Hail, Hero!
Hail, Hero! is a 1969 film directed by David Miller, starring Michael Douglas, Deborah Winters and Peter Strauss. David Manber wrote the screenplay based on the novel by John Weston. The picture was produced by Harold D. Cohen and was the feature film debut for Douglas and for Peter Strauss.
Plot
During the Vietnam War, college student Carl Dixon quits school and joins the Army in hopes of using love, not bullets, to combat the Viet Cong.
Cast
Michael Douglas as Carl Dixon
Arthur Kennedy as Albert Dixon, Carl's father
Teresa Wright as Santha Dixon, Carl's mother
Peter Strauss as Frank Dixon, Carl's younger brother
John Larch as Mr. Conklin
Charles Drake as Senator Murchiston
Mercer Harris as Jimmy
Deborah Winters as Becky
Production
Gordon Lightfoot contributed two songs to the soundtrack, the title song (co-written with Jerome Moross) and "Wherefore And Why", an "alternate, slightly faster take" of the first track of Did She Mention My Name? No soundtrack album was released.
A key scene in the film was changed shortly before the film's release. In both the novel and the film, "Carl spends his last night at home painting the side of his father's barn with a Pop war mural—flowers, bombs, flaming planes and an American flag in which hearts have replaced the stars. In the novel (and in the film before it was ... re-edited), Carl's mother ... and father joined him in this act of affirmation."