Screw the War, We're Partying

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The heat is on in Saigon
And things are not going well
But still at midnight, the party goes on
A good-bye party in hell.

Miss Saigon, "The Heat Is On in Saigon"
"I expect the best and I give the best. Here's the beer. Here's the entertainment. Now have fun. That's an order!"
Lt. Jean Rasczak, Starship Troopers

This is The Bible quote in Isaiah 22:13, "let us eat and drink; for tomorrow we shall die", taken to the extreme.

Soldiers and civilians during war will try to have as much fun as they can during their downtime to block out the horrors of war, to escape the violence and recapture the feeling of peacetime. But then there are those who take it to a whole other level: the bombardier who turns up with a hangover, the stoned tank commander, aristocrats trying to deny a war is even happening... This one's for the characters who party to keep their upper lip stiff and morale high and the others, on the dark side of the trope, trying to block out the reality of war altogether.

Glamorous Wartime Singer often features. Unlike While Rome Burns, this is for characters who are on the receiving end of war and can be a positive way for characters to keep their sanity.

Bonus if there is plenty of Plunder to party with.

Examples of Screw the War, We're Partying include:

Anime and Manga

  • In the Skypeia arc of One Piece, the Straw Hat Pirates drop everything to celebrate their discovery that the city of gold is real and they know where to find it. Their "Pre-Bounty Bash" takes place on the first night of a war between God Eneru's forces and the native Shandians, which they spend the next day taking part in en route to the City.
  • Played for maximum sadness in Saikano, in which the students beg the military to allow them to celebrate the school festival.

Comic Books

  • The first arc of Midnighter's series had him travel back in time to kill Hitler. Long story short, he arrives in Berlin shortly after Adolf is about to off himself as Red Army troops are closing in. Arriving at the guards' building, he finds them pissing drunk and getting it on with their girlfriends, one of them claim the staff officers are having a full blown orgy in the next building.
  • Baron Soontir Fel, the best pilot in the Empire since Vader died, defected for a long and complicated list of reasons, including the fact that he and his command had been assigned to the utterly incompetent Admiral Lon Isoto. Isoto tried to make Fel cheat on his wife with a servant girl, had no grasp of tactics and no sense of what a victory was, and basically just threw orgies around. Fel knew that his command had been assigned there for the express purpose of being killed by the Rebels as part of one of Isard's schemes. With that in mind, he let his pilots attend and enjoy themselves, since it would be inhuman to deny them a last pleasure. Fortunately for them, Isoto's assassination at Isard's order meant that they didn't all get killed; if Fel hadn't gotten captured in that battle, he might have put off defecting a little longer.
  • In Elf Quest, the night before the Wolfriders and the Go-Backs go into battle against Guttlekraw's trolls, a general orgy ensues among the elves.
  • The comic Army @ Love is this trope. After a unsuccessful recruitment campaign, a division called Morale and Motivation markets the army as "Spring Break w/t Guns". Every platoon gets a state sponsored orgy as well as other perks, even if they're married. Hell, they start giving out medals to soldiers who 'deploy' in the middle of combat! Many military readers have found it deeply offensive.
  • Lost Girls is set in an Austrian hotel in 1913. Alice, Wendy and Dorothy cocoon themselves inside the hotel with the other patrons, engaging in drug-fueled orgies as the outside world erupts into war.
  • In DMZ, there is an area where both sides of the second US Civil War decide to say screw fighting, get together to party, then both sides return to their bases, lie in all their reports about what is going on, and keep their superiors clueless.
  • In the Marvel Comics series The Nam the new guy is watching a movie when the Viet Cong launch a mortar attack. The new guy starts to go for cover but is stopped by his buddy, who assures him that they are safe since the enemy are watching the movie too, "Charlie don't get no R&R."
  • In the IDW's Transformers Ongoing comics, Blurr was a racer, one of the best, and had no interest in joining the war on either side and pretty much just said that he was gonna keep partying. However, that didn't happen and he joined the Autobots.

