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William Oliver Stone (born September 15, 1946), known simply as Oliver Stone,
is an Academy Award-winning American film director.
Stone was born in New York City. His father was Jewish and his mother a
Roman Catholic of French birth. He was raised an Episcopalian as a
compromise. His parents divorced when he was in high school, and only then
did Stone learn of his father's extramarital affairs with the wives of
several family friends.
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Stone attended The Hill School, Yale University and New York University. He
attended Yale, dropping out after one year. He then taught English at the
Free Pacific Institute in South Vietnam for six months after which he worked
as a merchant marine, and traveled to Oregon and Mexico, before returning to
Yale, where he dropped out a second time.
A veteran of the Vietnam conflict, Stone served with the United States Army
from April 1967 to November 1968. He specifically requested combat duty and
was assigned to the 25th Infantry Regiment, and was wounded twice in action.
His personal awards include the Bronze Star with "V" device for valor for "extraordinary
acts of courage under fire", and the Purple Heart with one Oak Leaf Cluster.
He has made three films about Vietnam —Platoon (1986), Born on the Fourth of
July (1989), and Heaven & Earth (1993). He has called these films a trilogy,
though they each deal with different aspects of the war. Platoon is a semi-autobiographical
film about Stone's experience in combat. Born on the Fourth of July is a
biography of Ron Kovic, a veteran of the war who was paralyzed in Vietnam
and subsequently became a political activist against the war. Heaven and
Earth is a true story of a Vietnamese girl whose life is drastically
affected by the war.
Stone has won two Academy Awards for Directing for Platoon and Born on the
Fourth of July, as well as a best adapted screenplay Oscar for Midnight
Express (1978), which he wrote but did not direct. Other films he had a hand
in the screenplays for are Conan the Barbarian (1982), Scarface (1983), Year
of the Dragon (1985), 8 Million Ways to Die (1986) and Evita (1996). He has
also written or taken part in the writing of every film he has directed,
except for U Turn (1997). The very first film that he directed
professionally was the obscure horror picture Seizure (1974).
A distinct feature in Oliver Stone's movies is the use of a multitude of
different cameras and film formats, from VHS to 8mm film to 70mm film. He
sometimes uses several formats in a single scene, as in JFK (1991) and
Natural Born Killers (1994).
Stone won his first Academy Award in 1978 for Midnight Express, but many
scenes in the movie, which were supposedly based on the true story of Billy
Hayes, in fact never occurred. In 2004, while visiting Turkey, he apologised
for the film and admitted that he did not do any research before he wrote
the script.
Stone's films often deal with political matters and are sometimes critical
of the government. JFK, for instance, hypothesizes about many high-level
government officials, including Lyndon B. Johnson, having a hand in the
assassination of President John F. Kennedy. In 1991, he showed the film to
Congress on Capitol Hill, which helped lead to passage of the Assassination
Materials Disclosure Act of 1992. The film was widely criticized in the
media as being a mixture of truth and fiction, prompting Stone to publish an
annotated version of the screenplay, in which he cites references for his
claims. Similarly, he published an annotated version of his screenplay for
the film Nixon, which was criticized for its portrayal of President Richard
M. Nixon.
Stone has admitted to using drugs while making films. On the DVD of Natural
Born Killers: The Director's Cut, a member of cast recounts stories of
taking psylocibin mushrooms with Stone and some of the cast and crew and
almost getting pulled over by a police officer—a situation which Stone later
wrote into the film. Natural Born Killers is filmed and edited in a frenzied
style where animation, grainy black and white 8mm film, color 35mm film, and
VHS are intercut and juxtaposed in a psychedelic montage of images showing
not only the story's action, but also conveying the characters thoughts and
feelings. The film was criticized by some for its apparent glorification of
violence. Stone refutes this claim, saying that it is a satire of the
American media's glorification of violence and violent people. In fact, the
original screenwriter of Natural Born Killers, Quentin Tarantino, was
unhappy with the end result of the film because of the attention Stone gave
to the aspects of the story involving the media, and asked that his name be
removed from the credits.
In 1999, Stone was arrested and pleaded guilty to drug possession and no
contest to driving under the influence. He was ordered into a rehabilitation
program. He was arrested again on the night of May 27, 2005 in Los Angeles
for drug possession and driving under the influence.
In 1993, Stone produced a mini series for ABC Television called Wild Palms.
In an ironic cameo, Stone appears on a television in the show discussing how
the theories in his film JFK had been proven correct (the series took place
in the future). Wild Palms has developed a moderate cult following in the
years since it aired, and has recently been released on DVD.
In 1997, Stone published A Child's Night Dream, a largely autobiographical
novel first written in 1966-1967. After several unsuccessful attempts to get
the work published, he "threw several sections of the manuscript into the
East River one cold night, and, as if surgically removing the memory of the
book from my mind, volunteered for Vietnam in 1967." Eventually, he dug out
the remaining pages, rewrote the manuscript, and published it. The book is
an almost stream of consciousness telling of his experiences as a child, in
college, and in Vietnam.
In 2003, Stone made two documentary films: Persona Non Grata, about the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict, and Comandante, about Cuban president Fidel
Castro. In 2004, he made a second documentary on Castro, titled Looking for
Fidel. Stone has called himself a friend and an admirer of Fidel Castro. |
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