Fortunes of War Movie Streaming

February 9th, 2010 by abigayle7319418
Fortunes of War Movie Streaming. Fortunes of War Movie Streaming.

Movie Title: Fortunes of War
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I was so pleased when “Fortunes of War” was released on DVD! When I first saw this splendid BBC television series, I rushed to the nearest bookstore (in Rome at the time) and bought Olivia Manning’s mammoth Balkan and Levant trilogies, which I have since devoured at least three times (so much so that the paperback editions are falling apart). Reading, however, in no way lessens, but, instead, enhances one’s enjoyment of “Fortunes of War,” which preserves the essence of Manning’s novels. Visually stunning, the film recreates Bucharest and Athens on the brink of World War II, and then Cairo and Alexandria, as well as Damascus and Jerusalem, the outposts of the British Empire in the Levant. One step ahead of the advancing Nazi armies, Guy and Harriet Pringle, the film’s central characters, are constantly uprooted and forced to be on the move.

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Guy, acted with affable understatement by Kenneth Brannagh, epitomizes the type of academic who constantly puts the wants of his students first. Friend to all the world, Guy Pringle remains totally oblivious to the needs of his newly-married bride. Harriet, played with a dry and subtle irony by Emma Thompson, must cope with setting up house, first, in a city that is about to fall to the juggernaut of the Third Reich; next, in a series of hotel rooms, each more seedy than the last; and finally, sharing digs in Cairo with an odd assortment of British expatriates (and their even odder friends and acquaintances who continually drift in and out of the premises). Guy simply cannot understand that Harriet might be miffed at his heedlessness. For example, after Guy offers her the female title role in Shakespeare’s “Troilus and Cressida,” she suddenly discovers that he has taken the part away without telling her and has given it to Sophie, a Rumanian professional student and troublemaker who resents Harriet’s presence, both in Bucharest and in Guy’s life. It is not that Guy Pringle does not love his “little monkey’s paws,” Harriet; he simply takes her for granted.

Among the outstanding ensemble cast, two performances are memorable: those of Ronald Pickup and Alan Bennett.

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Pickup plays the incorrigible Prince Yakimov, a displaced Anglo-Russian aristocrat, long-since fallen on hard times. Pickup’s performance is so poignantly nuanced that the viewer is moved from loathing, to laughing–first at him and then with him–and finally to loving him. “Poor Yaki” resembles a spoiled but irrepressibly sweet and helpless child. Not even the much-imposed-upon Harriet can remain angry at a man who appears before her wearing one brown and one black shoe and then explains that he has another pair just like them at home.

Alan Bennett plays the insufferably fussy Cambridge don, Professor Lord Pinkrose, who is always on the verge of giving his renowned lecture on Byron but who, for one reason or another, is always prevented from doing so. Bennett’s performance does not make one love Pinkrose (nor should it); it does, however, make one recognize him (He often sits on dissertation committees!). With his smarmy herd of acolytes (including the odious Toby Lush and the insidious Dubidat), Pinkrose, who always darts a baneful glance in Harriet’s direction, causes Guy so much trouble that the viewer is tempted to cheer when the Lord Professor finally gets his just desserts. Every film ought to have a character that one loves to hate, and Alan Bennett plays this one to perfection.

The viewer seeking the wartime thrills of dogfighting Messerschmidts, exploding bombs, and action packed battle sequences should go watch “Saving Private Ryan” or a John Wayne movie. Even though the conflict in “Fortunes of War” is omnipresent, it is always just over the horizon. It nevertheless exerts a profound impact on the characters, both major and minor. It exerts an equally profound impact on the audience. For the discerning viewer, who appreciates exceptional acting and remarkable characterization, “Fortunes of War” represents the epitome of cinematic storytelling.

For Kenneth Brannagh and Emma Thompson, who acted together for the first time, this film represented “the start of a beautiful friendship,” both on film and in real life. Unfortunately, it was not to last, but “Fortunes of War” at least allows us to glimpse the brilliant start, and to be glad that their joint venture in film lasted as long as it did!