Film

  • Features in Downfall (or Der Untergang) where Eva Braun engineers vast parties to distract Adolf Hitler and their friends to avoid the reality of Germany's Defeat. Unfortunately, Eva's one attempt at a party above ground near the very end of the war is stopped real quick as a Soviet artillery shell hits too close and blasts dust everywhere.
  • The finale of Carry On Up The Khyber shows the main characters attempting to have a dinner party while their mansion is being bombed all to hell.
  • Features in Apocalypse Now, with Willard reflecting that "(Charlie's) idea of great R&R was cold rice and a little rat meat." during a USO show. Also the scene in the Directors Cut where the main characters trade their fuel for some private time with playboy models.
    • Not to mention the extraordinarily famous scene when Col. Kilgore orders his men to take a village so that they can partake of its surfing beach. Some are even seen out on longboards before the battle has even concluded.
  • Buffalo Soldiers
  • Subverted in Platoon with Sgt. Elias, a stoner with a relativist attitude to war who is still a badass and a more effective commander than his violent rivals.
  • Deconstructed in Jarhead. During a Christmas party Jake Gyllenhaal's character Swoff decides to goof around and get drunk while he's supposed to be on guard duty, so he has another Marine take his place. Said other Marine accidentally burns down a tent, and Swoff suffers the consequences since he was the one who had the guy replace him. This results in a complete mental breakdown.
  • Full Metal Jacket, in the Vietnamese half of the movie, where the most popular hobbies among soldiers are whoring and comparing bodycounts.
  • On display in Paths of Glory, with the aristocrats (generals included) insulated by ballroom festivities.
  • Sgt. Oddball in Kelly's Heroes is a proto-hippie who just wants to have some "fine wine and cheese and soak up some rays" and to avoid 'negative waves'. He's also a tank commander. Who has loudspeakers attached to the tanks in his unit so they can play blare music while they go into battle.

"We play music on 'em...really loud...It calms us down, y'know?"

  • The Dirty Dozen centres on a mission to assassinate several high-ranking Nazis during a country-house party.
    • The Dozen themselves also party with prostitutes at the end of their training. This leads to problems with high command for the major and leads to the "War Games" plot detour.

"...then you don't deny the fact that on the night of April 14–15, a US Military installation was the scene of a drunken party in which no less than 7 civilian women played an active part!?"
"Oh yes sir, they played an active part alright."

  • In Casablanca, Rick's Cafe hosts the Vichy French and the richest of the refugees at Rick's Cafe trying to gamble and drink while the war goes on elsewhere. Then some Nazi Officers and a Czech freedom fighter are thrown into the mix...
    • Even before then, it's played with a bit in that even though Rick's Cafe Americain is a good place to go for a good time, it's also a place where the black market, espionage and various other schemers go to make contacts, arrange deals and such; even though the party's good, no one's entirely forgotten that there's a war on.
  • Lt. Jean Rasczak in the Starship Troopers movie brings out a whole set of party favors, including kegs, footballs, and musical instruments, for his soldiers after they run a successful mission, specifically so that they can have some fun. Unfortunately, the festivities have to be cut a little short when they're ordered to move out for another mission.
  • The first scenes of Das Boot involve the crews from a pair of submarines in the Wolf Pack having a party the night before going back to the Atlantic.
  • The infamous scene from The Matrix Reloaded that features the human city of Zion in an all-city rave before the War with the Machines. And you get to see Keanu Reeves's ass. It's supposed to be symbolic of... something.
  • The Russian soldiers in Enemy at the Gates party because they're happy they're alive for another day and may be dead tomorrow.
    • Veterans of the actual battle criticized this scene, saying that they instead spent their downtime sleeping or eating.
  • When Forrest and his best friend Bubba arrive at their base camp during 'Nam in Forrest Gump, the soldiers there are in the midst of a barbecue as the two of them report to their commanding officer. Bubba then starts talking to Forrest about the potential shrimping industry that could sprout once they'd conquered Vietnam.
  • Joyeux Noel. See Real Life example below.
  • In Blood Diamond, a party is held at night in a city. The very next night, it's the rebel army that's partying; they took the city during a battle the day before.
  • Pretty much the premise of the entire (original) M*A*S*H film.

