: Green Beret Captain Sam Cahill (Danny Glover) and his successor, Captain T.C. Doyle (Ray Liotta), lead a misfit team to deliver an elephant to a remote village after the North Vietnamese Army (NVA) kills the village's original elephant. Production :

The operation took place on April 4, 1968, but received minimal news coverage due to the simultaneous assassination of and the death of a major Vietnamese military leader on the same day. Scholars often view the film as a product of the 1990s "post-Cold War" era, attempting to reframe the Vietnam War through a lens of American exceptionalism and humanitarian effort.

The film is loosely based on a 1968 mission known as , documented by retired U.S. Army Major Jim Morris.

: U.S. Special Forces were tasked with transporting two elephants, named Bonnie and Clyde, from the village of Ban Don to Tra Bong.

: The elephants were intended to support a sawmill project to improve local living conditions and secure the loyalty of villagers near the Ho Chi Minh Trail , a vital North Vietnamese supply route.

: Released on July 28, 1995, it was a moderate financial success, grossing approximately $24.7 million. It is often noted as a rare example of a "family-friendly" Vietnam War movie, though critics often cite it for sanitizing the conflict's history. Key Cast and Characters Danny Glover Captain Sam Cahill Veteran Green Beret liaison Ray Liotta Captain T.C. Doyle By-the-book West Point replacement Denis Leary David Poole Resourceful Chief Warrant Officer Doug E. Doug Harvey "H.A." Ashford Nervous, "short-timer" specialist Corin Nemec Lawrence Farley Animal-loving Iowa farm boy Dinh Thien Le Young boy and elephant handler Cultural and Historical Context

Directed by Simon Wincer, the movie reimagines these events as a high-stakes, comedic journey.

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