This is one of the most underappreciated films which delves successfully into the personal side of life during wartime. Life, business, and education goes on even though the world is trying to kill itself. Love is found and lost, jobs come and go, and life goes on-even as the bombs fall. Branagh and Thomson are as always endearing as much for their flaws as for their charms. The scenery and cinematography is simply spectacular. This is in many way reminiscent of The English Patient, while not as powerful or brilliant, still very enjoyable, and highly recomended.
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Stream Sixteen Candles Online

February 8th, 2010 by abigayle7319418
Stream Sixteen Candles Online. Stream Sixteen Candles Online.

Movie Title: Sixteen Candles
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I have to agree with the reviewer who complained about the “butchered” soundtrack. I grew up with “Sixteen Candles” — I’ve seen it so many times I practically know it by heart — and the songs are as much a part of the movie as the dialogue. I wonder if someone forgot to get permission to use some of the songs when the original movie was released — but that wouldn’t explain the cheezed-up “muzak” version of the opening credit music. And why substitute “Strangers in the Night” for “New York, New York” as background music for the post-party conversation between Jake and The Geek? The replacement music, as a whole, seems thrown together — the songs are obviously meant to sound “almost like” the originals but for anyone who really knows the movie “almost like” just doesn’t cut it. The most awkward moment is when the family is leaving the house the morning of Ginny’s wedding. In the original version of the film, David Bowie’s “Young American” is playing in the background as the family piles into two cars. In this version, there is NO music playing — the family enters the cars in silence. What used to be a funny, quick scene now seems agonizingly drawn out.

“Sixteen Candles” is still a great movie, of course, and I’m glad that I have it in my DVD collection. But I found myself cringing every time a song was changed — I could barely concentrate on the diaglogue at times. (I don’t know what I would have done if the Thompson Twins’ “If you were here” was replaced at the end of the movie; thankfully, it wasn’t.)

Sixteen Candles takes place basically over the course of one day when a family forgets the sweet sixteenth birthday of a girl amid the preparations for the oldest daughter’s wedding. The sixteen year old is played by the 80’s teen queen Molly Ringwald. It was the movie that helped her gain that title and is the best of her career. She plays the role of Samantha Baker with ease and charm. We feel all her range of emotions from the hurt of being forgotten to the longing she feels for a boy, Jake Ryan, who she has a major crush on but doesn’t think he knows that she’s alive. Little does Samantha know that Jake wants to meet her and the movie goes through a series of near misses between the two. Anthony Michael Hall plays “The Geek” who is constantly hitting on Samantha. He acts like he is a man of the world, but really is full of hot air. Mr. Hall is extremely funny and the scene where he gives Jake advice on women and eventually drives the prom queen home in Jake’s father’s Roll Royce are priceless. Both sets of Samantha’s grandparents are funny, one set are the worriers and the other the carefree sort. Gedde Wannabe is funny as an exchange student who comes with one of the grandparents. He does take the Asian stereotypes to the max but he comes across with a nice degree of charm. John and Joan Cusack show up in bit parts and the movie has a great soundtrack. The Thompson Twins’ “Wish You Were Here” perfectly frames the ending scene where Jake and Samantha finally hook up. Sixteen Candles was the directorial debut of John Hughes and set the stage for the Brat Pack movies that would be the dominant teen movies of the 80’s. Unlike his other movies like The Breakfast Club, Pretty In Pink or Some Kind Of Wonderful, Sixteen Candles isn’t full of teen angst, self-examination and skepticism that the others are. It is a charming look at the life of a teenager that seems to be the most real.
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Stream The Last Action Hero Movie Online

February 8th, 2010 by abigayle7319418
Stream The Last Action Hero Movie Online. Stream The Last Action Hero Movie Online.

Movie Title: The Last Action Hero
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I think I know why this film was so poorly received and tanked at the box office. It was TOO “inside”. Much of this film is a series of jokes about the standard, conventional, formulaic, bombastic action film genre. But the humor was so tongue-in-cheek so often that it probably didn’t bode well with the average action-junkie film fan. “Last Action Hero” made fun of itself as it unfolded, and one would need a certain sense of humor to fully appreciate it on its intended level. I dare say that most folks who went to this film just didn’t “get it”. Too bad for them.

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The major flaw of the DVD is that the film is presented in the god-awful Pan and Scan format. Pan and Scan presentations of frenetically-shot widescreen films should be outlawed, it’s just that simple. You almost get a headache watching this P&S version. The digital pan is so obtrusive and distracting that it can drive one to anger! It pulls you out of the film, to say the least. I like (but don’t really love) this film, and the low price of the DVD makes the purchase a no-brainer. But it is too optically uncomfortable to watch in P&S.

