Rotor Review Winter 2022 #155

Page 64

The Guardian

Reviewed by LCDR Chip Lancaster, USN (Ret.)

I

chose this movie for a number of reasons. Whenever I walk into the NHA and NHAHS offices I go down passageways lined with hundreds of squadron and detachment plaques filled with thousands of names of pilots, aircrew, mechs, riggers and yeomen. When I walk into the training building at HSC-3 I walk down a passageway lined with pictures and paintings of the aircraft, aircrew and in particular the rescue swimmer in action. And, every few weeks I observe the graduation ceremony of a new class of Navy Rescue Aircrew men and women getting their "gold wings." I think that a movie dedicated to them is appropriate. Rescue Swimmer in both the Navy and the Coast Guard is actually a collateral duty with the aircrew much more involved in other things than this film portrays. Let’s put that aside for now and just look at The Guardian movie. The movie starts off with a quote about the legend of “The Guardian” as someone who lives beneath the sea and is the last hope for all who have been left behind. The action moves us into the cabin and cockpit of an HH-60J Jayhawk rescue operation in progress in heavy seas. The mission is successful, albeit, with some minor complications and returns to homebase, CGAS Kodiak, Alaska. Senior Chief Petty Officer (SCPO) Ben Randall, played by Kevin Costner, goes home to disgruntled wife, Helen (Sela Ward), who is in the process of moving out. Ben’s dedication to his military duties has led to Helen filing for divorce. SCPO Randall’s day worsens when he is called in for a night rescue to a sinking fishing boat. The crew abandons ship before the rescue helo can get there. By the time they arrive on station, nothing is left but a debris field and the bodies of the crew dead by hypothermia. One of them pops a flare and Ben is jumped into the raging seas. The rescue basket is lowered and the victim loaded into it. However, before they can hoist him up a debris laden wave hits the tail rotor with the Jayhawk going into the water. It quickly sinks with the only one making it out being the crew chief, and Ben’s best friend, Carl. A C-130 drops them a raft but another helo can’t get there for three hours. Carl dies before they can be rescued. Ben is transferred to Louisiana to be an instructor at the Rescue Swimmer “A” School where he can spend time recovering while training new recruits. This is where most of the rest of the movie takes place. Besides a lack of aviation and rescue missions, it concentrates on the Coast Guard training techniques. It’s also where we meet some key instructors and newbies. Chief among these are Chief Aviation Survival Technician CPO Jack Skinner (Neal McDonough), and recruits AN Jake Fischer (Ashton Kutcher) and PO3 Billy Hodge (Brian Geraghty). We also meet the base CO, CAPT Frank Larson (John Heard). Ben takes over the position of lead instructor. He has a reputation of legend among the Rotor Review #155 Winter '22

rescue swimmers and is looked upon with awe by the recruits. Ben, however, is suffering from PTSD as a result of his last mission where the aircraft and whole crew except for himself were lost. Despite the PTSD which keeps cropping up, SCPO Randall launches into training the recruits with a passion and vigor often exceeding the bounds of the established training program. Two special cases among the recruits are Jake and Billy. Jake has attitude problems and Billy is going through for the third time. These two get extra attention from the instructors, especially CPO Skinner and the Senior Chief. The recruits develop personal relationships among themselves and with some of the locals which are key to their completing the school. Things come to a head for both Randall and Skinner with Jake and Billy. Everything works out and they graduate, getting their aircrew wings. Starting with a class of 50, only 11 complete. Along with their wings, they get their orders. Jake goes to Kodiak, which is also where Ben goes back to following his tour as lead instructor. Kodiak, with Ben and Jake as fellow rescue swimmers, is where the rest of the action takes place. That action is hot and heavy and I’m not going to tell you what it is or how things resolve. Suffice it to say that it is rewarding and worth sticking through the middle of the movie. The film is supported by a strong cast under excellent direction with amazing cinematography. Director Andrew Davis, with seven Academy Award nominations, has brought together a cast of seasoned actors with Academy Award, Golden Globe and Emmy Winner, Kevin Costner (Field of Dreams, Wyatt 62


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Articles inside

NHA Symposium 2022

1min
page 3

Book Review

2min
page 65

Best Scribe for 2020 Finally Has Her Award

2min
page 33

Movie Review

7min
pages 64-65

From the Editor-in-Chief

4min
page 14

View from the Labs

3min
page 23

NHA Symposium 2022 - The Human Advantage

2min
page 21

Radio Check

8min
pages 66-67

Off Duty Book Review

4min
pages 63-65

PEP, Part 3: Flying in a Foreign Language

11min
pages 60-62

Building Bridges with Simulated Large Force Exercises

7min
pages 58-59

COVID ALERT: The Challenges of Transferring COVID Patients at Sea

6min
pages 56-57

USS Abraham Lincoln Deploys with First Female Commanding Officer

2min
page 54

Bring Back Virtual HITS

3min
page 55

The Next Chapter: A Call to Innovate and Integrate

8min
pages 48-50

Advancing FRS Training through Modern Technology: Get Real, Get Better

13min
pages 51-53

Logistics, Not PR, is the Key Mission to Consider for HSC

5min
pages 46-47

A Retired H-60 Pilot’s Personal Take on the Untapped Potential of the CMV-22B

6min
pages 44-45

Embrace the F-Word

11min
pages 34-36

U.S. Marine Corps Supports Humanitarian Aid and Disaster Relief Mission in Haiti with the V-22 - Bell Boeing

3min
pages 42-43

Helicopter Preservation Packaging

6min
pages 40-41

Empathy Is Not Sympathy

11min
pages 37-39

The Heart of Leadership

5min
pages 32-33

Sometimes You Just Have to Say “No”

3min
page 31

Asking the Hard Questions – Suicide Prevention

9min
pages 28-29

FY22 NDAA Reforms Sexual Assault Prosecution in the Military

4min
page 30

Report from the Rising Sun

4min
pages 22-23

Reflections on the 2021 CNAF DEI Summit

8min
pages 26-27

Get Started Telling Your Stories

7min
pages 6-11, 24-25

Commodore's Corner It's the Leadership, Stupid

4min
pages 20-21

Historical Society

3min
pages 18-19

Executive Director's View

3min
page 9

J.O. President Message

3min
page 11

Scholarship Fund Update

3min
pages 16-17

Chairman’s Brief

3min
page 8

Vice President of Membership Report

5min
pages 12-13

National President's Message

3min
page 10
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