In 1969, a platoon of the
3rd Battalion,
187th Infantry,
101st Airborne Division, receives five new recruits as replacements:
Privates Joseph Beletsky, Vincent Languilli (soon called Alphabet), Johnny Washburn, Martin Bienstock and Paul Galvan. At the same time, platoon sergeant, Sergeant First Class Dennis Worcester is breaking in a new platoon leader, Lieutenant Terry Eden. The five privates are assigned to 3rd Squad, led by battle-weary Staff Sergeant Adam Frantz. As Frantz gives them a crash-course in battlefield skills, a
Viet Cong deserter silently penetrates a barbed wire barrier and aims a rocket launcher at them. The platoon's
specialists include the machine gun team of Michael Duffy and Frank Gaigin, along with African-American veterans Ray Motown, Abraham "Doc" Johnson and Sgt. Elliott McDaniel who share their experiences of racial discrimination still practiced in the army. The new arrivals get their first, sudden taste of war when a mortar barrage decapitates Galvan. The platoon is air-lifted into the
A Sầu Valley for an assault on Hill 937. McDaniel, whose
tour of duty is nearly over, is killed in a firefight shortly after disembarking at the landing zone. This loss provokes considerable bitterness and tension from Doc, who blames Frantz for not getting the short-timer McDaniel a less dangerous assignment. Hill 937 soon becomes known as
Hamburger Hill when unexpectedly determined resistance is encountered from
NVA defenders in well-entrenched positions. The platoon attacks repeatedly against stubborn opposition. Between assaults, US air-strikes steadily strip away vegetation, leaving the hill a barren, scorched wasteland. In one assault, a battle-crazed and wounded Duffy, wielding an
M60 machine gun, seems on the verge of overcoming enemy resistance but is killed by botched air support by helicopter gunships. During lulls in the fighting the shrinking platoon chatters about social upheaval and unrest back home. Bienstock is devastated by a letter from his girlfriend, whose college friends have told her that it is immoral to remain with a soldier. A cassette tape from Beletsky's girlfriend Claire moves Frantz when she mentions his name. Worcester describes the alienation and hostility from
anti-war college students, and the breakdown of his marriage, on his return from a previous tour of duty. He tells of a good friend, whose son had been killed in Vietnam during the 1965
Battle of Ia Drang, who receives cruel phone calls gloating over his son's death. On day seven, returning downhill from their ninth assault, Frantz confronts a reporter, telling him he has more respect for the NVA they're fighting, and threatens to shoot him for taking pictures of his men. During the tenth assault, in torrential rain, Gaigin is killed while Beletsky and Doc are wounded. Doc tells Frantz and Motown to capture the hill so that they will at least have something to be proud of, then succumbs to his wounds moments before a medevac helicopter lands. Beletsky, despite having received a "
million dollar wound," returns to the action. The eleventh and final assault is mounted by troops whose bitterness and exhaustion is overcome by desperation and unit pride. The final enemy positions are overrun at heavy cost. Lieutenant Eden loses his right arm, while Murphy, Worcester, Motown, Bienstock and Languilli are killed. Frantz, stunned by the loss of so many friends, is dazed and wounded by an enemy bayonet. Beletsky, wounded but enraged, leads the final push to the summit where a bleeding and exhausted Frantz, Washburn and Beletsky sit together in the dirt as the battlefield finally goes silent. The film's epilogue is a poem by Major Michael Davis O'Donnell, January 1, 1970,
Đăk Tô, Vietnam which reads as follows: "If you are able, save for them a place inside of you and save one backward glance when you are leaving for the places they can no longer go. Be not ashamed to say you loved them, though you may not have always. Take what they have left and what they have taught you with their dying and keep it with your own. And in that time when men decide and feel safe to call the war insane, take one moment to embrace those gentle heroes you left behind." ==Cast==