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Flags of Our Fathers
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Directed by Clint Eastwood.
Clint Eastwood's adaptation of the non-fiction book Flags of Our Fathers concerns the lives of the men in the famous picture of soldiers raising the American flag over Iwo Jima during that historic WWII battle. Battle scenes are intercut with footage of three of the soldiers - played by Ryan Phillipe, Jesse Bradford, and Adam Beach -- who survived the battle going on a goodwill tour of the United States in order to sell war bonds. Many evening they are forced to reenact their famous pose, something each of them finds more and more difficult to do as they suffer from survivor's guilt. Eastwood frames the story by having one of the men's grown son (Tom McCarthy) interview his father's old comrades in order to find out more about what happened to his father. Eastwood followed this film with Letters from Iwo Jima, a second film about the battle of Iwo Jima, but told from the Japanese perspective. Flags of Our Fathers was produced by Eastwood and Steven Spielberg. ~ Perry Seibert, All Movie Guide
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CinemaRianCinemaRian Flags of Our Fathers (2006, USA ...
by CinemaRian in CinemaRian Blog
hasn't rated it.
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"Do critics just arbitarily decide they like a director and then feel they need to praise every single thing he does? Clint Eastwood has now made three of the most overrated movies I have ever seen in a row: Mystic River, Million Dollar Baby and now Flags of Our Fathers. Sometimes, as with Martin Scorsese, I can understand why a director is overrated. But I am stumped as too why Eastwood is so popular. He's been compared to Shakespeare and Ernet Hemingway, I think that comparison is an insult to those writers. Flags of Our Fathers is too boring to be terrible and to simplistic to be contraversial. Based on the nonfiction book by James Bradley, the movie recounts the story of the writer's father father, John Bradley (Ryan Phillippe) and two other soldiers, Rene Gagnon (Jesse Bradford) and Ira Hayes (Adam Beach), who participated in the famous raising of the American flag over Iwo Jima. That image became one of the most famous photographs of all time and was used in a major PR e ... " [More]
downwestdownwest The real heroes are dead on tha ...
by downwest in downwest Blog
loved it.
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"I think Eastwood has perfectly captured America during a time when it was desperate for someone to call a hero. I also think it was noble in capturing the character of our World War II veterans. In a way I can see how some might consider this film dull, but the direction quality is still masterful nonetheless. This is the American story of Iwo Jima as it should have been told from the very beginning. In time I think this film will age well, and become much more appreciated in the next fifty years or so. " [More]
CinemaLeviathanCinemaLeviathan A Must See
by CinemaLeviathan in CinemaLeviathan Blog
loved it.
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"Clint Eastwood brings us a character inspired war drama based on The Battle of Iwo Jima and the men that raised the flag and inspired the world and became a patriotic symbol of hope, inspiration, and victory. William Broyles Jr. and Paul Haggis adapted the screenplay from the book written by James Bradley and Ron Powers. As the producer, Steven Spielberg takes a step into the non-fictional world of feature war drama with Flags by telling the story of the actual men in the service and their families during that time of World War II unlike, Saving Private Ryan – which can be seen as an obvious inspiration during the battle sequences in Flags. Like Steven and his Director of Photography, Janusz Kaminski, Clint and his DP, Tom Stern, chose to portray the battle as a non-glamorous event by using handheld camera techniques, washing the color out from the sequences, and creating brutally realistic effects consisting of both practical and CGI. An example of great CGI usage in the ... " [More]
LeonBlankLeonBlank Sentimental War Epic
by LeonBlank in LeonBlank Blog
is neutral about it.
