Showing posts with label military. Show all posts
Showing posts with label military. Show all posts

Contract Killers (2008) Review

Contract Killers (2008)
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"Contract Killers" is an allright movie,there are lots of action scenes throughtout, but I didn't see the intensity that "Point of No Return" has. The movie had too many location scenes for me, but the shoot out in the old factory was great. The Amazon price is good and you do get your money's worth with this movie.

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Major Dundee (The Extended Version) (1965) Review

Major Dundee (The Extended Version) (1965)
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Well, I've seen the extended version, and even if they added only 12 minutes, out of a possible forty I guess, it still makes so much more sense now it is totally worth it. Kudos to the editors behind this reconstruction. I didn't have any problem following any of it, and I'm not really bright at complicated plots. All the main outlines of the drama became extremely vivid and clear; the tension between the Confederates and the Union soldiers; the dilemma about the French army; the massacre of the family at the beginning that causes Major Dundee to go all medieval and turn over command at the prison to his skeptical sub-lieutenant. "Maybe there's a reason why you're a jailer, not a soldier, Amos." They keep saying this as though being a jailer were something terrible.
Charlton Heston's descent into a delirium of infection is painful to deal with, very real. Now we see him drawn to the Mexican woman who brings him food; he's so out of it he finds himself having sex with her for the comfort it brings, and then of all times that's when Senta Berger shows up at his door on her own mission of mercy. She sees the naked back of the Mexican woman and you can see the pain in her eyes. Heston's pretty covered up but you get the picture, and he's man enough not to lie about what happened.
Richard Harris looks great and brings a rebel energy to the movie. Warren Oates' death scene is pure poetry, shot through with genius. What a ham he is! And oh, that is ham deluxe, 100 percent pure gold!
Michael Anderson, Jr. is excellent in his role as the young bugler, so much better here than in his other parts. He's sort of playing the Claude Jarman role, or maybe the part Brandon De Wilde played in IN HARMS WAY. The scenes where he meets Begonia Palacios in the ruined town where Senta Berger works as a doctor are credible and hilarious because he's so much in lust he can't see anything else but "Linda." Equally funny is the aftermath of the skirmish in which he's been shot in the butt and then they try to fix him up by tearing out the seat of his pants and stitching up what looks like his bare ass (kind of daring nudity for 1965). Anderson's got game and you can see why Peckinpah made him so prominent in this movie.
[SPOILER]
The chronology straightens itself out and before long we come to the scene where the troops find the crucified corpse of their Indian scout, whose trustworthiness the previous version had left in doubt. Somehow it is nice, after all these forty years, to have at least one MAJOR DUNDEE mystery cleared up, and also to find that that Riago was loyal after all!
[END OF SPOILER.]
At the end a whole bunch of us (film geeks I expect) clapped at the final credits. PS, the new music is outstanding, though I'm glkad the forthcoming DVD will give you the option to hear the old sing-along theme too.

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MAJOR DUNDEE (EXTENDED CUT) - DVD Movie

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At Ease Review

At Ease
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This is a film with a lot of heart. I saw it at its original screening in Provincetown, Mass. and bought a DVD there. I was in a room with hundreds of other gay men and women, many of whom had served in the military (including myself) and there was not a dry eye in the audience. I have watched it often, and it still has the same impact.
The heart of this film lies in its honest portrayal of gays and lesbians in the military, and how they are no different from anyone else when it comes to serving honorably and heroically. In war, there are only a few things that matter: Are you my brother? Will you fight for me? Will you die for me? The answer is always yes, no matter what, and this film speaks to how the young aviator's colleagues still accepted him after he was killed and they found out he was gay. Why? Because he gave his life for them, and they knew that this was more important than anything else.
The characters' journeys are clear and well told. Tyler is forced to reevaluate his own ideas of honor and duty when his lover dies, only just after telling people he can't reconcile fighting for freedom when he isn't free himself. That leads Tyler to his lover's father, Bill, in a mission to tell him who his son really was. Bill himself can't reconcile that his son could have been a hero and be gay at the same time. Bill is a man's man, but is fragile and frail in terms of his emotional strength. In the end, everyone becomes stronger: Kevin died with honor; Tyler, even though he has been discharged as well, has moral clarity; and Bill can go on with the peace of knowing his son was indeed a hero.
The performances are solid, maybe not Oscar-winning, but certainly better than a lot of gay movies I've seen. It is a short film, about a half hour or so, but that doesn't take away from its ability to convey its important message. As a gay veteran, I can say that this is a film that should be seen. And even though DADT was just repealed, it is important to reflect on our nation's very fresh history of discrimination.

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