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Unlike the hordes of young men who sought refuge in the nation's
universities in order to escape the draft, Oliver Stone dropped out of
Yale and enlisted to serve in Vietnam. He was born on September 15,
1946. Stone worked first as a teacher and then as a combat soldier, and
was awarded the Bronze Star and Purple Heart. Like many who survived
Vietnam, Stone hasn't let it go without a lot of therapy, which in his
case translates to big-budget pictures depicting the war and its
aftermath. He studied film at N.Y.U. under Martin Scorsese and began
his film career as a screenwriter. He wrote the scripts for Year of the
Dragon and Scarface, and he earned an Oscar for his screenplay for
Midnight Express, in 1978.
Stone's 1986 release, Salvador, was the first of what would become his
signature directorial subject — the political picture. Platoon,
released that same year, provided a personal account of a war the
country had tried hard to forget. The success of the film (Stone earned
his first Academy Award for directing) helped to focus attention back
on the war and its veterans. Several other well-received films
followed, including the nasty, "Greed is good" flick Wall Street, and a
somber Tom Cruise film, Born on the Fourth of July, for which Stone
received hi second Best Director Academy Award. The Doors was D.O.A.,
despite Val Kilmer's brilliant portrayal of Jim Morrison.
All hell broke loose with the release of JFK. The film
revolved around Jim Garrison (played by Kevin Costner), the New Orleans
D.A. who believed there was a conspiracy to assassinate Kennedy and a
cover-up that stretched to the highest levels of government. The film
not only compelled Congress to open previously sealed files on the
shooting, but it rekindled the country's interest in the Kennedy case
and the events surrounding it. The overblown Heaven and Earth (another
Vietnam picture) received a mixed response, as did an ultra-violent
"satire," Natural Born Killers, but with 1995's Nixon, Stone offered a
complex and sensitive portrait of the rise and fall of the beleaguered
former president. Proving he has a sense of humor about his reputation
for being a fervent conspiracy theorist, Stone appeared as himself in
Ivan Reitman's mistaken-identity comedy, Dave, to advance his
hypothesis that the president is an imposter. The year 1997 witnessed
the release of Stone's hyperkinetic, pulpy U-Turn, a film that followed
antihero Sean Penn's accidental visit to a hick town in Arizona; the
year also marked the release of Stone's autobiographical novel, A
Child's Night Dream. Two years later, he brought to the screen a pro
football saga, Any Given Sunday, which starred Al Pacino as a Vince
Lombardi-style coach and Dennis Quaid as a past-his-prime all-star
quarterback.
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