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Coming Out Under Fire
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List Price: $14.98
Our Price: $3.75
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Product Details
- Starring: Salome Jens, Max Cole
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- Audience Rating: NR (Not Rated)
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- Binding: VHS Tape
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- Director: Arthur Dong
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- EAN: 9786303937632
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- Format: Black & White, NTSC
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- ISBN: 6303937632
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- Label: Fox Lorber
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- Manufacturer: Fox Lorber
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- Number of Items: 1
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- Product Group: Video
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- Publisher: Fox Lorber
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- Release Date: 1997-10-13
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- Studio: Fox Lorber
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- Theatrical Release Date: 1994
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- Title: Coming Out Under Fire
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- UPC: 720917011943
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Avg Customer Rating: 
Product Description: A look at the experiences of nine gay and lesbian veterans, who volunteered to fight for the country only to be later persecuted, rounded up in witch-hunts and labeled as undesirable.
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Customer Reviews
How far we haven't come
"Coming Out Under Fire", a short but reflective documentary based on a book of the same name by the late Allan Berube, gives heed to what is still one of the most egregious governmental policies in existence today....."Don't Ask, Don't Tell". The film, where surviving members of the military discuss their service during the Second World War, is at times empathetic but often maddening. The final exchange between Senator John Warner and Colonel Margarethe Cammermeyer regarding the implementation of this policy ends the film with a bang.
This is a film that offers up how little progress has been made over the years regarding gays serving in the military. As many of these veterans had to lie to avoid persecution from within the military ranks and prosecution from without, "Coming Out Under Fire" also reminds us of how gays who serve today still have to keep mum about their sexual orientation to stay in the service. It's a good and necessary film, and I highly recommend it.
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The Vets Deserved a More Thoughtful Explanation
The highlight is touching interviews with World War II veterans, four gay and one lesbian, and the persecution they suffered. Unfortunately, the film remains simplistic, tracing the source of the world war military's policy, subsequent McCarthyite persecutions, and current 'no kiss and tell' policy to the medicalization of homosexuality. The filmakers failed to connect the military's policy to American gender relations during the same period.
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Sometimes funny but mostly upsetting.
Director Arthur Dong is perhaps best known for his documentary Licensed To Kill, in which he probed the minds of people who murder others for being gay. Though Coming Out Under Fire at least has flashes of humor, it is equally upsetting in the dark secrets that it reveals. Dong shows not only the long tradition of gays in America's military but also their tradition of serving with distinction before meeting with betrayal.
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