I wanted to work with: Robert De Niro and Clint Eastwood. And the fact that I’ve gotten to do both is incredible. I first started auditioning for Clint’s movies on Flags of Our Fathers and put myself on tape for all of them. There was one thing that looked like it was maybe going to happen, and then, when that fell through, I thought, ‘Oh, wow, I can’t believe it.’ Then this project happened, and it was the perfect match. Clint, what was it like for you to work with Bradley? CE: I’ve admired him on film, and I voted for him on his Academy Award nomination. I think Bradley’s head’s up on this generation of actors. He started in films with a lot of comedy and slapstick in them, and they were great. The job he did was terrific. But, then, I find a lot of people who have a knack for comedy are great dramatic actors, anyway. • Thomas Plunkett An Irishman fighting for the British? Yep. Plunkett was a soldier in the 95th Rifles who were raised to specialise in the new Baker rifle. At the Battle of Cacabelos in 1809, Plunkett shot a French general from 600 metres; and then the trumpet major attending to the mortally wounded General to prove it wasn’t a fluke. When you consider the average effective range for the smooth bore musket of this day was 50 metres, Plunkett’s kills with the Baker rifle were extraordinary. • Lyudmila Pavlichenko Ukrainian Pavlichenko was one of the first troopers to enlist following Hitler’s decision to invade Russia in 1941. A proven amateur sharpshooter, it wasn’t long before she started clocking up the Nazi kill count, and ended the war with 309 confirmed kills. The most successful female sniper during the Second World War. • Carlos Norman Hatchcock Remember Barry Pepper’s shot through the German sniper’s telescopic sight in Saving Private Ryan ? Hatchcock did it for real. When an enemy North Vietnamese sniper was sent in to hunt him, he too went on the offensive. After seeing a flash of light in the jungle, he took aim and fired. Hatchcock calculated that for his shot to go right through the enemy's sight, the NVA sniper would have been just about to pull the trigger on him. Sniper Greatest Hits • American Sniper is out May 27

How did that wartime experience inform the life that he came back to? BC: Well, he was honorably discharged from the military and, for him, the saying hadn’t been ‘God, Family, Country,’ it was ‘God, Country, Family.’ You can read about him or watch him actually say that. Family had been last, and he wanted to amend that. There’s a 90 per cent divorce rate amongst SEALs, and he didn’t want that to happen to his family. So, he made a choice to put family first. But when he got home, it wasn’t so easy to make that transition and because he was willing and physically able to fight, he would always say, he wasn’t there anymore. So, he found this other way of being of service, which was helping veterans. He would put the gun back into the vet’s hand to take the stigma away from it – because there’s something that they loved about it – and he knew that holding a gun again could be therapeutic. He would do this thing where he would drive up to this ranch and go shooting with vets and drive back, get to know them, hear their story, share his… CE: All the guys that he was helping in that scene, with the exception of one actor, were all vets, and they all knew the story. Bradley sat down and chatted with them. We just started talking about, ‘Well, who are you guys? How do you guys feel about this? How do you feel about war?’ The whole deal. And you get all kinds of different people coming from different directions. But I don’t think any of them had He liked taking care of people. He liked the leadership aspect of it. I guess he felt that was his calling. He worked hard to become a great Navy SEAL

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