American Sniper True Story: 12 Things The Movie Changes

American Sniper True Story: 12 Things The Movie Changes

Although American Sniper claims to tell the true story of Chris Kyle, the movie adaptation took plenty of artistic liberties with Kyle’s life and made a few changes to the book’s narrative. Released in 2014, American Sniper charts Kyle’s childhood, early adulthood, military career, retirement, and ultimately his untimely death. Bradley Cooper stars as Kyle in director Clint Eastwood’s loose film adaptation of American Sniper: The Autobiography of the Most Lethal Sniper in U.S. Military History. The movie earned six nominations at the 87th Academy Awards, including a Best Picture nomination for Eastwood and a Best Actor nomination for Cooper.

While Kyle was celebrated for his success as the deadliest marksman in U.S. military history, his tours of duty during the War in Iraq took a huge toll on his marriage, which became the main conflict of the film. Critics praised Cooper’s committed performance and Clint Eastwood’s engaging direction, but American Sniper was controversial for its historical inaccuracies. According to the data site Information is Beautiful, there is just 56.9% of footage that makes American Sniper a true story.

American Sniper True Story: 12 Things The Movie Changes

Related

Where To Watch American Sniper Online

Here’s here to watch American Sniper, the 2014 war biopic drama directed by Clint Eastwood and starring Bradley Cooper and Sienna Miller.

1 Chris Kyle Never Had To Shoot A Child

It Was A Woman Who He Shot Rather Than A Child

In the opening scene of American Sniper – and the opening of Kyle’s memoir – the pressures of Kyle’s sniping career are demonstrated when he sees a woman hand an anti-tank grenade to a child, who then approaches a U.S. military convoy, and Kyle has to decide whether to pull the trigger. In real life, there was no child (via The Guardian); the woman herself carried the grenade to the convoy. Kyle described this incident as “the only time I killed anyone other than a male combatant.

2 The 1998 U.S. Embassy Bombings Didn’t Influence Kyle’s Decision To Enlist

Kyle Wanted To Enlist Since High School

Bradley Cooper as Chris Kyle sitting in a chair in American Sniper.

In the movie, Bradley Cooper’s Kyle is motivated to enlist in the U.S. military when he watches the 1998 U.S. embassy bombings on television. However, this didn’t influence Kyle’s real-life decision to enlist (via Slate). Kyle had intended to join the military after he graduated from high school. The filmmakers simply used it as a visual shorthand to demonstrate Kyle’s need to defend his country. It also had nothing to do with a cheating girlfriend, as the film suggests.

3 Rodeo Injuries Almost Prohibited Kyle From Joining The Military

Kyle Wasn’t Accepted At First Like He Was In The Movie

Bradley Cooper as Chris Kyle at weapons training in American Sniper

When Kyle first enlisted to join the military, he was turned down due to injuries he had sustained from bronco-busting rodeos (via Slate). While he did get a full-time ranch job after he left Tarleton State University after attending for two years (before dropping out), Kyle got a call from Navy recruiters who had changed their minds and decided to accept him into the Marines. The movie streamlines this part of the story to save time, so Kyle goes straight from the rodeo circuit to Marine weapons training.

4 Kyle’s Wedding Wasn’t Interrupted By The Outbreak Of War

Kyle Already Knew About His Deployment

Bradley Cooper as Chris Kyle and Sienna Miller as Taya dance at their wedding in American Sniper.

In the movie adaptation of American Sniper, Kyle’s wedding to his wife, Taya (played by Sienna Miller), is interrupted by the news that America is going to war following the 9/11 terrorist attacks. In real life (via Slate), Kyle had already learned that he was going to be deployed, so he and Taya decided to get married during a brief period of leave from military training before he was shipped off to war.

5 Mustafa Is Partly Fictional

Mustafa Was Never Really Kyle’s Nemesis

Mustafa using a sniper rifle in American Sniper

The American Sniper movie introduces a Syrian sniper named Mustafa, an ex-Olympic sharpshooter (played by Sammy Sheik), who is Kyle’s main “opponent”. This is a partially fictional character (via The Guardian). A notorious sniper is briefly mentioned in one paragraph of Kyle’s memoir, but he’s not the main villain of the story like he is in the movie. In his book, Kyle wrote, “I never saw him, but other snipers later killed an Iraqi sniper we think was him.” This is one of the most Hollywood-ized elements of the film adaptation. The movie dedicates its climactic sequence to Kyle and Mustafa’s dramatic fight to the death.

