The documentary follows the 100+ soldiers of C (Charlie) Company, 2nd Battalion,
7th Cavalry Regiment,
1st Cavalry Division in 1970 during the
Vietnam War. The unit routinely patrols the harsh, heat-filled Vietnamese jungles in
War zone C near the Cambodian border west of Saigon looking for enemy contact and supplies. The soldiers are worn down on every patrol by the exhausting conditions of heat, dense foliage and biting insects. The troops express diverse opinions about fighting the war. One soldier who opposes the war says he hasn't fired his weapon, a mortar, since arriving in South Vietnam. Others talk about killing the enemy as routine. "Killing gooks don't mean nothing," says one. The medic, a pacifist, says, "Killing for peace just don't make sense." The troops talk about their lives back in the
United States that they commonly refer to as "back in the world." The troops' company commander, Captain Robert Jackson of
Sheffield, Alabama, has formed a close bond with the men and earned their respect because he is unwilling to take unnecessary chances with his soldiers' lives. He is experienced in jungle warfare and central to his tactics is never allowing his company to walk along trails in the jungle where the men can be ambushed by the PAVN. Only two soldiers have been killed under Jackson's command and he is seen as the prime reason the unit has survived so well. However, after six months in command, he suffers a cardiac problem in the field and has to be replaced. The soldiers receive a new commander, Captain Al Rice, who orders them to walk down a trail wide enough to accommodate a motor vehicle. The men call it "a road." The night before, the soldiers had listened to a PAVN battalion of several hundred walk up the same road a short distance from their night defensive perimeter. The point squad, considered by Captain Jackson to be his best, refuses to go down the road and this leads to a revolt against Captain Rice's order. The men explain why they are refusing to walk the road. Rice criticizes his platoon leaders for not supporting his order. Later, Charlie Company gets orders to make a combat assault into Cambodia at the start of the 1970
Cambodian Incursion. Because they are an experienced rifle company and perhaps because of their earlier rebellion, the soldiers are given the mission of attacking the command post of the PAVN in South Vietnam known as
COSVN. A detailed account of the making of the documentary appears in the Vietnam War memoir, "The Cat from Hue" by John Laurence. ==Reception==