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"Clint Eastwood is much a better director than one would like to accept, but he tends to direct pretty dull films. It might be me, but none of the Eastwood-films are too enlighting experiences, although beautiful and usually well-done in and out. Flags of our Fathers is no expection. Clint uses always a great cast and crew to produce his vision a super-high quality. He's not a master of big surprises, but he knows well how to tell a astory. Flags of our Fathers tells a story about the guys who raised the legendary flag in Iwo Jima, after a glorious fight - or at least most of them did. It's a story of heroes, and the dilemma of heroes - are there heroes, and if so, what makes a person a hero. Flags has some wonderful scenes, but it suffers this time from pretty lousy acting on few fronts, as well as pretty dull story. All the mise-en-scene, props and sets are wonderful and beautifully shot, but the only interesting person in the film - an Indian alcoholic soldier, played by ... " [More]
JakeStevensJakeStevens Ouch - Eastwood Misses The Target
by JakeStevens in JakeStevens Blog
disliked it.
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"I didn't much care for this film as some of the acting seemed stilted (due, I'd imagine, to the actors themselves rather than direction or screenwriting) and I felt slightly "milked" in some of the war scenes. It wants to be Saving Private Ryan so, so badly. On the other hand, the direction and storytelling are top notch, as I felt Clint Eastwood's subversive text shone through beautifully. I'm sure it's no coincidence that the "war time machine" message is aimed at our current situation in The Middle East. Masterful direction in any case. A gripe - what a bare bones DVD! I watched the first release on DVD, and there's not even a chapter selection option - obviously they were saving THAT for the 2-Disc Special Edition...blah. " [More]
sanny77sanny77 War is madness (spoiler warning)
by sanny77 in sanny77 Blog
liked it.
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"War is madness, well that pretty much sums it up. This is not your typical war glorifying Hollywood story. This is not only a story about the harsh realities of war when it comes to money, numeral superiority and propaganda but also to what makes and breaks people and what they, the soldiers, become after the war is over. On the downside I did not like the flickering story telling style of the movie, to much altering between past, present, iwo jima and the states. I liked the ending of the movie; that although people go out at war for their country they fight and die for their friends. " [More]
MovieBabeMovieBabe Flags of Our Fathers - Conversa ...
by MovieBabe in MovieBabe Blog
hasn't rated it.
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"By Tricia Olszewski Based on the book by James Bradley and Ron Powers, Clint Eastwood’s Flags of Our Fathers tells the story of the six men who were unforgettably photographed hoisting the American flag at Iwo Jima and the celebrity thrust upon three of the survivors afterward. Our society’s universal reverence for both the soldiers of World War II and Oscar-winning Eastwood is certain to generate a great deal of knee-jerk accolades for the director’s latest. With a wide, subtly stylized canvas, harsh battle scenes, and its challenging us to see ambiguity in those we unequivocally elevate, the film shares elements of the Eastwood’s Unforgiven, the Academy’s nod for Best Picture of 1992. The problem is that in the hands of scripters William Broyles Jr. and Paul Haggis, there seems to be little story to tell. The photo—which actually captured a second raising so the first flag could be kept as a souvenir—was viewed by most Americans as a si ... " [More]
PinkElly101PinkElly101 Flags of Our Fathers
by PinkElly101 in PinkElly101 Blog
loved it.
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"This movie was an american masterpiece, a gret film! It was touching, and made you think about war, and what the world is becoming. It is a powerful true story of heroism that should be shared and remembered!4.5 stars! Rating=R not for children " [More]
Prelude76Prelude76 Re: Top War Films
by Prelude76 in Top 5
loved it.
"There's a lot of good choices already on here, so let me make a Top 5 with films not mentioned yet. 1. Letters from Iwo Jima : Uses the same production team that gave us 'Saving Private Ryan', but the incredible direction from Clint Eastwood makes this a true WW2 film that Saving Private Ryan always wished it was. It will completely drain you emotionally. I haven't seen its counterpart, 'Flags of our Fathers' yet, but I suspect that Iwo Jima version is the better part, from reviews I've read. 2. Stalingrad : This German film is a masterpiece. Most people know the Battle of Stalingrad from the point of view of the Russians, as depicted in all its Hollywood glory in 'Enemy at the Gates'. I'm not bashing that film, i thought the special fx were incredible, the sniper warfare was great, and the 'one man gets rifle, one man gets only bullets' scene really showed how desperate the Russian side was, just throwing everything at the Ge ... " [More]
HairyLimeHairyLime Musings on 'Heroics'
by HairyLime in HairyLime Blog
liked it.
