Home :: DVD :: Military & War  

Action & Combat
Anti-War Films
Civil War
Comedy
Documentary
Drama
International
Vietnam War
War Epics
World War I
World War II
Saving Private Ryan - DTS

Saving Private Ryan - DTS

List Price: $19.99
Your Price: $17.39
Product Info Reviews

<< 1 .. 34 35 36 37 38 >>

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: GREAT FILM
Review: People love to criticize Spielberg. LEAVE HIM ALONE. This film does NOT glorify violence. In order to show something as realistic as possible, having violence portrayed in such an awful way is necessary. So people who see the film as too violent feel it shouldn't be as realistic? Why the heck not? The violence in this film isn't "cool" or enjoyable to watch. This film is great for many reasons, technical and dramatic. If you don't like this movie, well that's sad.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Masterpice
Review: I love this movie it was great. I would give it 4 thumbs up if I had them. This movie made me really think about D-day it wasn't just heros and John Wayne it was real men. See this movie and you will beg for more.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: :(
Review: The last person who

Tested Hannibal Lecter?

Served with chianti

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Not really that good
Review: This is one over hyped movie. Although the opening scenes on Omaha Beach are incredibly realistic, the remainder of the movie is ironically unrealistic and an ego trip for Tom Hanks, the lost Ranger. My advice, watch the first 10 minutes, skip the rest.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Guts and gory
Review: Does anyone still believe WWII was the good war, and that cynicism, spin control and U.S. brutality were born in Vietnam? If so, Steven Spielberg's visceral re-creation of the Secend World War experience will be a shocker: The film's battle scenes are anarchic, bloody, frenzied and studded with atrocious acts. Screenwriter Robert Rodat's script (based loosly on an actual incident and heavily indebted to historian Stephen Ambrose), however, sticks to familiar ground. Battled-scarred Captain Miller (Tom Hanks) is sent on a special mission to retrieve one Private Ryan (Matt Damon), who merits heric efforts because he's the sole survivor of four enlisted brothers, and his safe return is conceived as a home-front morale booster. Miller's hand-picked squadron is a checklist of war-movie types--hard-nosed sergeant (Tom Sizemore); decent private (Vin Diesel); Brooklyn wiseass (Edward Burns), introspective medic (Giovanni Ribsi); tough Jew (Adam Goldberg); pious Southern sharpshooter (Barry Pepper); and bookish corporal (Jeremy Davis) with no frontline experience--whose destinies follow a well-worn path. The exception is the GI who clings to the hope that war exposes the hidden strength in men, and instead has the worst wrenched out of him in a scene that elicits scattered applause but seems designed to evoke a mixture of pity and contempt. The movie's greatest strength lies in phenomenal performances that reach from the leads right down to the smallest supporting roles: Hanks' affability is worked under Miller's hardened skin, and Damon gives Ryan a boyish determination ans convincing as it is naive. Spielberg does some of his best work (the pointless preasent-day framing sequence notwithstanding), but follows in distinguished footsteps: Among the films that should'nt be lost in the rush to praise are Samuel Fuller's harrowing BIG RED ONE, whose credo--"The only glory in war is surviving"-- could be the movie's own.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Surprisingly impressive, stands out among war movies
Review: Most of us expect a low-rate, pointless and overall tacky war movie from today's money-hungry industry, but SPR has done well in distancing itself from our presumptions. If you've never seen it before, than you'll be surprised at how well the movie is puit together. Aside from the usual modern-day method of pumping a movie full of A-List actors, a predictable script, less-than-impressive direction, irrelevent acting, and the overall novelty that one can come to expect of supposed dramas of today's glamour industry.

The story follows Captain John H. Miller and his team, including a sniper, a medic, an Arab, a surly private, and an acceptable Vin Diesel, to rescue James F. Ryan, a private in a paratrooper squad whose three brothers have been killed in action. A mission susceptible to much protest, and ultimately one that will cost many lives.

Everything about the movies feels as if it was done right. The overall atmosphere feels right, and it makes you feel as if you're sitting inside the movie--you can almost feel the moisture of the air seething through your clothes or the subtle sunshine warm your shoulders and forehead. The acting is very good as well, although you can spot some parts where improvement wouldn't hurt and it at times feels tacky and stunted. The direction is done well, as the actors can easily pass as soldiers, but the aforementioned cut corners could bring you away from the total immersion and feeling.

Saving Private Ryan is very worthwhile, and any war movie buff in his right mind would praise it as innovative and a revival of the genre.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: GREATEST WWII MOVIE........ NO GREATEST MOVIE IVE EVER SEEN
Review: This movie is so increadably realistic and tells an epic story, about, Cpt. John Miller and his men, taking on a task few men could take on. The task, Saving Private James Ryan. Ryan is one out of 4 brothers, all in combat, The other three were KIA'd (killed in action)leaving James as the only one to come home to his mother. Along the way, Cpt. John Miller and his squad encounter Omaha, and work there way to the Rhine River, going through hardships and doubt, wether Ryan is still alive or if they are just going for nothing.
This movie is the greatest film i have ever seen. So intense and so well made. Its Steven Spielberg at his finest.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: got cheated out of best picture
Review: i guess Shakespeare in Love and Titanic are better movies then this.....

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: An Important film
Review: I am so glad Spielberg made this film. D-Day really happened and it's important for us to recall or be shown what really happened - even if we find out through a movie. It's important for us to recall the tremendous bravery and loyalty soldiers have shown so we could live free and in comfort. Those men of that generation were truly a great generation...selfless and willing to fight for what they felt was right. Even if a war is started for duplicitous reasons (and I don't think WW2 falls in this category) one must remember that soldiers, for the most part, are acting from the heart..from virtue to fight for what they feel is right.
Some other reviewer said that there was no good reason for this film...but I heartily disagree. It was real...it happened and we should know our history and the sacrifices others have made for us. Many people will never read any account of what happened. They will only learn via movies...I'd rather have a movie about it than nothing at all. We need more appreciation for the sacrifices previous generations have made. The only reason we are allowed to say "war has not solved anything" is because others have courageously gone to war. I don't like war...no one does...but we can't deny the fact that it has eradicated some evil in the world. It's just the truth and this film has shown it. Kudos to Spielberg.


Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Powerful viewing the first time, but doesn't have legs
Review: I think what impresses most people about SPR is its spectacular budget. It is also technically and somewhat artistically well beyond what most War movies have done before. But it suffers from the "Spielberg Factor". That is, the story and characters are developed not from a Veteran's standpoint, but from a novice trying to imagine a Veteran's standpoint. Once the plot gets rolling, I got the uncomfortable feeling the soldiers were behaving like children playing war. They were certainly in adult situations, but their behavior was the way children would behave if they were pretending to be adults. I blame this on Spielberg's directing because probably his only experience with war is playing it as a child in his neighborhood. If I may go further in alienating other viewers, I find Tom Hanks of similar ilk, playing his character as the oldest kid in the war game. If they had been carrying plastic toy guns, I would have found the tone more honest. Don't get me wrong, I'm an active supporter of Veteran's Day, and if this movie increases respect for our Vets, then the good outweighs the bad. If there is anything I commend this movie for, it is that it seems to be a sincere, if awkward, reaching out to our Vets by mainstream Hollywood. But for a really good recent war movie I'll take Windtalkers or Blackhawk Down.


<< 1 .. 34 35 36 37 38 >>

© 2004, ReviewFocus or its affiliates