| 
			
				|  |  
				
		No. 3 - 
				Saving Private Ryan (1998)Amblin 
				Entertainment/Mutual Film Company, DreamWorks Pictures/Paramount 
				Pictures
 This Time The mission is a man
 |  |  
				
				
				Saving Private Ryan (1998), 
				DML Rating: 
				★★★★★★★★★★ 
				- perfect Director: Steven Spielberg; 
		Screenplay: Robert Rodat; 
		Rated R for bloody battles, carnage, language Starring: Tom Hanks, Edward Burns, Tom 
		Sizemore, Jeremy Davies, Giovanni Ribisi, Matt Damon, Vin Diesel, Adam 
		Goldberg, Barry Pepper, Dennis Farina Movie Introduction: Captain John Miller and 
		his Army-Ranger company are a part of the Normandy Invasion on D-Day at 
		Omaha beach. Somehow most of his men survive the unbelievable carnage of 
		that day. Their company is next tasked with a unique mission behind enemy lines to 
		find one soldier, a Private James Ryan. Ryan's three brothers 
		were recently 
		killed elsewhere in the war in other engagements. Surrounded by swarming enemy 
		troops, Miller and his men venture through German-occupied France searching for Ryan. Despite 
		their orders, the men begin to question the validity of a mission that risks so much 
		for only one soldier. Defining Moment: omaha beach 
		 Before seeing Saving Private Ryan, 
		I knew, historically, that the landings at Omaha were brutal for the infantry troops in Normandy, France. I had seen 
		The Longest Day 
		(1962), 
		and had a general idea: our troops landed in LCVT and LST boats. 
		They 
		took on heavy fire and incurred massive casualties from fire rained down 
		on them by German in heavily fortified positions. I wasn’t prepared for 
		THIS. This ultra-graphic film depicts 
		the "day of days" like no other. Director Spielberg wanted to recreate this 
		historical milestone as realistic as possible. Praise should be lauded on him and his 
		film crew because they certainly succeeded in that objective. 
		 It is hard to watch. It is loud. It is unforgiving. We see every 
		horrible detail of a mechanized war battle, right down to blood, 
		guts, and airborne severed limbs. Grown men cry out for their mothers.  
		The word "hero" is often over-used. Omaha 
		Beach is where the heroes were made... and most of them died there.  
		 Something subtle you might have missed: 
		hand shakes Captain 
		Miller is the company leader. He must show calm strength to inspire confidence 
		in his 
		men. This holds the company together. But 
		inside, he is a mess. His nerves are shot. It takes all he can muster to 
		stay sane and appear in control. There is one small thing, though, that 
		even he cannot control: an occasional twitch of his right hand. The audience 
		is shown his shaking hand a couple of times (as shown on
		
		YouTube).  Then his men notice it. Regardless, Miller powers through and does his job. 
		The men trust him. 
		At the film's end, we see his hand one last time, and it's a powerful moment.  
		
		 
		Memorable Quotes: 
		 "The boy's alive, and we are 
		going to send somebody to find him, and we are going to get him the hell 
		out of there." - Gen. George C. Marshall "But, another part of me 
		thinks... What if by some miracle, we stay... and actually make it outta 
		here? Someday, we might look back on this, and decide that saving 
		private Ryan, was the one decent thing we were able to pull out of this 
		whole, god-awful shitty mess. That's what I was thinkin', sir. Like you 
		said Captain, we all do that, we all earn the right to go home." – 
		Sgt. Mike Horvath Dad's Review: 
		 I originally had 
		Saving Private Ryan outside of the Top50. 
		I had in its place the HBO limited-series masterpiece
		Band of Brothers 
		(2001),
		a wonderful examination of 
		World War II, and what the soldiers endured - I highly recommend it, too. However,
		SPR's impact is more immediate and thoroughly engaging. I first saw this film with my good friend, 
		and fellow movie-buff, Kevin. The theater was crowded and we had to sit 
		three rows back, so we were really close. The film 
		starts with the invasion of France on Omaha Beach in Normandy.
		When the opening scene ended, we both sat back, and I could only muster an astonished, 
		"Jesus..."  I looked over at Kev, and he was likewise speechless. I was exhausted. I cannot imagine how those soldiers must 
		have felt in that moment. So many died. But to live through it? What 
		would that do to a person? For God's sake - that day really happened. 
		 Writing 
		this review is an emotional experience for me. As was common in that 
		day, my Dad and his brothers 
		all signed up. The youngest, Victor, wanted to 
		join the Marines. At 
		age seventeen, he was too young. He begged and begged his mother to sign for him so 
		he could join his three brothers in the service. She eventually agreed, 
		and Victor became a Marine.  
		As the cruel fates would have it, he was killed on Guam. Luckily, the 
		older brothers all survived the war. 
		Victor manned a flame-thrower on the invasion. He was hit and the fuel 
		tank exploded. He was killed 
		instantly. (In the picture at left, he's the handsome lad on the far right 
		with his mom and brother Paul).  In this film, early on, there is a scene 
		that destroys me. An army 
		vehicle winds its way toward a Kansas farmhouse nestled within an amber 
		wheat field. A woman is at the sink doing the dishes. She glances up and 
		out the window. When she sees the Army car, it immediately hits her. En 
		route is the 
		messenger no mother ever wants to receive. The car pulls up, the doors open. 
		A general and a pastor 
		step out. She collapses on her porch... No mother should have to bury 
		her child. After Omaha Beach, we follow a 
		Ranger company of infantry soldiers 
		who have been 
		assigned a special mission to find and rescue a single soldier whose 
		three brothers 
		have already been killed elsewhere in the war.   
		 At 
		the heart of the film is this simple question: How can one man be worth 
		the lives of several men? Private Ryan has parachuted deep into an active 
		war zone! He could be injured, captured or worse 0 dead. Regarless, in the Army, orders are orders, so Capt. Miller 
		must lead his men into France. This was a war film like no 
		other. Every skirmish is heart-breaking. It seems 
		so futile; a complete waste of men and munitions. And for what? To find a 
		lone 
		soldier, when so many are dying all around them. The men start to 
		question their orders, but Capt. Miller keeps them moving, always 
		forward.  The answer may be as simple as 
		this: in such chaos, where men are killing each other by the thousands, 
		perhaps we need something, a tent peg, and to that anchor, we tether our 
		humanity.  The film was nominated for 
		eleven Oscars, winning five, including Best Director. I was very surprised that it did 
		not win Best Picture (It lost to 
		Shakespeare in Love 
		(1998), a great 
		film, but not on this level.) For my children and anyone 
		who reads this review: Please watch this film.  Everyone needs to 
		understand the sacrifice this generation of American soldiers paid. For 
		me. For you. I know it 
		will be difficult, but please do this for me. Thanks in advance.   
				Onto No. 4... Cheerless Columbidae               |