waaaaaaaaaaiting for blu-ray | Saving Private Ryan (Special Limited Edition) | Tom Hanks, Matt Damon
DVDs:
•
Saving Private Ryan (Special Limited Edition)
Tom Hanks
,
Matt Damon
Dreamworks Video, 1999
average customer review:
based on 1709 reviews
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highly recommended
"Am I A Good Man?" ~ Lessons In War, Lessons In Life
Well, I've put off watching '
Saving
Private
Ryan
' for quite a long time. I'm not exactly certain why, I guess I simply burned out on the genre (the same can be said concerning mafia/gangster films). Now after finally relenting and giving this WWII war film a viewing all I can say is it's fantastic! It succeeds on every level, unique and well conceived storyline, sharp, insightful dialogue, impressive production values, outstanding ensemble cast and of course a magnificent soundtrack by the legendary John Williams.
There's definitely an unending string of accolades you could bestow upon this film and all would be undeniably deserved, this is most certainly one of the great war films of all-time. Watching these American soldiers deal with the crisis and chaos that is part and parcel of everyday life on the front-lines is both exhilarating and heart wrenching as the audience slowly comes to realize that acts of bravery and heroism are nothing more than the innate desire of mans will to survive made manifest. Spielberg goes one step further in his analysis of the human condition as he posits the ultimate question to those who where blessed with the gift of life; what did I do to deserve this and what can I do to show myself worthy of a second chance? The answer; live a good life, be a good man.
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Spielberg's come a long way, baby.
From what is undoubtedly the most realistic filming of the D-Day landings made to date; to the many harrowing incidents encountered throughout, this film is a gem! Top notch Tom Hanks. Just plain excellent! (NOTE:) Not for young children to see.
waaaaaaaaaaiting for blu-ray
The best war film ... but why ... there is no blu-ray yet ... I have been waiting for years!!!
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More "Reel-istic" than Realistic
Effective graphic art draws us in, appealing to the imagination, inviting us to participate in a viewing event. Whatever the eye of the artist has envisioned,
the eye of the beholder brings to practical focus. The work has to communicate sufficiently for us to relate to it. Similarly, video portraits lose audiences
when they leave little to the imagination. Viewers are left with nothing to do
but sit there, virtually motionless, in contrast to the multiplicity of actions that flow mercilessly across the screen.
For people who have never experienced the organized chaos of war, that may come across as a credible representation of reality. It isn't. True to life images
of military experience are impossible to recreate artificially, or as artifice.
We know the elemental components in sea water, but the exact formula for making
it in the laboratory escapes us. The result may taste right to us, but nothing
that actually originated in the sea comes to life in it. Marine creatures know
the difference, in a sense that we can only imagine.
Leaving little to our imagination, simulated combat in "
Saving
Private
Ryan
" is testament to Steven Spielberg's. Fertile as the prairie, it flows effortlessly into everything he does. Unquestionably, there is no director more earnest and hardworking. His enthusiasm is positively infectious.
As an actor, I would like to work with him, since his appreciation of the craft appears to match his passion for all aspects of production. As someone remarks
in the retrospective on making "Saving Private Ryan" that accompanies the D-Day
edition
, Spielberg "knows what he wants." In the broad sense, he has a vision,
and a basic plan. A formula. Usually, it works. Sometimes, it doesn't.
More telling, here, he has a positive mania for detail and storytelling, with a result that these elements sometimes combine, abruptly, forming manic images on
the screen. In one scene on the beach, Captain Miller turns his head to resume
contact with a radio operator, only to find that the man's face has been turned into bloody pulp. His first thought, however, is to check the radio. From the many veterans that I have interviewed over the years of researching the landing
at Normandy, even the most grizzled and combat-weary man would recoil from such
a sight, stunned into temporary immobility, faced with yet one more reminder of
his own vulnerability. The obliterated face is shown so briefly, if you blink,
you'll miss it.
The dizzying succession of images is a distraction. If Spielberg expects me to
think about what I'm watching, I need time for that. If his intent is to cause
me to feel as disoriented as the soldiers, I think he's succeeded. Frankly, it looks like he's tried to accomodate too much material. Ideas stampede, crowded beach, crowded brain.
To say that the storyline is carried forward too quickly more than once in this film is an understatement. In the space of mere seconds, Ranger Miller reveals
that he has command, not only of his faculties, but of the landing, shouting an order to inform the Fleet: "We don't hold the beach!"
I know that this scene is to show that individual men exercised initiative, but
the compression of time takes the script over the top.
Andy Rooney notes in MY WAR that, for the men on the beach in the initial hours
of D-Day, the boundaries of their world were measured in scant yards to left or right. They saw little beyond that. Smoke covered the area. Remarkable, what Miller and his sergeant managed to see of the enemy, using their small mirrors, servicing successful battle plans.
In standard war films, chief protagonists are usually outfront, doing important things. A clear hint that we should continue to watch them closely. While the theatrics in this film stray from cliche, for the most part, there are hints of
the 1990s. Movies, even thoughtfully crafted ones, are products of their time,
and this one is no exception. It's mostly about personal relationships.
I concur with General Colin Powell's perspective on the command decisions taken, leading up to the climactic battle. The Army has never been a democracy. In an actual situation, everyone was accountable, and acted accordingly.
Jim O'Dell
Military Historian
Buellton, CA
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Saving Private Ryan
This motion picture is one of the best war movies ever made. The battle scenes are very surreal: e
special
ly the D-Day invasion on Omaha Beach at the first part of the movie. Some of the scenes in this movie are intensly graphic and seem very realistic: something you should expect in any good war flick such as this one. '
Saving
Private
Ryan
' has a very dramatic and riveting plot. After watching this movie it had me wanting to learn more about the history of WWII. The weapons, military outfits, and tanks seen in this movie are highly accurate to what was used in WWII. The cast in this film performed outstandingly well! They made it seem like they weren't even acting at all. Tom Hanks deserved an Oscar for the performance he gave in this film. 'Saving Private Ryan' is such a well done movie that I sometimes forget it is a movie while watching it. Composer John Williams delivered a very moving musical (score) for 'Saving Private Ryan': perhaps the best musical (score) ever used in any motion picture. This film is my favorite movie from the highly successful director Steven Spielberg. There are absoultely no flaws in this movie. It is one of my favorite movies alongside 'Platoon', 'Braveheart', and 'Gladiator'. 'Saving Private Ryan' is a film that expresses the true courage and bravery of a group of American soldiers who risk their lives looking for one man lost in combat so he can safely return home: allowing him to have no further risk of being killed in battle like his brothers did. If you like war movies then this one is a must-own.
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Captain John Miller must take his men behind enemy lines to find
Private
Ryan
, whose three brothers have been killed in combat. Faced with impossible odds, the men question their orders.
Genre: Feature Film-Drama
Rating: R
Release Date: 14-FEB-2006
Media Type: DVD
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