Killer Blue: Baptized by Fire

Blue homecoming

June’s first Notable Narrative recounts the story of Blue Platoon, Killer Troop, whose soldiers returned to the U.S. in 2009 after finishing one of the last 15-month combat tours in Iraq. The story behind this multimedia project is simple and all too familiar: The Killer Blue soldiers serve. Some die. Others make it home. And some who come back find themselves damaged in ways they do not understand or accept.

But an inverted structure makes the story fresh. The video portion of the project opens by running several platoon members past the viewer, letting us hear their voices, and then dives into suspense by showing footage from a funeral. We hear the slow whine of the motor lowering a coffin into the grave and watch it descend, but we don’t know who died. Then suddenly we see scenes from the platoon’s homecoming. We scan the troop formation. Who didn’t make it? Who is missing?

The video of this Associated Press project is crisp, without the self-conscious grittiness of much war reporting. If this kind of footage makes the package almost slick, it somehow also makes it more dramatic. We see impeccable sequences of these young men playing golf, joking around, doing the terrible job that could end their lives at any moment. And we get to know the voices of men like Lt. Rusty Morris, who mentions “war stories that you want to tell, but you don’t want to tell.” We sense his grief, and we worry about what will happen to those who make it back.

Original music, links to a 2008 print piece, and interactive elements—including soldiers’ recollections about those who died—add depth to this complex portrait of a platoon.


2 Responses to Killer Blue: Baptized by Fire
Andrea Pitzer says:
July 22, 2009 at 4:17pm
If you click on our link, you'll get a picture box, which has an arrow. If you click that, it will show you the video, which we highlighted on the site. But if you are really just interested in the article--no video--then click on one of the black and white photos of the soldiers along the bottom of that page. You'll see a profile of the soldier, and an opportunity to click and read a print story about the Platoon.
Jim Mullett says:
July 22, 2009 at 3:40pm
No resaponse from me because I can't access the article. All I get when I click is what looks like a picture box.
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