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Men of Honor (Full-Screen Edition)

Men of Honor (Full-Screen Edition)

List Price: $14.98
Your Price: $13.48
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A truly touching movie
Review: Let me start off by saying this was one of the best adaptations from a true story I have ever had the oppurtunity to see. I watched this movie with my father the first time I saw it. He was a Navy man himself and He said that nearly everything in this movie was realistic down to the part of Brashear's Shipboard accident. While watching it, I was enraptured by the movie. This is not a movie folks, this is piece of true art. Great Movie 2 Thumbs up!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: absolutely the best movie to come out in a long time.
Review: I think that this is one of the most riviting movies. It keeps you on the edge of your seat while making you cry at the same time. For once somebody actually made a movie based on a true story that somebody doesn't die in the end. It has become an instant favorite in our house and has been rented by this family probably more than any other movie has ever been rented in one household. If you have not yet seen this movie it is a MUST. I promise you will not be dissapointed.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Can you say CHEESY?
Review: This story could have been handled in so many different ways but of course, Hollywood goes for the in-your-face glam that diminishes the true story radically. Cuba Gooding battles his way through cliche after cliche and should be awarded a purple heart for his desparate attempt to keep this film on the ground. He is the only reason to even consider viewing this film and the only reason it got more than 1 star.

Most of the other characters were invented to appeal to the masses or movie execs and believe me, it doesn't work. Hal Holbrook's cartoonish diving school commander is so contrived, its pitiful. Oh, I see, he's supposed to be EVIL...they should have had him wear a t-shirt that said "BAD GUY" on it so we wouldn't have laughed so hard. DeNiro's attempt at portraying a bigoted, drunk, brawlin, good ol boy that finally sees the light, seemed about as genuine as the likelihood of this guy having a relationship with someone who looks like Charlize Theron. Just not buying it.

The redneck attitude was so heavy-handed that it completely reduced the actual issue of segregation and discrimination to a charade. The original story is a good one...triumph over adversity sells itself. Why oh why did Hollywood have to "fix it?"

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Men of Honor
Review: Cuba Gooding and Robert De Niro are brilliant in adversarial roles in this movie. Cuba Gooding plays a young black man who is determined to be one of the first black divers in the newly-integrated Navy in the 40's. De Niro is his trainer and he is just as determined that Gooding will fail. The battle of wills is wonderful to behold and Gooding's determination in the face of all odds is inspiring. This is a very satisfying and enjoyable movie.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: A riveting tale, Hollywood style.
Review: Certainly worth a look. Robert De Niro as a master Navy diver and Cuba Gooding Jr. as a wanna-be master Navy diver are superb together. It also helps that the film is based on a true story. Why it's not a classic? Quite frankly, it's too short. Sure, it's inspirational. But toward the end, the plot accelerates to a mad pace. You get the sense that the filmmakers suddenly saw the finish line and decided to sprint. Gooding and De Niro are here, then there, then here, and suddenly back again. And the audience is left scratching their heads and wondering what might have been.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A very well acted and inspirational movie!
Review: Robert De Niro is good in almost ever movie and this one is no exception. De Niro plays a navy master diver trying to train other navy drivers. Cuba Gooding Jr. does an excellent job playing Carl Brashear the first African-American navy driver. You will have to see the movie to see if he becomes a master diver, like De Niro. There are times in this movie when you actually feel bad for Brashear, I mean he goes through a lot and just keeps fighting and fighting. Not too many people have his kind of will and determination. I really like the way De Niro turns around and helps Cuba Gooding Jr. in the end. There is very good acting from the two lead actors, if you like bad acting watch, "The Contender". It would be hard to believe that anyone who watches this movie could not be moved and inspired by Carl Brashear.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: How to ruin a good story...
Review: This movie is another example of true life stories Hollywood had decided to adapt to the big screen, and somehow managed to ruin. It's hard to understnad why - this is a pretty good and heroic story, it deals with an important issue, and the cast is definitelly a great one!

The only explanation I've got to this paradox is the bad script and the two dimensional characters. Billy Sunday must be a totally bad guy at first, then make a 180 angle turn and become a perfect angel.... Instead of showing Carl Brashear's struggle, we only see a certain side of it - the bad army officials tormenting him, and him fighting back to get to where he wants to get, then he miracolously wins another step. After watching this film, I don't have any idea whatsoever of the motivations (as lousy and stupid as they might have been) of any of the characters, both good and bad...

I think movies like this have a great potential of letting struggles like Brashear's known to us and teach us a lesson. But ruining them like this not only ruins a good story, but the lesson, too..

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Another Hollywood treatment of a true life story...
Review: Everytime hollywood comes up with a biopic it makes me worry... The main character is always portrayed as an angel. It is always portrayed very black and white. "Men of Honor" is the best example of the hollywood treatment since Tina Turner's true life story hit the big screen in "What's love got to do with it" in 1993. I wish they would portray these peoples life in a more realistic way. It would make it so much more interesting. 2 stars because De Niro and Gooding Jr. give great performances...

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: VERY COOL
Review: At first I didn't want to see this movie, but when I did, it was way differant than what I thought. Rent or buy this movie now.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: The R Rating Is Unfortunate
Review: There was no legitimate reason for giving this movie an, "R" rating. The only thing I can think of that caused this restriction were racial epithets that while ugly and forever inappropriate are not unknown to people under 18. Other language can be found slightly censored so as to still be understood on the radio, or are words that people hear long before they are 18. This is not a movie that substitutes foul language for substance, this is about the Navy and a man who is not welcome, and the language is what should be reasonably expected to have occurred.

This is a movie about an African American that broke yet another color barrier when he became a Navy Diver. This movie is about History and it should be rated in that context. There certainly are Historical Films that for a variety of legitimate reasons should be rated as to keep the younger viewers out, this is not one of them!

Mr. Robert De Niro and Mr. Cuba Gooding Jr. brought to the screen the remarkable story of Mr. Carl Brashear who not only overcame the barriers of color and racism to become an accomplished diver, he is then faced with an unprecedented challenge that no diver of any color had ever had to face, and he won that battle as well.

The time will hopefully come when movies about bravery in the face of racism and other destructive social forces will no longer need to be told, for they no longer will be an issue. Unfortunately that is not presently the case. This movie, put in its proper context with adults/parents attending with their children under 18 is entirely appropriate. When compared to the violence, which somehow becomes benign when it takes the form of animation, this movie is mild in comparison. This movie is also about truth, and truth is often unpleasant, unlike fiction it is as it was, to change it would be to dishonor the man that is portrayed. It is unfortunate enough that a real role model was kept from so many young people.

My Father joined the Navy when he was 17, but he would not have been allowed to see this movie?


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