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Comparing Slaughterhouse Five And Full Metal Jacket

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Between Slaughterhouse-Five, a novel written by Kurt Vonnegut, and Full Metal Jacket, a film directed by Stanley Kubrick, we can see many significant similarities in ideas and themes. Both of them have major ideas regarding brainwashing of war as well as acceptance which, in a sense, go hand in hand. However, since Full Metal Jacket follows Joker, the main character, he displays more ideas of compassion and humanity while Slaughterhouse-Five follows Billy Pilgrim, the main character, he shows more of themes that reveal that time is cyclical and how everything ends up back at the beginning.
Brainwashing is a significant part of every war and every soldier in every war; it is also a major theme in Slaughterhouse-Five and Full Metal Jacket. In a scene where Joker is in a helicopter with a door gunner, the door gunner is shooting at Vietnamese farmers and civilians from a helicopter and says that Joker should write a story about him because he has got “157 dead gooks killed” to which Joker responds by asking if he’s killed any women or children and he says, “sometimes.” Then, Joker asks, “how can you shoot women or children?” and the gunner responds by saying, “Easy! Ya just don’t lead 'em so much! Ain't war hell?” (Full Metal Jacket). As we can see, yes, war is definitely hell. The gunner has been so brainwashed by the drilling of war training that he feels nothing when shooting at innocent people from a helicopter, not even women and children. For a normal person, it would be

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