Release it in widescreen and all will be okay.

This is one of those movies that a lot of people that haven’t seen it say, “That movie wasn’t really that good, was it?” but those that have seen it, say, “Why wasn’t this movie more popular?” Maybe it was bad timing, or as some others suggested, just not correctly billed to the public.

Last Action Hero is hard to describe. It’s funny, it’s witty, with lots of those one-liners that Arnold became so popular with, and I loved the way he constantly poked fun at his fictional character as well as his “real” self. Some of my favorite dialogue in the movie is when the kid is trying to convince “character Arnold (aka: Jack Slater)” that he’s actually just a character in a movie. The kid starts asking about phone numbers and how can they possibly all start with 555- in a city with several million phone numbers, when Jack Slater exasperatedly says, “That’s why we have Area Codes…” Priceless. The movie is full of fun stuff like that, and I highly recommend this movie to anyone who is even remotely a Schwarzenegger fan, or who just like campy, yet intelligent, movies. The parody within a parody, and movie within a movie actually worked well in this one.

I thought the movie had a lot of great character performances, and clever scripting, and I think this movie got a bum rap. It’s really a great movie, I’m glad I bought the DVD. The transfer is a little sloppy in places on the one I bought, but since it’s a “Special Anniversary Edition”, I have a feeling that had something to do with it. There’s only a fullscreen version on my DVD, no widescreen, and the camera pans are really noticeable in a few places.
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Stream The Motorcycle Diaries Online

February 7th, 2010 by abigayle7319418
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Movie Title: The Motorcycle Diaries
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As most potential viewers know, this film is based on diaries and letters to home written by Ernesto “Che” Guevara during a motorcycle and foot tour of a significant portion of South America during the early 1950s, years before Guevara achieved international renown as a Communist and Latino revolutionary. Thus, the film functions as an attempt to get at the heart of the person who preceded the myth. The film is therefore difficult to judge as pure cinema. Is this, on its own merits, a great film? Or is it a great film about Che Guevara? Interestingly, the person I saw this film with knew absolutely nothing about the subject of the film before it started, and did not connect Ernesto Guevara with Che Guevara until very late in the film. Her reaction was interesting. Until she realized that it was about Che, she says that she considered it a decent but only slightly above average “road” picture, but it gained considerably in her estimation once she realized who the film was about. I think she was correct, and I would agree with those who feel that what merits the film has depends to some degree on who the film is about. If Ernesto hadn’t become Che, it would be a good film but of considerably less interest than it is.

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The film does a good job of rooting Che’s eventual concern with the liberation of the oppressed by depicting his broad and constant encounters with everyday people throughout the continent. Camus wrote that it was important to side with the victims and not the executioners, and in his travels Ernesto spends most of his time with the victims. His near-epic exposure to the continent clearly condition his sympathies and inform his vision. At the end of the film it is easy to understand why Che chose a life dedicated to aiding the oppressed in Cuba and elsewhere. The great question left unanswered, and the one reason one can find Che’s life morally troubling, is why he felt that the causes he espoused demanded a violent, military response. Why follow in the steps of Trotsky and Lenin rather than Gandhi? Apart from a single line which merely hints that Che felt violence might be necessary, the film doesn’t come anywhere close to answering this question.

In many ways, the star of the film is the South American continent. I have seen many films over the years set in one corner of the continent or another, but none provided a panoramic view. This film, however, by swinging through Argentina, Chile, Peru, Columbia, and Venezuela provides a graphic impression of the continent’s immense geographical diversity, expanse, and enormous beautiful. I don’t think it would be possible to see this film without a deep urge to visit the land. The scene shot in Machu Picchu reveals the incredible beauty of the site better than anything else I have ever seen.

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Gael Garcia Bernal is a remarkably handsome, talented young actor, formerly best known for one of the two young men in Y TU MAMA TAMBIEN, and is outstanding in portraying the young Che Guevara. One suspects that his days as an actor in primarily Latin productions is close to an end, his next several projects originating in Hollywood. Rodrigo De la Serna does not have the enormous charisma of Bernal, but he more than holds his own in the film. The cast is rounded out by a large roster of professional and amateur performers.