6 The Butcher Is Fictional

The Butcher Was Made Specifically For The Movie

The Butcher with a drill in American Sniper

Mido Hamada plays “The Butcher,” an infamous terrorist who attacks small children, in the movie adaptation of American Sniper. The Butcher is depicted as al-Qaeda leader Abu Musab al-Zarqawi’s second-in-command. Although he’s thought to be inspired by Ismail Hafidh al-Lami, also known as Abu Deraa (via The Guardian), who was blamed for thousands of deaths in the mid-2000s, the Butcher is a fictional character.

7 The Scene In The Civilian House Was Invented For The Movie

The Scene Was Added For Additional Tension

The SEALs eat in a civilian house in American Sniper

In one scene in the American Sniper movie, Kyle and his fellow SEALs take shelter in a civilian house, where they are welcomed with a meal. However, when they find weapons hidden under the floorboards, they realize the family is pro-insurgency and enter an intense shootout with them. This scene doesn’t appear in Kyle’s memoir and was invented just for the film (via Slate).

Related

15 Movies Like American Sniper That Everyone Needs To See

American Sniper gave audiences a brutal view of life after war. Movies like The Hurt Locker & Flags Of Our Fathers also give similar experiences.

8 Kyle And Taya Mostly Communicated Via Email

The Phone Calls Were Just To Add A Personal Touch To American Sniper

In the American Sniper movie, Kyle frequently speaks to his wife Taya on the satellite phone, and she’s horrified to hear the sounds of battle in the background. In reality (via The Washington Post), this only happened once. Kyle and Taya mostly communicated via email, but that’s nowhere near as cinematic as a phone call where the actors can express all their emotions through dialogue, so the filmmakers changed the emails to phone calls.

9 Kyle’s Friends’ Stories Are Fictionalized

Kyle Never Disrespected Lee’s Death In Real Life

Bradley Cooper and Luke Grimes in military uniform in American Sniper

Both the memoir and its film adaptation feature many of Kyle’s friendships on the battlefield, but the two friends who recur the most – in both the book and the movie – are Ryan “Biggles” Job (played by Jake McDorman), and Marc Lee (played by Luke Grimes). In the film, Biggles is blinded by Mustafa, bolstering Kyle’s quest for vengeance against the fictional Syrian sniper, and dies shortly after proposing to his girlfriend. In real life (via Slate), Biggles was discharged after his injury attended college, started a career, and got married before he passed away during his wife’s pregnancy with their first child.

In the film, Lee’s death in the heat of battle is used to further the film’s pro-war message as Kyle argues his friend died because he lost faith in the war. But, in reality, Kyle was much more sympathetic to the loss of his friend and paid graveside respects. In the film, Kyle scorns an anti-war letter that Lee wrote to his mother, but in the memoir, he praises the letter and supports his fallen friend.

10 The Bounty On Kyle’s Head Was Smaller And Applied To Any American Sniper

Kyle Wasn’t Special Enough To Get A Unique Bounty

A wanted poster in American Sniper

The American Sniper movie illustrates Kyle’s notoriety with posters bearing his tattoos, which promised a $180,000 bounty to anyone who killed him. However, the reward was actually in the $20,000 to $80,000 range, and it applied to any American sniper, not just Kyle. It turns out that Kyle himself debunked this part of the movie when she spoke to Conan O’Brien and explained that the enemy did want him dead, but they had the same bounty for all the American snipers that the insurgents could kill.

11 Kyle Came Home From War To Avoid Divorce

In The Movie, Kyle Came Home Dejected After Killing Mustafa

Sienna Miller as Taya embraces Chris in American Sniper.

In the movie, Kyle decides to come home from war after killing Mustafa and determining that he feels too dejected to keep fighting. However, in real life, he decided to come home to avoid a divorce. His military service was putting a strain on his marriage and Taya had threatened to leave him if he didn’t come home (via Slate). While the movie did show the two fighting about him reenlisting, the movie didn’t show that this was the main reason that he finally decided to leave the service and at the end of American Sniper, Kyle came back home to his wife and his baby.

12 Kyle’s Final Conversation With Taya Isn’t In The Book

However, The Conversation Supposedly Did Happen

The film ends with Kyle’s death as he heads to a shooting range with veteran Eddie Ray Routh, who would ultimately kill him. In the movie, Kyle has a heartfelt final conversation with his wife before leaving for the shooting range. This conversation doesn’t appear in the book, but American Sniper screenwriter Jason Hall wrote in an addendum to a new edition of the memoir that Taya had described the conversation to him (via Slate). Interestingly, by adding this final scene the movie was able to make it about his life, and not bother with his actual murder, which could have put attention on the man who killed him.