Questor,
I'm not understanding what you are referring to when you say "not to cause an argument". My last sentence is
"I do believe that Patton was a brilliant general, egocentric and eccentric to the max, and blustery as hell. But he did get the job done for sure."
He was a top battle general. No argument from me. I respect him for being so. That doesn't conflict with the fact that he was egocentric, eccentric, and blustery. Some of those aspects of his personality (in my opinion) contributed to his effectiveness as a battle commander.
That's why I liked the movie - because I thought those issues were fairly depicted.
I also state that people view figures like Patton from different perspectives. Take a GI, for example, that has been standing in cold water in a foxhole under artillery "tree bursts" for weeks with nowhere to hide from overhead shrapnel, watching his friends being vaporized, or torn to shreds, shivering, sleeping standing up between dead bodies, crapping, peeing, in your helmet, hungry, and sick. When a GI hears a story of a general with custom-designed uniforms, ivory-gripped revolvers, a valet, and real chow - slapping a GI, even if you don't hear or know the whole story, you can understand their reaction. It's a different perspective. Combat fatigue, PTSD, whatever we call it, is a very real result of war, all wars.
When my Dad died in 1987, I called one of the four surviving members of his original company that had made it through the war. (Not many, huh?) This man was one of my heroes in life, and I asked him to be a pall bearer for my Dad. He had fought in the Huertgen Forest and the Bulge also. He all but "lost it" in the Huertgen Forest. I heard the story first hand. He went on to fight heroically in the Bulge, also. To ever slap this man would be a sin and a travesty. (See "When Trumpets Fade" for a taste of that battle, that chewed up a few divisions, one after another.)
I am not arguing at all - particularly about Patton's effectiveness or brilliance as a battle commander. Only pointing out the perspectives of others who "were there" and endured more.