Che Guevara is such a controversial figure that this film could elicit a host of differing responses. How one will respond to this film will be deeply conditioned by how one views him. But I do think that it is a film that virtually every viewer will respond to with great interest, and I defy anyone not to find the remarkable landscapes anything short of stunning.

When I visited South America on my own extended trip a couple of years ago, I was amazed how many times I saw pictures of Che Guevara everywhere I went….cafes, outdoor bulletin boards, art galleries, even department stores. Now I understand why. Having just read his diary, I was greatly anticipating this film, and my interest only heightened when I started seeing the travelogue shots in the previews. I am happy to report the film surpasses my expectations on almost every level. It is exquisite – perceptively directed, beautifully photographed and wondrously acted by a cast headed by two charismatic actors who tap deep into the hearts and souls of their characters. Whereas the book is more observational, the movie provides a more involving feeling in its portrait of a young man on the brink of his political awakening. It starts out somewhat deceptively as a comic buddy picture with the young Ernesto Guevara (pre-Che), a medical student, leaving his family and accompanying his seemingly more worldly pal Alberto Granado, a biochemist, on a dilapidated 1939 Norton motorbike traversing South America from their native Buenos Aires to Caracas. It is obvious what Alberto’s hormonally charged intentions are on this months-long journey, but at 23, Ernesto is at a more sensitive juncture in his life where his encounters and observations have a deeper impact on his ideology.

What I really like about the film is how it changes in tone and texture as the boys’ hunt for adventure evolves into life-changing experiences for both of them. The motorbike acts as a metaphor for this change, as it unsurprisingly breaks down forcing them to open their eyes to the poverty and quiet struggle of the local people in each of the countries they visit. The story winds through wintry Patagonia, the blistering Atacama Desert, the awe-inspiring Machu Picchu and several towns in between. But the most touching passage takes place at the San Pablo leper colony in the Peruvian Amazon basin, where Ernesto bonds deeply with the lepers to the chagrin of the local nuns. His night swim across the Amazon, struggling for air through his asthma, is a powerful scene among many in this subtly potent film.

As he proved with his wonderful “Central Station”, director Walter Salles has an acute ability to connect his characters to their settings in deeply emotional ways. He is the ideal choice to guide this road movie. As Guevara, Gael Garcia Bernal transcends his Tiger Beat, teen heartthrob looks and delivers a deeply touching performance, as he grows from a big city innocent to a haunted young man ready to take on a greater cause than his medical career. He does an especially strong job in conveying his character’s unblinking honesty and displaying unexpected acts of rage and compassion. Just as good is Rodrigo de la Serna in his feature film debut as Granado, effortlessly showing his character’s bravado and humor while finding his own bumpy way in the world. His reactions to his buddy’s political declaration at the birthday party, and to his own feelings during their goodbye at the end, are among the most poignant moments in the movie. In fact, much of the film’s power comes from their palpable chemistry and unforced rapport. They are instantly and completely believable as best friends. And much more than the book, the film builds a solid emotional bridge between the young innocent and the Communist revolutionary Guevara was to become. If you are not aware of his fate, it is briefly summarized in subtitles at the end, and the coda with the real Granado is moving. While this may be the most glowing portrayal of a Communist-in-the-making since Warren Beatty’s film about John Reed, “Reds”, don’t let that stop you from seeing this mesmerizing work. This is a wonderfully heartfelt film.

**ADDENDUM ABOUT THE DVD RELEASE POSTED ON FEBRUARY 18, 2005**

There are three extended deleted scenes included in the DVD package, none indispensable but still valuable for the additional context they provide to an essentially episodic movie. I particularly liked the sequence with the blind truck driver risking the lives of the two vagabonds as he swerves perilously on a treacherous mountain road. The obligatory making-of documentary is helpful, and includes comments from Salles, screenwriter Jose Rivera and executive producer Robert Redford. There are also a couple of brief Spanish-language TV interviews with Bernal and a quick interview with the film’s composer, Gustavo Santaolalla.
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Constantine’s Sword Streaming

February 7th, 2010 by abigayle7319418
Constantine's Sword Streaming. Constantine’s Sword Streaming.

Movie Title: Constantine’s Sword
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“Constantine’s Sword”

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Search for the Truth

Amos Lassen

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“Constantine’s Sword (First Run Features), based on the bestseller by James Carroll, is a search for the truth that comes face-to-face with persecution and violence in the name of G-d not only in the past but at present as well. The film, directed by Oren Jacoby, examines the legacy that has been passed from generation to generation beginning with the Emperor Constantine and extending to modern day religious fanaticism.

