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The Greatest Beer Run Ever !LINK!


The Greatest Beer Run Ever is a 2022 American biographical war comedy-drama film directed and co-written by Peter Farrelly, based on the book of the same name by John "Chickie" Donohue and Joanna Molloy. The film stars Zac Efron and Russell Crowe, and follows the true story of Donohue, who as a young veteran sneaks into the Vietnam War to deliver some beer to his friends, who are serving their duty.




The Greatest Beer Run Ever


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Back in Saigon, Chickie learns that his ship has left early due to warnings of an impending attack and is on the way to the Philippines. Hieu gives Chickie directions to the U.S. Embassy, and he gives Hieu his address to visit him in New York. At the embassy, a woman helps him book a flight to Manila the next day in order to rejoin his ship. He returns to the Caravelle Hotel and shows the journalists photos as proof that he really went to LZ Jane. As the Viet Cong suddenly invades Saigon in the surprise Tet Offensive, Chickie and photographer Arthur Coates explore the streets, where Chickie sees Hieu killed in the Viet Cong attack on US Embassy. Chickie sees an armored car blow a hole in the embassy wall. The next morning, Coates photographs the aftermath of the embassy attack and witnesses a huge explosion in the distance. The two drive to the scene of the explosion at Long Binh Post, where Coates explains that the military would rather fake an entry hole in the embassy wall than admit that the attack was an inside job. At Long Binh, Chickie looks for and shares a beer with one last wounded friend, Bobby Pappas, who confirms Tommy Minogue's death.


Chickie returns home with a changed perspective on the war. Before drinking with his friends, he visits Mrs. Minogue to give her the rosary beads he was to give to Tommy. Chickie takes responsibility for talking Tommy into enlisting and his ultimate death, but Mrs. Minogue forgives him with a hug. In the park, he sits among the tributes for soldiers and shares his last beer with Christine.


In 2015, Andrew Muscato produced and directed a short documentary The Greatest Beer Run Ever. The short was released on the Pabst Blue Ribbon YouTube Channel on Veterans Day November 11, 2015.[3] The documentary was based on the true story of John "Chickie" Donohue who sailed to Vietnam to deliver beers to friends from the old neighborhood. He later said that he "was a staunch supporter of the war. But when I got there, I saw things that just weren't right, and it was just false, totally false."[4]


Former United States Secretary of State, and Vietnam War veteran John Kerry wrote an Op-Ed for The Boston Globe in support of the film. In the op-ed, which was published on September 22, 2022, Mr. Kerry wrote, "For those of us of the Vietnam generation, the film is a poignant reminder that, whatever we did in that time and whatever our political perspective, how we experienced Vietnam is inextricably intertwined with who we experienced it with."[18]


A wildly entertaining, feel-good memoir of an Irish-American New Yorker and former U.S. marine who embarked on a courageous, hare-brained scheme to deliver beer to his pals serving Vietnam in the late 1960s.


John (Chickie) Donohue happens to be one of the best storytellers anywhere. He knows that though life may be funny, it is no joke. In this book you will see through his eyes the absurdity of the human condition. Chickie takes us thousands of miles on a hilarious quest laced with sorrow, but never dull. You will laugh and cry, but you will not be sorry that you read this rollicking story.


Based on a 2020 book of the same name, "The Greatest Beer Run Ever" follows a pretty simple story. Efron plays John "Chickie" Donohue, who, in 1967 decides to deliver beers to his neighborhood friends serving in South Vietnam. The idea came from a friendly bartender, himself a World War II veteran, whom all the neighborhood boys call "The Colonel" (Bill Murray).


Admittedly, Efron accepts the challenge after he's had about five or six beers himself and looks for every opportunity to weasel out of his big promise to deliver beer. But no such luck. Everyone in the neighborhood starts hearing about his pledge to visit South Vietnam and starts giving him stuff to take to the boys in uniform, from $33 to settle poker debts, socks and a rosary.


And, for a film that committed to a runtime of more than two hours, it would have been nice to see him doing a little work on the ship, showing the idea of committing to a two-month voyage. That's nothing to sneeze at. But "The Greatest Beer Run Ever" cuts straight to Saigon where Chickie gets himself three days off work with a fast lie to run across the war zone delivering beers to his friends.


Chickie finds his first friend easily enough on a base with Military Police in Saigon. And, to his credit, Chickie's friend isn't exactly over the moon to see him. He's just shocked and tells Chickie he needs to get back on his boat and go home. But the protagonist shrugs it off, eager to continue farther into combat zones to fulfill his promise. So he pulls out a lot of beers from his duffle bag and passes them out to all the MPs in the room.