Literature

  • Nearly every character in Pynchon's Gravity's Rainbow.
  • Most of the lower-ranking soldiers in Catch-22.
  • The good version in the X Wing Series novels pops up more than once, with the Wraiths taking the time to raise their morale. Runt organized a dance in Iron Fist. Solo Command had the "rebellion of anonymity" on the Mon Remonda; for twenty-four hours, rank became meaningless when off duty and people did a lot of things, including playing sabbac with man-who-looks-like-Commander-Antilles and man-who-looks-like-General-Solo, but can't be, since Antilles and Solo both wore rank insignia, and these people didn't. There's mention of astromech races and the woman who looked like Rogue Squadron's chief mechanic winning a week's pay from the man who looked like Solo's second in command.
  • The morale-boosting version pops up in Faith Of The Fallen, sixth book in the Sword of Truth series, where Kahlan arranges a wedding for Verna and Warren while they've got a brief break from their war with the Imperial Order. The wedding ends up being a double morale boost, as about half way through the festivities reinforcements show up, adding about 100,000 men to the army's ranks. Not that it helps a whole lot, considering the size of the army they're facing.
  • In the Dragonlance novel 'Dragons of Spring Dawning', the people of Kalaman celebrate their liberation by the Golden General, Laurana, by holding a day long celebration in her honor, even though the War of the Lance is still raging. The celebration leads to tragedy, since Laurana, who is already physically exhausted from all the battles she has recently fought in and in a bad emotional state over the apparent loss of her Love Interest Tanis Half-Elven to her Arch Enemy, Kitiara Uth Matar, drinks heavily at the party and is not allowed to leave the celebration until she is dead on her feet. It is then with Laurana in this weakened, highly suggestible condition that she receives a false message from Kitiara about Tanis. The drunk, exhausted Laurana proves an easy mark for Kitiara's manipulation and ends up getting herself captured after blindly walking straight into a rather Obvious Trap.
  • Merry and Pippin after the fall of Orthanc.
  • In the Left Behind book Glorious Appearing, the people in Petra were like Screw The War, We're Praising The Lord when the Global Community Unity Army has them completely surrounded and ready to overrun the place. Somewhat justified in that God has made them nigh-invulnerable to enemy fire at that point...and also in that Jesus was going to come and turn the entire Global Community army into bird food!
  • In Sven Hassel's books about the Legion of the Damned, there is invariably a scene where the nothing-to-lose penal soldiers throw a big party, usually doing something like taking over a brothel or a high-class hotel and defending it against all comers, be they German military police, civil authority, or in one extreme case a major Russian attack. Although they may have signed a local truce with the Russians and shared the girls and the booze.
  • Jingo: Screw the war, we're playing football!
  • Scenes of this take place in both the book versions and the film versions of Wouk's World War II duology and both the good guys and bad guys spend a lot of time partying. There is even partying in a concentration camp where they make a puppet show making fun of Hitler.