The film plays like a detective story. We follow Carroll as he goes into his own past and into the larger world where he finds Christian church violence against non-Christians. We go to the Air Force Academy where we see evangelicals trying to find converts within the armed forces of America and we see how religious influence can bring about serious consequences on American foreign policy. We are then faced with the question of whether it is fanaticism fueled by religious fervor that threatens the modern world.

The title, “Constantine’s Sword” refers to the Christian cross which caused the Emperor Constantine to yell “in this sign you will conquer” thereby making the cross a symbol of war rather than a symbol of love and peace.

The film looks at the history of Christianity as a trend that caused oppression which led to the most evil crime of all, the Holocaust. It also looks at the present day and concentrates on the family of Mickey Weinstein and how it challenges the evangelicalism of the Air Force Academy.

This is perhaps the most intelligent documentary I have ever seen and it mesmerized me completely. It exposes religion as an underlying and unhealthy trend in the modern world and compares the religious fervor of today with the Crusades when so many were slaughtered in the name of G-d. This is a film that will stir and appall you. Hopefully it will also cause you to examine yourself in order to live a better and more honest life.

“Constantine’s Sword,” the movie version of John Carroll’s book, is now available on DVD; it can also be watched on-line if you have Netflix.

There’s a great deal of autobiography in the film. Carroll’s father, Joseph Carroll was an important Air Force general; an FBI agent, Joseph Carroll was then sent to the new Air Force, commissioned a colonel, and within two years was a major general. He was the founding director of the Air Force’s Office of Special Investigations, and then the founding director of the Defense Intelligence Agency; it was he who brought the photos of Russian missles in Cuba to Kennedy’s attention.

The younger Carroll grew up on military bases, met John XXIII with his family as a teenager, and in the wake of the nuclear uncertainty of the Cold War, opted to pursue those things that would last. His first mass was celebrated at a chapel on an Air Force base; growing disillusioned with the war in Vietnam, and feeling called to follow the Prince of Peace, he slipped in just a tiny allusion in that first homily. He preached on Ezekiel’s vision of the dry bones; he mentioned they had been burned by the sun. More than that, burned by napalm. Such a tiny rebellion-such a miniscule insult to the military-but enough to drive a wedge between James and Joseph.

Carroll was a priest from 1969-1974, increasingly active in opposing the war, which destroyed his faith in both governmental and churchly authority. In an interview from those days he notes the silence of the US Catholic hierarchy to the bombing of civilians in Vietnam and opines, “Were US bombers dropping contraceptives on the Vietnamese, the American Catholic hierarchy would have condemned it quickly; but we were dropping napalm, and they said nothing.”

These personal stories are sketched throughout the movie, which begins at the US Air Force Academy in Colorado Springs, and the issue of aggressive evangelization of non-Christians, especially Jewish students, by evangelical churches in the area and by evangelical faculty, staff and students of the Academy. He interviews Academy graduate Mikey Weinstein, who was shocked when one of his two sons then at the Academy told him of anti-Jewish slurs he had been subjected to, and of the aggressive promotion of “The Passion of the Christ” by the Academy.

Carroll uses this incident to launch into a discussion of two issues: the history of Christian hostility to Jews, and of the linkage of Christianity with military power. He visits Milvian Bridge outside Rome, and Constantine’s vision of a cross with the motto, “In hoc signo vinces,” becomes the guiding metaphor for the book-”Cross and sword become one. Christianity turns violent.”

He surveys how this baptized violence spread across Europe, and became a means to unite feuding Christian kingdoms in a war against a common enemy, the Muslim “infidel”-and against closer enemies, against whom Christians had a long-standing grudge.

Carroll relates how he grew up in a typical Irish-Catholic family, trusting in a holy church with holy saints, priests and bishops. Now he saw those “holy” priests and bishops calling for bloody conquest, even leading pogroms against Jews in the name of Christ.

He travels to Spain, where Jews were first forced to convert to Christianity; then, when Christians became suspicious of the integrity of those they had forcibly converted, the Spanish Inquisition was created to investigate and to punish. When Jews were expelled from Spain, many were welcome in Rome, until 1555, when chief Roman inquisitor Giovanni Cardinal Caraffa became Pope Paul IV, who restricted Jewish intercourse with Christians and created a ghetto in which they must live.

