Silence from Hill on film showcasing SEALs

Our colleagues at Kit Up and Under the Radar are pumped about next year’s release of a movie called “Act of Valor,” which includes real, active SEALs and their real-life tactics and equipment. It’s been in the works for many years, including under another title, “I Am That Man,” and people in the closed world of Naval Special Warfare are said to be pumped, too.

But wait a tick — a Hollywood movie that includes real special operators and the weapons and procedures they actually use in the field? Isn’t that… treason? When New York Rep. Peter King, the Republican chairman of the House Homeland Security Committee, learned that DoD was in talks with a Hollywood studio about collaborating on a movie about the Osama bin Laden raid, he was furious! King vowed to “investigate” whether the Obama administration was leaking classified information in a baldly political bid to make the president look good to moviegoers.

So with last week’s release of the trailer for “Act of Valor,” King must’ve gone on another rampage, right? Right now his office is ordering 50 million blindfolds and pairs of earplugs labeled “OPSEC” that Congress will require people must wear if they want to see it, right? Press conferences! Hearings!


Well … no. Although King’s office released his letter to DoD and CIA officials requesting “investigations” about the bin Laden movie, it has maintained radio silence since the debut of the “Act of Valor” trailer.

In the interest of saving taxpayers’ money, here are the preliminary results of our own investigation: People inside the Navy have been talking about this movie for years. A cursory search of the Navy’s own official website yields no fewer than 13 official Navy photographs depicting SEALs, Special Warfare Combatant Crewmen and other sailors, ships and equipment all taking part in filming.

The Pentagon has helped Hollywood make movies featuring troops and their equipment for years. When “Act of Valor” comes out next year, officials believe their time and patience with the filmmakers will be rewarded if many of the kids who see it decide to join the Navy.

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Yep, the navy will get a boon of recruits who want to be SEALs but only 1% will ever achieve that. The rest will go on to become regular sailors. Wonder why they don’t do a movie about them? You know, truth in advertising?

Its hilarious that the Air Force (latest commercials focus on AFSOC troops) and Navy showcase their ground forces to draw recruits recently vs. communicating their core roles and responsibilities. On the other hand the Army drops the ball AGAIN when it comes to blowing their horn. I guess they are busy doing most of the fighting and dying. (Marines have always done an excellent job of marketing their core values and mission)

I know, I know. I’ll get tons of negatives. Doesn’t mean anything I said is any less accurate or true.

Can’t think of any(sane) one who would disagree with you on the PR angle. The Navy does the recruiting thing best. They HAVE to ;-). The Navy got “Top Gun” and the Air Force got.…Iron Eagle?
I took comp time to see the first showing of Hunt for Red October in Salt Lake City’s biggest theater. It was SRO and there were exactly 2 women in the hall (including my wife). The Navy had a recruiting booth up in the lobby with a cutaway model of the 688 class sub and after the movie the Navy Recruiter display was SRO.

Unfortunately you’re not likely to realize that it doesn’t make anything you said more accurate either.

The SEAL TEAM 6 movie trailers I’ve watched really suck and wont give away anything, wrong uniforms improper arrangement of warfare pins and ribbons, std hollywood combat tactics and dramatics. if you want to see realistic movies about the TEAMS check out ACT OF VALOR due out in Feb, and LONE SURVIVOR. The trailers for all of them are on hollywood reporter.

My concern is with our brothers and sisters in arm, the equipment is something I’m sure our major enemies already know about, but our soldiers who are in harms way deserve the secrecy they deserve. Including there families and friends, the new enemies of democracy and religion see no line between soldiers and civilians, they fight dirty and kill without care. Any company, any movie that display our brothers and sisters in uniform such way to place them in threat. Should be fined and the film destroyed, this is not freedom of the press, but treason. God Bless our soldiers, the back bone of any good defense. Shalom Israel and Shalom my many friends.

Right on..very accurate

Spare me with all the concerns!!!.…DOD is giving advisory support…as well as the Commander in Chief!
All you Special –Ops Wanna Bees-And secret Burger Flippers can sleep well tonight!
No One Gives a Hoot in Hell about how we fight!
Thaqnks for the Hard one!
Hard BAr!!!

actually, 23% will make it. not like that’s any better, but get your facts straight

Saw the movie last night It dosen’t slow down a all. I’ve been retired 25 years and hven kept up wth all the new inovations. There awsome. People shouldn’t bitch about what DOD spends our tax money on.
It’s well worth seeing.

I thought the movie was great, seeing those old airplanes that we used to purchase that were made out of Balsa wood for a dime, or for 15 cents, you could get one that had a rubber band and a prop. Now they make them so they can launch them like we did as kids, only now they stay up in the air, and provide real time video. The end of the movie is sad, as they re-create the funeral of the navy seal who jumped on the hand gernade, and saved about 20 navy seal’s lives. He has a Rosewood casket, and every seal that was at the funeral, took his gold Seal Pin, and inbed it into the coffin, it looked like it has gold inlay all over it. That sceen realy did happen, and if you don’t shed a little tear, you are not an American. The Navy Seal Chief Petty Officer in the movie is one big bad-ass, 6′-5″ and not an ounce of fat on this man.

Everyone cannot be first and on top. That is the main reason to have rank in the military and in politics.

I believe that major rod was referring to the 1% of all the new Navy recruits that would end up as SEALS.

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