10 Military Characters That Make National Service Look Terrifying

By Brogan Morris /

1. Freddie Quell (Joaquin Phoenix) - The Master (2012)

Like Travis Bickle, PTSD could turn you into an insomnia-ravaged, paranoid angel of death. If you€™re lucky. If you get the sharper end of the stick, you might come out of National Service with alcoholism, sex addiction, €œcrying spells€, violent behaviour, erratic mood swings, hallucinations and a predilection for religious cults that have no basis in fact. In The Master€™s pre-war flashbacks, we see soon-to-be-WWII vet Freddie Quell sober, somewhat sad but altogether a normal, unremarkable person. Post-war, languishing in a military hospital before he drifts aimlessly across America, he€™s a sex-mad, boozing animal bordering on missing link, hungrily downing turpentine and masturbating like a chimp in open daylight. If there was ever a warning sign against obligatory military service for all €“ especially for those already of a melancholy disposition €“ Quell is it. He€™s a man wrecked by combat, mentally disfigured then released back into the wild as one of the most damaged souls ever committed to celluloid. He€™s the ultimate example of post-war trauma.