Tag: Graham Greene


  • The Quiet American: Lessons from Vietnam Still Relevant

    The Quiet American: Lessons from Vietnam Still Relevant

    Introduction: A Scene that Haunts the Past The opening image from The Quiet American lingers long after the film ends: Alden Pyle, the self-described “quiet American,” lies lifeless as Thomas Fowler and the French police piece together a tangled web of ambition, idealism, and geopolitical miscalculation. Though set in a different era and a different…

  • The Quiet American: Vietnam War Lessons for Today

    The Quiet American: Vietnam War Lessons for Today

    Introduction: A Quiet Death, Loud Lessons The Quiet American, in its various forms, is more than a war-era thriller. It is a meditation on intervention, journalism, and the fragile line between idealism and manipulation. As the Vietnam War’s first generation of observers moved into memory, Phillip Noyce’s adaptation (and Graham Greene’s original novel) challenged audiences…