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"Not quite what people expected, I think, and is probably responsible for this movie's lukewarm reception at the theaters. Not a Pacific Theater version of Saving Private Ryan, but instead a more somber musing on the motivations of soldiers under fire, on what constitutes a 'hero' and the press and government's manipulations of public's hunger for patriotism and 'heroes' and a need to make sense of the sensless waste that is war. Probably a little more than most people want in a war picture.The last scene at the beach was particularly moving (I won't spoil it if you haven't seen it yet), and is one that will likely stick in my memory for a while. Wanted to wait and see this as a double feature with Letters from Iwo Jima, but it arrived the other day from Netflix and we decided to watch it now. Perhaps catch Iwo Jima in the theaters. " [More]
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Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
liked it.
Clint Eastwood's Flags of Our Fathers uses a true story about World War II in order to make timely reminders about sacrifices in wartime. Jesse Bradford, Ryan Philippe, and Adam Beach play three soldiers who appeared in the famous photograph of American troops planting the flag on Iwo Jima. Eastwood economically establishes how this photo affected the mood of the country, but since his tone for the film is not particularly rah-rah, he never indulges in the feelings of patriotism this famous image evokes -- the characters feel it, but the audience does not. Instead Eastwood plunges the viewer into the harsh reality of the invasion. The war footage in Flags of Our Fathers brings to mind the opening passage in Steven Spielberg's Saving Private Ryan, offering a grunt's eye view of the brutal human cost of war. The carnage becomes so commonplace that viewer must accept this new reality, just as the characters must. These brutal action sequences are intercut with the three soldiers on a homefront tour designed to help sell war bonds. The way the media and the government help shape public sentiment around them recalls certain sequences in The Right Stuff, but where Philip Kaufman's film about the early days of the space program plays those absurdities for comedy, Eastwood's downbeat tone plays those same ironies for tragedy. The audience learns that veterans generally didn't talk about what they saw and what they did, but these three young men are forced to relive their experiences every night before adoring crowds. The survivor's guilt affects each of them differently, most notably Adam Beach as a young man so overcome that he begins drinking himself into oblivion. Beach carries the emotional weight of the film, and Eastwood's measured pacing gives him nowhere to hide. His is a difficult performance that earns much audience sympathy, even though he never once asks for it in the performance. These thematic elements are presented so well that the film suffers when Eastwood gets around to tying up the story's framing device concerning one of the soldier's sons. The interaction between father and son never achieves the depth of the earlier sequences in large part because the audience never sees the veterans raising their kids. The screenwriters miscalculate the audience's interest, leaving a half hour of screentime after an emotional scene involving Beach provides the dramatic climax of the story. The fact that Spielberg also serves as a producer on the film, alongside Eastwood, forces one to consider how Flags of Our Fathers compares to Saving Private Ryan in more ways than just the reality of the battle sequences. Ryan, released in 1998, was directed by a baby-boomer shaping a love letter to his father. Part of a wave of WWII veterans veneration that includes Tom Brokaw's The Greatest Generation and the miniseries Band of Brothers, many of these projects felt like boomers attempting to close the generation gap now that they themselves were facing mortality. Flags of Our Fathers, although covering much the same ground thematically, improves upon Ryan for two major reasons. First, Eastwood is old enough to be a World War II veteran himself. He feels no need to sentimentalize these young soldiers, or their reasons for fighting. Secondly, this is a post 9/11 movie, and the culture has been saturated with nearly nonstop reminders that war is hell. Eastwood is reminding audiences that the men on the ground are not thinking about anything other than themselves and their fellow soldiers. Flags of Our Fathers is a sobering reminder that the lessons and experiences of WWII soldiers do not belong only to history, but offer valuable insights for any country that finds itself in a time of war. ~ Perry Seibert, All Movie Guide
 



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