For the Love of Beer and His Buddies. “The Greatest Beer Run Ever” tells the story of Chickie Donohue’s unlikely but true adventure bringing suds from New York to his military pals in 1967 Vietnam. Donohue, whose given name is John, grew up in Inwood when it was an Irish American enclave dense with bars. He ran errands for the old-timers in the Democratic clubs and bookie joints. He said that by late 1967, he knew more than 20 young men from the neighborhood who had died in the Vietnam War.
Theme: Friendship, Politics, and Disillusionment Amid War
Texts/Media:
- Film: The Greatest Beer Run Ever (2022), directed by Peter Farrelly
- Article: The Greatest Beer Run Ever — Chickie Donohue profile (The New York Times, Sept 27, 2022)
- Historical context: Tet Offensive, Battle of Khe Sanh, U.S. military intelligence
Essential Questions:
- How do personal experiences challenge official narratives during wartime?
- In what ways can a firsthand witness transform one’s political beliefs?
- When is liberty through humor appropriate for portraying complex political realities?
Learning Objectives
Students will be able to:
- Connect Chickie’s journey to the broader political backdrop—including troop levels, anti-war protests, and the Tet Offensive.
- Analyze how Chickie contradicts U.S. military intelligence by asserting the war isn’t being “won” and by witnessing abuses.
- Evaluate how cinematic devices—comedy, character, conflict—serve to critique or reinforce propaganda.
- Develop informed arguments about the tension between national myth and lived reality.
Lesson Activities
Opening Prompt & NYT Connection
Begin with: Why would Chickie feel compelled to go to Vietnam despite growing skepticism at home?
Highlight from the NYT: his sense of betrayal when he saw protestors carrying Viet Cong flags, deeming them ungrateful toward American troops—despite military leaders claiming progress in Vietnam
Political/Historical Context
Provide background facts:
- In late 1967, the U.S. had ~500,000 troops in Vietnam
- The Tet Offensive (Jan 31, 1968): Viet Cong and North Vietnamese forces launched attacks across 100+ locations, including the U.S. Embassy and ammo depots—shattering public confidence in U.S. intelligence .
- Chickie travels through A Shau Valley and battles near Khe Sanh—actual combat zones event depicted in the film
Film vs. Official Narrative: Spotting Contradictions
Students examine key scenes where Chickie disputes U.S. intelligence:
- Conversation with Bobby Pappas at Long Bình: Chickie relays official claims that the war is going well, but Pappas angrily refutes it: “It’s your brain that’s going to get you killed,” pointing to mounting evidence of U.S. failures
- CIA Agent on Helicopter: Chickie sees a U.S. agent dropping a prisoner from a helicopter—contradicting the idea of moral discipline in U.S. forces .
- Tet Offensive’s shock factor: Despite military assurances of dominance, Tet Offensive’s scale exposes intelligence failures and political misreading .
Group Analysis: Lived Reality vs. Official Messaging
In small groups, students analyze:
- Specific scenes highlighting official claims about the war versus what Chickie witnesses.
- How Chickie’s Marine background lends weight to his disbelief.
- The cinematic choices—comic setups, dramatic reveals—used to subvert propaganda.
Groups then report: what scenes were most compelling in reshaping our understanding of the conflict?
Character & Political Symbolism Discussion
Class-wide dialogue:
- Why did Chickie’s firsthand experiences overturn his trust in U.S. intelligence?
- How does humor employed in the film deepen or soften the impact of political critique?’
- How does the film balance friendship-based patriotism with institutional intervention and policy failure?
Reflection Writing
Prompt:
“By the end, Chickie said ‘I didn’t want those kids to die without me helping,’ yet he witnessed government lies and abuse. Does his journey reflect true patriotism or complicity in political myths? Use specific film moments and historical context in your analysis.”
Extension Task
Students research another case where personal testimony or journalism contradicted official narratives about war (e.g., My Lai massacre reporting, embedded journalists, whistleblowers like Daniel Ellsberg). Compare motivations, methods, and political impact.
Comprehension Questions (7)
- What did U.S. officials claim about war progress before the Tet Offensive—and what was the reality Chickie observed?
- How many U.S. troops were in Vietnam in late 1967—and why was this significant politically?
- What tragic event does Chickie witness on the CIA helicopter—and why does it contradict official ethics?
- What does Pappas say in response to Chickie’s view of “winning the war”? Provide the quote.
- How does Chickie’s Marine veteran status influence military personnel’s reactions to him?
- Describe how the film uses humor to mask then reveal disturbing truths.
- What does Chickie’s transformation—after encountering intelligence failure and frontline realities—tell us about personal versus governmental narratives?
Essay Prompts
-
Patriotism vs. Disillusionment: Explore Chickie’s transformation from trusting state messaging to believing in flawed systems. What scenes showcase this journey?
-
Comedy as Critique: Analyze how the film’s humor functions as a tool to subvert official propaganda. Does it clarify or diminish political critique?
-
Eyewitness Biography vs. Bureaucratic Narrative: Compare Chickie’s firsthand accounts to the government’s messaging. What value do personal testimonies hold in democratic societies?
Sources and Further Reading
- The New York Times – The Greatest Beer Run Ever: Chickie Donohue’s Unbelievable Story
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/09/27/movies/the-greatest-beer-run-ever-chickie-donohue.html - History vs. Hollywood – The Greatest Beer Run Ever: Separating Fact from Fiction
https://www.historyvshollywood.com/reelfaces/greatest-beer-run-ever - War History Online – Chickie Donohue’s Vietnam Journey with a Bag of Beers
https://www.warhistoryonline.com/vietnam-war/john-chickie-donohue.html - Looper – The Greatest Beer Run Ever Ending Explained
https://www.looper.com/1037112/the-ending-of-the-greatest-beer-run-ever-explained - HistoryNet – Chickie’s Story Behind The Greatest Beer Run Ever
https://www.historynet.com/greatest-beer-run-ever-vietnam - The Cinemaholic – Where Is John “Chickie” Donohue Now?
https://thecinemaholic.com/where-is-john-chickie-donohue-now-the-greatest-beer-run-ever-update - Wikipedia – John “Chickie” Donohue
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chick_Donohue - Wikipedia – The Greatest Beer Run Ever (Film)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Greatest_Beer_Run_Ever - Task & Purpose – The True Story of Chickie Donohue
https://taskandpurpose.com/history/chick-donohue-vietnam-greatest-beer-run-history