Current:Home > ContactMy war refugee parents played extras in 'Apocalypse Now.' They star in my 'Appocalips.' -EliteFunds
My war refugee parents played extras in 'Apocalypse Now.' They star in my 'Appocalips.'
View
Date:2025-04-14 00:30:38
In 1975, my newly married parents fled Vietnam on a boat. Months later, while living in a refugee camp in the Philippines, they were hired to play extras in Francis Ford Coppola’s Vietnam War film "Apocalypse Now," which came out 45 years ago and won two Oscars.
Though my parents played a variety of characters – translators, Viet Cong, drivers, POWs – they had no face time and no speaking parts.
They escaped a war only to be cast in a reenactment that placed them at the margins of their own story.
My mother, Hoa Le, owned two sets of clothes then: one to wear, one to wash. On the set, the film crew dressed my mother in black pajamas. They issued her a machine gun. They gave her a Viet Cong hat and placed her under a thatched straw roof. She stuffed her ears with cotton. She shot up into the American helicopters. “Not to worry,” they yelled at her. “The bullets are fake. Keep shooting!”
“I was scared to death,” my mother would recount dramatically, or perhaps conspiratorially, and laugh. She was 22.
My father, Hue Che, played an interpreter, a POW, a Viet Cong gunning a car across a bridge. He had skills. He could speak a little English.
He had firsthand experience as an actual prisoner of war. He was caught, not by the enemy – but by the South Vietnamese army when he attempted to go AWOL to retake his high school exit exam. He never graduated, my bemused father would tell me, because he was so obsessed with building an airplane in high school.
These were the stories I grew up listening to, over dinner, around our kitchen table in Los Angeles, then Long Beach. As I grew into the world, these are the stories that I found absent from the greater narratives of the Vietnam War voiced on the radio, on the television and movie screens, in the newspapers.
My parents’ oral histories are the foundation for me to pursue writing as a path.
From 'Apocalypse Now' to my 'Appocalips'
No first-person filmed accounts from the Vietnamese extras of "Apocalypse Now" seemed to exist, and I wanted to change that. In 2022 and 2023, I traveled to Vietnam, the Philippines and Long Beach with my filmmaker friends, director Christopher Radcliff and cinematographer Jess X. Snow, to document this particular story.
We sought to create a work that centered perspectives that have been historically erased from the master narrative. We wanted to create a piece that would help refugees, immigrants and marginalized people feel seen.
Kissinger's human 'legacy of war':Vietnamese Americans still endure trauma passed among generations
We visited the places where my parents lived, including their refugee camp in Mandaluyong, and Baler, the site of the movie's famous napalm sequence, for which my parents and their friends were cast as extras.
The refugee camp looked nothing like what I had imagined. It resembled a YMCA: five beige buildings, a basketball court. Baler, the fishing town, is now a tourist destination where one could book surf lessons and take guided "Apocalypse Now" tours to Charlie’s Point.
Over a year, we worked to create a 27-minute, three-channel video installation called "Appocalips," an Open Call commission now at The Shed in New York City through Jan. 21.
"Appocalips" – how my father labeled the VHS of "Apocalypse Now" he had recorded from television – is driven by my parents’ funny and heartbreaking storytelling. Vietnam War films often focus on trauma and violence, but my parents’ testimony upend these expectations.
Though they talk openly about their losses, they also make jokes, discuss friendships forged at the refugee camp and insist that the filming was fun.
War in Gaza reminds me of my parents and all refugees
At a recent public event for the video installation attended by more than 100 people, I wept as I read poems. I dedicated the reading to my family and to all refugees and families who have had to live under war.
As we continue to witness the ongoing devastation in Gaza, I am reminded of my parents, whose friends and families were killed during the war. Their stories taught me so much about narrative power and self-definition.
Over Christmas break, my family gathered in Long Beach in front of the TV to watch the video installation. No one had seen it yet, and I didn’t know what to expect.
In solidarity with Gaza:Why Christian Palestinians in Bethlehem canceled Christmas
As the film played, my 8-year-old nephew Legend asked, “Wait, is this real? Did this happen? They were in a movie?” I was touched by Legend’s interest in what he had seen. As my parents age, I want their grandchildren and great-grandchildren to be able to access their story. I want them to know something about where they came from.
As I pointed out different present-day sites of Mandaluyong and Baler, my mom marveled. As my father spoke on the screen, she listened and chimed in.
My father was silent. I wasn’t sure what he thought. His face lit up, however, at the end, when he saw that we had included his Super 8 and VHS home video footage of our family.
When the credits rolled, my mother clapped her hands together and declared, “Dinner time!” Nobody spoke any further about the video installation.
Part of the listening process is setting aside lofty ideals around narrative reclamation to receive what’s in front of me. What I saw was three generations of my family, gathered and eating food together, sharing stories around the table. What I saw was our present-day lives co-mingling with the past that brought us here.
Cathy Linh Che is the author of the poetry book "Split" and co-author with Kyle Lucia Wu of "An Asian American A to Z: A Children’s Guide to Our History." "Appocalips," her three-channel video installation made with Christopher Radcliff, is on view at The Shed in New York City through Jan. 21. Find her at cathylinhche.com
veryGood! (24)
Related
- Justice Department, Louisville reach deal after probe prompted by Breonna Taylor killing
- We've Uncovered Every Secret About Legally Blonde—What? Like It's Hard?
- Environmental Auditors Approve Green Labels for Products Linked to Deforestation and Authoritarian Regimes
- Mourning, and Celebration: A Funeral for a Coal-Fired Power Plant
- McKinsey to pay $650 million after advising opioid maker on how to 'turbocharge' sales
- Kourtney Kardashian's Son Mason Disick Seen on Family Outing in Rare Photo
- More Than a Decade of Megadrought Brought a Summer of Megafires to Chile
- Carbon Removal Projects Leap Forward With New Offset Deal. Will They Actually Help the Climate?
- Warm inflation data keep S&P 500, Dow, Nasdaq under wraps before Fed meeting next week
- U.S. cruises to 3-0 win over Vietnam in its Women's World Cup opener
Ranking
- Hackers hit Rhode Island benefits system in major cyberattack. Personal data could be released soon
- Utilities Seize Control of the Coming Boom in Transmission Lines
- Barbenheimer opening weekend raked in $235.5 million together — but Barbie box office numbers beat Oppenheimer
- ‘Green Steel’ Would Curb Carbon Emissions, Spur Economic Revival in Southwest Pennsylvania, Study Says
- IRS recovers $4.7 billion in back taxes and braces for cuts with Trump and GOP in power
- Why Saving the Whales Means Saving Ourselves
- Former gynecologist Robert Hadden to be sentenced to 20 years in prison for sexual abuse of patients, judge says
- Maralee Nichols Shares Glimpse Inside Adventures With Her and Tristan Thompson's Son Theo
Recommendation
A South Texas lawmaker’s 15
Selena Gomez Confirms Her Relationship Status With One Single TikTok
A University of Maryland Health Researcher Probes the Climate Threat to Those With Chronic Diseases
U.K. leader Rishi Sunak's Conservatives suffer more election losses
Residents worried after ceiling cracks appear following reroofing works at Jalan Tenaga HDB blocks
Netflix debuts first original African animation series, set in Zambia
U.S. cruises to 3-0 win over Vietnam in its Women's World Cup opener
Antarctic Researchers Report an Extraordinary Marine Heatwave That Could Threaten Antarctica’s Ice Shelves