New Gary Sinise Film Will Donate Big Portion of Profits to Veterans Groups

New Gary Sinise Film Will Donate Big Portion of Profits to Veterans Groups
(L) Actor Gary Sinise during his Walk of Fame Star ceremony in Hollywood, Calif., on April 17, 2017. (Frederic J. Brown/AFP/Getty Images); (R) Actor Max Martini attends the premiere of 'Bigger' at the Orleans Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada on Sept. 13, 2018. Ethan Miller/Getty Images
Sarah Le
Updated:

The movie “Sgt. Will Gardner,” which opens in theaters on Jan. 11, has announced that a portion of its proceeds will go to some very deserving veterans organizations.

The film stars Max Martini, who also writes and directs the movie, as a struggling Iraq War veteran who hopes to reunite with his young son. Actor Gary Sinise, who has been heavily involved in veterans outreach over the years, also has a role in the film.
Martini told Military.com that the production company plans to give 30 percent of the film’s profits to three veterans charities: Higher Ground, Warrior’s Heart, and the Gary Sinise Foundation.
Sinise’s foundation recently made headlines in December for sending hundreds of children of fallen soldiers and their family members to Disney World during the holiday season. The annual “Snowball Express” trip is just one of many types of veterans support provided by the foundation.

“Anyone who goes to Military.com is aware that Gary is the #1 military charitable driving force in Hollywood. Nobody does more than he does for our veteran community,” said Martini to the media outlet.

The organization Higher Ground, based in Idaho, promotes recreational therapy to help disabled veterans regain their mobility and improve the quality of their daily lives. The group has also begun to reach out to the homeless veteran community in Southern California.
Warrior’s Heart, located in Texas, assists veterans dealing with substance abuse and mental health issues. The charity also supports active military, firefighters, police, and first responders.

Martini said he set out to make a film that would give back to veterans from the very beginning. The idea for the story came to him while he was working on the television series “The Unit” and he started to meet members of the military with traumatic brain injuries (TBI).

In the film, Martini’s character, Will Gardner, is in a very dark place and he decides to take a motorcycle trip to try to see his son who lives with his ex-wife and her new husband. In the meantime, he endures many intense flashbacks and works through his painful memories in conversations with his friend Sam, played by Omari Hardwick.

Gardner is also encouraged along the way by an interaction with Sinise’s character Larry, a bartender.

“At the end of my movie, there are some very sobering numbers, statistics regarding traumatic brain injuries, the homeless veteran population, PTS and veteran suicide,” Martini told Military.com.

“I have a lot of friends who have had amazing experiences with the VA but I also have way too many buddies who haven’t. It’s crucial that we support these charities and foundations that are making up for where the VA system is failing. This movie is a means to do that.”

“Sgt. Will Gardner” will also feature actors Dermot Mulroney, Omari Hardwick, Elisabeth Rohm, Robert Patrick, Lily Rabe, JoBeth Williams, Holt McCallany, and Stuart Margolin.

Martini has also recently appeared in the television series “The Order,” “NCIS: Los Angeles,” and “Training Day,” as well as films “Spectral,” “13 Hours,” “Fifty Shades of Grey,” “Captain Phillips,” and “Pacific Rim.”

Sarah Le
Sarah Le
reporter
Sarah Le is an editor for The Epoch Times in Southern California. She lives with her husband and two children in Los Angeles.
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