Live-Action TV

  • M*A*S*H (television) again. The commonly invoked trope is the only way the staff has to keep themselves sane amid the pressures of war. However, the instant wounded arrive, the gang would instantly call off the hijinks and get to work.
  • An episode of Foyle's War featured a hotel in the countryside where people lived trying to pretend the war wasn't happening. Not so much partying as "lalala! Can't hear the bombs going off!"
  • Private Walker from Dads Army who has avoided the WW 2 draft due to a 'corned beef allergy' and spends his time in the home guard playing the black market and chasing women.
  • When No Reservations went to Beirut they got caught there when Israel started bombing it in 2006. They filmed a scene that evening in a Beirut nightclub where the patrons were living out this trope, with suggestions that similar had happened during the prior war some years back. Then It Got Worse...
  • Implied and glimpsed in Battlestar Galactica. As discipline aboard Galactica starts to break down, we occasionally see the pilots partying and boozing wildly in the pilot common room. Since the pilot roster consists of mixed sexes and Kat accuses Starbuck of sleeping around, they presumably get wilder than just boozing.
  • In the Doctor Who episode "The Empty Child," the Doctor stumbles into one of these, which quickly gets rerouted to the bomb shelter as another air raid starts.
  • In the Torchwood episode "Captain Jack Harkness," Jack and Tosh get sent back in time to 1941 and end up in a dance hall during a German air raid. While the bombs do cause the party to temporarily relocate to the bomb shelter, the Glamorous Wartime Singer continues entertaining, and the party resumes upstairs once they get the all-clear. Most attendees treat it as a normal occurrence and no reason to stop having fun, but others are clearly having issues with the whole mortality thing and are using the party as a cover for their fears.
  • In the Stargate Atlantis series opening, the heroes just pissed off the Wraith, a race who defeated the freakin' Ancients while they themselves are cut off from Earth and any sort of reinforcements. What do they do? Party with the Athosians, of course.
  • This is pretty much the lifestyle of your average Klingon. On the eve of battle, sworn enemies often party together and part company saying, "May you die well!"
  • The Supernatural episode "The End", soldiers are seen driving around the devastated ruins of a city in armored cars, bottles of whiskey balanced on the dash and classic rock blaring as they gun down a plague-infected mob. The whole thing exudes a "whole world's going to hell, no reason to not enjoy ourselves" feel.
  • In China Beach, the characters were at an R&R base, so they often had dances, parties, concerts, and generally had a good time when they weren't too occupied with, ya know, killing Viet Cong or saving lives. This took a turn for the dark several times, as the war sometimes got in the way. Probably the worst incidents were the night that fun-loving lifeguard Boonie and two buddies went to a bar in Saigon and one guy who was going home the next day was killed by a Viet Cong agent with a grenade. Then, in a later season, they were all driving to a dance and a Jeep flipped, Boonie underneath. One of the doctors was forced to amputate Boonie's leg below the knee to save him from drowning as flood waters rose.
  • This trope is invoked so often in McHales Navy that one has to wonder if the sailors will ever get around to (intentionally) contributing to the war effort.
  • In Star Trek: Deep Space Nine there was a 'screw the War, we're playing baseball' episode and a 'screw the War, we're fighting gangsters in the holosuite' episode.
    • Quarks Bar is a notable place to do this.
    • Klingons party a lot too but this seems to be less "Screw the war" and more,"Lets celebrate, we get to have a war."

Music

  • Simon LeBon of Duran Duran famously said in an early interview "We want to be the band to dance to when the bomb drops." This was during the early 80's when the Cold War was undergoing one of its more unstable periods.
  • If taken more seriously, Weird Al's "It's Christmas at Ground Zero" is very much this.

Oral Tradition, Folklore, Myths and Legends

  • The Feast of Belshazar while Babylon is under siege by Persians at the end of Book Of Daniel, making this trope Older Than Feudalism
  • Alternating partying and battles is a fairly accurate description of the Norse afterlife. If you were lucky enough to die in battle.
  • For the most part, this is an accurate description of the life of Heracles.

Radio

  • One of the Doctor Who Big Finish audios, Terror Firma is mostly based around this. Earth has been conquered by the Daleks, and the few remaining people in London spend their whole time partying while waiting for the inevitable extermination. Or, to be more precise, waiting for the uprising. Turns out the party is just a front

Theatre

  • In Cabaret, everyone tries to forget the Nazi invasion while having some entertainment at the Kit Kat Club. It's summed up in the lyrics of "Willkommen".

Leave you troubles outside!
So - life is disappointing? Forget it!
We have no troubles here! Here life is beautiful...
The girls are beautiful...
Even the orchestra is beautiful!

