Friendly Fire (1979 film)
Friendly Fire | |
---|---|
Genre | Drama War |
Based on | Friendly Fire by Martin Starger Productions |
Original release | |
Network | ABC |
Release | April 22, 1979 |
Friendly Fire is an American
The movie tells the real-life story of Peg Mullen (played by Carol Burnett),[4] a woman from rural Iowa who with her husband works against government obstacles to uncover the actual details and facts about the death of their son Michael, an Army infantry soldier killed by "friendly fire" in February 1970 during the Vietnam War. Her husband Gene, a World War II veteran, is played by Ned Beatty.
Sergeant Mullen was drafted in September 1968 after he graduated from college and sent to
23rd Infantry Division (Americal Division) in September 1969.[5]
He was listed as a non-battle casualty after being accidentally killed with another soldier from an exploding Army artillery shell burst fragment, while Mullen and most of his platoon were asleep at night on their hilltop position; the government did not report publicly the number of non-battle deaths or their names on its weekly casualty lists during the war.
Friendly Fire is adapted by Fay Kanin[4] from C. D. B. Bryan's 1976 book of the same name.[6] The book was adapted from a series of New Yorker magazine articles Bryan had written about the Mullens and their ordeal.[7]
Cast
- Carol Burnett as Peg Mullen
- Ned Beatty as Gene Mullen
- Sam Waterston as C. D. B. Bryan
- Dennis Erdman as Michael E. Mullen
- Timothy Hutton as John Mullen
- Fanny Spiess as Mary Mullen
- Sherry Hursey as Patricia Mullen
- Michael Flanagan as Father Shimon
- Hilly Hicks as Willis Huddleston
- William Jordan as Col. Byron Schindler
- Vernon Weddle as Col. Georgi
- Jack Rader as Sgt. Fitzgerald
- Robert Wahler as Alan Hulting
- David Keithas Leroy Hamilton
See also
References
- ^ Brown, Les. "ABC's 'Friendly Fire' Drew 64 Million." The New York Times, April 25, 1979, p. C22. Archived from the original.
- ^ "1978–1979 Emmy Awards." infoplease.com, updated February 11, 2017. Accessed December 27, 2020. Archived from the original.
- Time Warner. Retrieved October 11, 2016.
- ^ a b Gamarekian, Barbara. "Why Carol Burnett Made 'Friendly Fire'." The New York Times, April 21, 1979, p. 15. Archived from the original.
- ^ Michael Eugene Mullen. Iowa Veterans Remembrance Project
- ISBN 978-0399116889.
- University of Iowa Libraries. Archived from the originalon October 20, 2008. Accessed November 25, 2008.