"The Greatest Beer Run Ever" seems to operate on the same kind of math with regards to beers in the bag as action movies do with how many bullets are in a clip. As many as the plot needs. Because Chickie always somehow has enough beers for, not just his friends, but all the people in uniform around him.


While in Saigon, Chickie visits a hotel bar where press war correspondents gather. And he's flabbergasted at how unsupportive they appear to be. If members of the audience haven't figured it out by now, Chickie isn't exactly the smartest guy around. But he does have a good heart. Unfortunately, having a good heart unrestrained can get a guy into trouble, especially one smuggling beer into a war zone.


While Murray and Crowe are fine in their respective roles, it's Efron who truly carries "The Greatest Beer Run Ever." His transition from happy-go-lucky beer delivery boy to a man who has witnessed the horrors of war is masterfully handled.


Peter Farrelly follows up Green Book with the funny, rather simplistic, and ultimately forgettable The Greatest Beer Run Ever. Zac Efron does his best to give the film both a wacky SpongeBob sense of humor and a grounded, emotional anchor, but even his best efforts can't save The Greatest Beer Run Ever from its own lazy plot and cinematography, or its questionable themes and ideals. Farrelly once again pulls from a dark chapter in American history and uses it to deliver a googly-eyed feel-good movie about how everything can be better if we could just find common ground. The result is grossly manipulative and leaves an aftertaste about as good as the warm beer the main character is delivering.


On the direction side of things, Peter Farrelly has this moment where Chickie and Coates (Crowe) are having a conversation that leads to their area being bombed and the moments that followed was one of the best-directed sequences in any film this year. It was a pulsating, edge-of-your-seat moment that genuinely took your breath away. In addition, Farrelly had several jaw-dropping shots throughout this movie.


Drunk ideas, while entertaining, rarely end well. But there are exceptions. Like that time in New York in the late 1960s when a conversation about anti-war protesters led one veteran to set off on the greatest beer run in history.


After sharing a few drinks with Collins, Donohue set off to find the other names on his list. Donohue went from Qui Nhon, to Khe Sahn, then to Saigon, striking off names and handing out beers, then restocking.


Donohue talked his way onto convoys, military mail planes, and transport helicopters. He even got caught in the Tet Offensive and was briefly stranded when his ship left port without him. So he hung around, caught up with his buddies on the front lines for a bit longer, and by March 1968, made his way back to Inwood where his beer run quickly became a local legend.


When a battle breaks out in Saigon, Chickie and a reporter friend run for cover. Buildings get hit by explosive RPGs. A Jeep blows up, sending men flying. One guy staggers forward from the blast, his arm torn off and bleeding at the shoulder. We see several dead and bloodied people lying in the streets, including children.


Since this is all about a long-distance beer run with a seemingly bottomless bag of canned beer, there is constant drinking in the mix. We see people chugging back beers, glasses of Scotch and cocktails in bars, fox holes and on military bases. Some get a bit tipsy. One guy puffs on a marijuana joint. And a variety of different people smoke cigarettes throughout.


Several people, jaded by the harshness and agonies of war, speak of their distrust of government officials. Several times, lies and deception are purposely disseminated through newscasts and public statements.


However, his 72-hour leave now tallies 96 hours, and his ship has sailed. Without him. He has no change of clothes. Nor does he have a US passport, which he needs in order to get a South Vietnamese passport in order to leave Asia in order to get back to the US.


In the memoir, Donohue spent eight weeks in Vietnam delivering beer to his friends and other soldiers in combat, including his friends from Inwood in Vietnam. He carried a list of six names with him on his journey in Vietnam and overcame numerous challenging situations, including getting stranded in Saigon, to make sure the troops knew they were supported. He was able to find four of his friends; one had gone home, and one was sadly killed in action.


The week's best Apple news, reviews and how-tos from Cult of Mac, every Saturday morning. Our readers say: "Thank you guys for always posting cool stuff" -- Vaughn Nevins. "Very informative" -- Kenly Xavier.


Chickie and Red go back to the bar with the rest of their friends and the Colonel. They talk about wanting to find a way to lift the spirits of their friends who are serving, to give them a feeling of enjoying a beer the way they currently are. This gives Chickie an idea to go to Vietnam himself and deliver his friends some beers. However, Chickie later appears to backtrack on this, which only gives his friends more reason to view him as someone who talks about doing something but never actually accomplishing his goals, like finishing high school, so nobody actually expects him to go to Vietnam. 041b061a72


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