Video Games

  • Super Robot Wars, particularly the Original Generation series often features the heroes having a large feast or party before the final push against the enemy. Notably, the pilots themselves do most of the cooking for it.
  • In World of Warcraft in the Eversong Woods zone, blood elves are trying to hold back the rampaging undead from overrunning their city. Meanwhile, Lord Saltheril, is... holding a party, with guests giggling about going to watch the fighting later on. Needless to say, the elves doing the actual fighting are pissed at him.
    • The guests - and Saltheril himself - are intensely creepy. There you are, a stone's throw from the front and even closer to the insane looters, and they're...giggling and partying like nothing's wrong. It serves as a very effective symbol of the blood elves' lifestyle, really.
    • Not to mention the various holidays observed by the Horde and Alliance throughout the year. Both sides (for the most part) take some time off slaying each other and participate in the festivities. The cold war thaws slightly.
    • It also has some basis in real life too. During the American Civil War during the first few battles, civilians on both sides were so excited about the action that they would have picnics on the hillside and watch the fighting.
  • The culminating scenes of the romance arcs in Neverwinter Nights 2, Jade Empire, Mass Effect, and Mass Effect 2 all occur on the eve of the final battle. Your Love Interest in Dragon Age will also invite you to bed on the eve of your confrontation with the Archdemon.
  • Most Suikoden games have a "calm before the storm" night before the final battle. Your army is split between having some very personal moments, and in drunken revelry (sometimes both). Expect the backdrop to be this.
  • At one point in Alan Wake, Alan and Barry stay in a cabin overnight, and can't leave because Dark Is Evil is to be taken literally. Barry finds some moonshine made by the owners, and they proceed to get very drunk.
  • Dukov in Videogame/Fallout3. The post-apocalyptic ruins of Washington are the site of an epic Stalingrad-esque battle between the Brotherhood of Steel, super mutants and the Talon Company (later during the plot, the Enclave also throws their hat into the ring). And the retired Russian mercenary just sits in what once was a luxurious hotel, drinks to oblivion and boinks whores.
  • In Mass Effect 3, when the whole galaxy is locked in a desperate war against the Reapers, you can find lots of military personnel living it up on the Citadel. Joker even lampshades it when you find him there.

Web Comics

Ishtvan: Could it always do that?
Martellus: How should I know? Knowing my Grandmother's parties, probably.

    • Or, in the words of Smoke Knights, she had one in a city under attack ("…and there were fire monkeys everywhere") and such things are a feature rather than a bug:

Varpa: Listen. This party is about to be crashed by a giant undead Storm King! The Master will be there.
Malek: Oh my gosh — the Master, the Lady Heterodyne, and the actual Storm King at her party?
Varpa: I know! Grandma's going to be thrilled!

      • And then, this party was crashed by "The Queen of the Dawn". Oh, and the Geisterdamen on giant spiders. Never mind that.

Western Animation

  • At the end of Season 3 of ReBoot, as the system is crashing (an equivalent of a Planetary/Physical Annihilation for the digital characters), some of the Pirate and Mainframe Binomes get together, throw a rowdy party and get drunk off their asses. Meanwhile, other characters decide it's a good time to conclude their Romance Arcs and make out.

Real Life

World War II

  • This is pretty much exactly what happened at the fall of Singapore (and many other European colonies that were conquered by the Japanese). See the start of the movie Paradise Road and the series Tenko.
  • In the movie Downfall a mixed crowd of Wehrmacht and SS officers is seen partying in a Berlin posh hotel along with nurses and civilian women; the revelers are depicted possessed with all the frenzy of doomed people: the Red Army was already encroaching the city and many of the party-goers would have either died defending it or be subject to the Russians' vendetta for the atrocities inflicted against the USSR in 4 years of war. The episode is partly inspired by an actual event.
  • In The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich, William Shirer relates how, in the last days of WWII, the low-level staff in Hitler's bunker broke out the booze, put on records and started dancing after the senior staff had retired for the night. They apparently got so loud and raucous that Hitler himself called to request that they turn down the volume.
    • As he was about to commit suicide, no less. They were ruining his big dramatic moment.
  • As Berliners waited for the Russians to close in during WWII, teenagers having sex in various quiet (and sometimes not so quiet) corners became a common feature. One middle-aged female diarist even described walking through the Tiergarten with a companion, with both of them trying to come up with a witty name for it that took into account all the nervous giggling and sighs of pleasure they heard...when she saw her fourteen year old son with a lady friend, walking in the other direction and adjusting their clothes. The comedy of the situation is made tragically grim when the motivation for all this randiness is taken into account: German girls wanted to lose their virginity in a consensual sexual act, rather than have their first experience of sex be rape by a drunken and probably violent Red Army soldier.
  • The Happy Valley Set in Kenya during WWII. Made infamous by the murder of Josslyn Hay, Earl of Erroll and the subsequent trial and aquittal of Sir Jock Delves Broughton.
  • The Duke and Duchess of Windsor during his term as Governor of the Bahamas during WWII. In particular, the Duchess was notorious for going on long shopping trips to the USA.
  • Shanghai was as infamous for its "tastes" in partying during the world war ii and the various troubles before. It was called the most wicked city in the world which is probably unfair as it's vices were usually ordinary human sleaze and crime pumped to an extreme degree rather then totalitarianism. In any case it was a favorite place for people who wanted to get away from trouble somewhere else whether refugees from as far away from the other side of the world or locals fleeing from the warlordism and the three way fight between the Nationalists, Communists, and Japanese.
  • Lisbon was the last port out of Europe and the first into during World War II. Rich dilettantes and spies disguised as such would spend much of their time partying.
  • Basically any neutral spot in World War II saw a lot of partying. There were plenty of rich folks around who hadn't enough left to get to safety but had money or at least credit enough to party.
    • Sometimes the partying had a brutally utilitarian side. There were a number of occasions when someone had to go on the run and didn't have enough money to buy a ticket(which were going at premium rate due to the chocked up transport and the ubiquitous suspicion of travelers by the various chancelleries)but did have enough money for a buy-in at an expensive gaming house. It was common to use the last money in the hope of winning enough of a score to get out of Dodge. In other words, though it had faults in detail, the basic idea of Casablanca was true to life.
  • Comedian Spike Milligan famously laughed and joked his way through WW 2. He was part of a jazz quartet that formed when its four members were conscripted to the same artillery unit. Warned that if they dared waste shipping space by smuggling their instruments aboard the troop ship taking them to war in North Africa, they did so anyway. Despite dire threats of court-martial and having the instruments tossed overboard. A fortnight into the voyage, a shamefaced Naval officer who'd seen Milligan's band playing on shore made unofficial representation from the captain. If all possible charges were dropped, how much would it cost for Milligan's quartet to play on board ship for officers, diplomats and their wives travelling to form a civilian administration in occupied north Africa?
    • Milligan was also pursued during the war by the Inland Revenue, chasing undeclared income from band gigs. Having received the letter threatening to jail him for non-payment of tax during a German offensive, with shells and bombs landing all around him, Milligan was not amused. He sent back a not-entirely-accurate resume of having made guest appearances worldwide, playing gigs like "The Retreat" for General Gort's BEF Rhythym Boys (Dunkirk, May 1940) "We Surrender" (Singapore, 1942), with an encore of "Nagasaki" at the request of General Tojo; and other unlikely band freelancing such as "Winter in Moscow" for General von Trimpernblitz, December 1941.
  • C. S. Lewis' speech at Oxford, Learning in war time. It was more "Screw the war we're studying" but from the speech you would think that studying was partying. For Lewis of course it was
  • Between the Saipan and the Tinian operations in World War 2 Admiral Spruance held a feast for his brass aboard his flagship offshore. Unfortunately the feast was disturbed by the agonizingly plump flies that had gathered from an island chock full of Japanese who took seriously the bushido code and would not surrender.

Elsewhere and Elsewhen

  • While the Bolshevik Revolution was going on all throughout Russia, the nobles and high-ranking military officers were partying pretty much until the commoners stormed the Hermitage.
  • In the US Navy, if a ship is at sea for more than 90 days at one time, each member of the crew is served two beers (it is otherwise illegal to consume alcohol while a ship is underway).
    • By comparison, in the Royal Navy, the allotment is 2 cans a night, with the option to buy a third in lieu of the traditional grog.
  • The Royal Navy recognized this as well, with the amusing result that the laws banning sodomy (when they were in effect) made a specific exemption "after 90 days at sea." Hello, Sailor!!
  • The Hippie revolutions.
  • A really bizarre example: The World War I Christmas Truce, in which the soldiers on both sides spontaneously took a day off from fighting.
    • Some of the soldiers. Some of them took the chance to take a closer look at the enemy defences while they were at it. For others... well, there was only one way to find out if the enemy would disobey orders to shoot you if you offered a truce, and not everyone felt like disobeying.
  • During the American Civil War, Confederate general George Pickett was off at a fish fry while his men fought the Battle of Five Forks. It didn't end well.
  • The original Olympic Games took this to the extreme: soldiers would drop their weapons and travel to Elis (the city-state in which the sanctuary of Olympia was situated) the moment the games were announced—it was not uncommon to shake hands with a guy who was trying to kill you a few weeks ago.
    • The other Panhellenic Games were similar, although they weren't as holy/prestigious as the Olympic Games.
  • According to an interview Robert Duvall did back in the 1990s this kind of thing happened frequently during the Vietnam War. He did extensive research about the U.S Military and had interviews with current and former service-men, what he learned was that the Air Cavalry division in particular, which his character Kilgore is a Colonel in, actually did some of the things that they are portrayed doing in the movie Apocalypse Now. He recounted one story that he liked about how one time the Air Cavalry where under fire from the enemy but decided to catch a cow with a net and air-lift it with a helicopter simply so they could have it for a barbecue. Robert Duvall then mentioned that the depiction of soldiers getting high on drugs was accurate as well. All in all Vietnam wasn't a war that a good majority of US service-men took seriously.
  • This trope captures a good part of the national character of the Lebanese people. In the early 1970s, when the Israeli Air Force was bombing the crap out of southern Lebanon and occasionally targeting Beirut itself to deal with the Palestinian Liberation Organization, nightclubs, bars, and coffeeshops (the teetotaling equivalent of the other two) still did a brisk business. During the incredibly bloody fifteen-year, three-sided civil war (1975-1990), the scene died down a bit (to say the least), but people still tried to make their own fun under the circumstances (one example can be seen in the film West Beirut). Since then, occasional violence has been a fact of life in Lebanon, but the Lebanese have continued, unfazed, to just make the best of it. The most poignant example is probably the period 2006-2010, when, starting with the Israeli invasion of the south and bombing of Beirut (again), people across the country all said, "eh, screw it, I'm going out;" despite a war between Israel and Hezbollah, armed clashes in the streets, terrorism arising from Palestinian refugee camps across the country, and the occasional assassination, Beirut and other Lebanese cities have seen a construction boom and a proliferation of all kinds of nightlife, and the country's wine and beer industries have seen a sudden uptick. They say that the nightclubs of Beirut were never so packed as in the third and fourth weeks of July 2006 (when Israel was running a bombing campaign against targets across Lebanon).
  • In Istanbul Intrigues by Barry M Rubin, the author describes high-class joints in neutral Istanbul during World War II where spies, diplomats, exiles, etc would go to party while they were taking a break from killing each-other, plotting against each-other, and generally doing unpleasant things to each other.
    • Istanbul in general was known for this all through the twentieth century. Starting at least with the pile of White Russian exiles piling into occupied Istanbul at the end of WWI(ironically the Czarists and the Ottomans had been traditional military enemies), and continuing to this day where you can visit a coffeehouse, get a good cup, and listen to people grumbling about, or pointedly ignoring ISIS nearby.
  • Along the Gulf Coast in the US, especially Louisiana, people who can't or refuse to evacuate during a hurricane warning will throw hurricane parties.
    • During Hurricane Dennis and Hurricane Ivan, people along the panhandle of Florida were known to go right down to the beach to look at the large waves, only to come home and find out they were close to having gotten hit by tornadoes and/or waterspouts when they were out there.
  • The Battle of Trenton during The American Revolution was won in large part because the Hessian mercenaries were hungover from Christmas Eve partying.
  • The Waterloo Ball just before the Battle of Waterloo was one of the most famous parties in history. Sir Edward Shepherd Creasy recounted in The Fifteen Decisive Battles of the World that the Duke of Wellington and his aides left the ball "[o]ne by one, and in such a way as to attract as little observation as possible" - necessary for secrecy, but also allowing the ball to continue.
    • Not to mention one of the first things they did after the Napoleonic Wars were over was hold one of the biggest and longest parties in history at the Congress of Vienna.
  • The famed war correspondent Alan Moorehead writes pictures of this in his classic collection of dispatches, The Desert War.