Though recent popes, especially John Paul II, have taken great strides to repair relations with Jews, Carroll doesn’t think they’ve gone far enough. John Paul denounced Nazi antisemitism, but blamed it on neo-paganism, refusing to acknowledge that another part of its foundation was the legacy of Christian anti-Judaism, of accusations of “Christ-killer” and the blood libel. Only this can explain the collusion of many Catholic prelates with Nazism. He goes to Trier, where one of the supposed relics brought back from the Holy Land by Helena, the Robe of Christ, has been kept since the time of Constantine. The Bishop of Trier supported the National Socialists in the election of 1933, and to celebrate their victory, arranged for the Robe to be displayed. Vice Chancellor Franz von Papen represented Hitler, and, with the bishop, sent a telegram to Hitler pledging their mutual cooperation. While it was on display, Eugenio Pacelli (later Pope Pius XII) signed the concordat with Hitler-protecting the institutional church while accepting Nazi rule. Pacelli might not have been “Hitler’s Pope,” says Carroll, but he was certainly “Hitler’s Cardinal.”

That same year Edith Stein wrote to the pope to warn of Nazi antisemitism and of the dark future that would face Europe’s Jews; five years later, now known as Teresa Benedicta of the Cross, she lamented in her diary that the pope had never bothered to respond … and that all she had predicted had come true. This wasn’t mentioned in her canonization in 1998; she was canonized as a martyr, despite the fact that she went to Auschwitz not because of her Catholic faith, but for her Jewish blood.

In Rome, the anti-Jewish legislation of Paul IV was rescinded when Italy unified and the pope was banished to the Vatican; it was revived by Mussolini, however, and when in 1943 Mussolini rounded up the Jews of Rome to deport to Auschwitz, the pope said nothing. A survivor says in the film, “If the pope had only taken the trouble to go outside the gate-and not say anything, just do as he did when Rome was bombed-just go outside the gate and stand in silence, with his arms raised in the form of a cross, there might never have been a deportation. Italians and German Catholics would not have gone along with it.” But he never appeared.

Carroll affirms the strides taken forward by the Catholic Church in the latter part of the 20th century, especially the “change that mattered most” at Vatican 2, the decree, Nostra Aetate. But he wonders how much it has sunk in. He speaks with Fr. Stanislaw Obirek, a Polish Jesuit, suspended by his order because, Carroll says, he wanted a fuller accounting for the Catholic Church’s role in Polish antisemitism.

Returning to the US, Carroll listens to the rhetoric of George Bush’s “war on terror”-language of “crusade,” “good vs. evil,” “God is not neutral”-and hears echoes of past attempts to fuse cross and sword That’s what frightens him about what he saw happening at the Air Force Academy; it appears to be a case of religion and military power coming together, with young evangelicals in the military inspired by their religious zeal to fight Middle East enemies. This isn’t the spirit of Jesus, but the spirit of Constantine, which is still alive after 1700 years.

The movie can be faulted for its disparagement of Scripture (Carroll accepts uncritically whatever Elaine Pagels tells him), but it remains a powerful testimony to the experiences of those who have been cut by Constantine’s sword.
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Watch G.I. Joe A Real American Hero: Complete Collectors Set Online

February 7th, 2010 by abigayle7319418
Watch G.I. Joe A Real American Hero: Complete Collectors Set Online. Watch G.I. Joe A Real American Hero: Complete Collectors Set Online.

Movie Title: G.I. Joe A Real American Hero: Complete Collectors Set
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G.I. Joe A Real American Hero: Complete Collectors Set is available for streaming or downloading.

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As a youngster, some of my fondest memories were coming home after school, sitting on the couch and watching G.I. Joe: A Real American Hero on afternoon television. On a regular basis I would run home from the bus stop, just wondering to myself which episode was going to be on today. Because of these fantastic cartoons by Sunbow, the G.I. Joe and COBRA characters got a new life and a new energy, and seeing them come to life on the television screen filled my impressionable 10-year old mind with joy.

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Of course, as with anything we loved as a child, sometimes the rose colored glasses make the cartoon look a little better twenty-five years ago than it does today…there are certain parts of the Sunbow cartoon era that do make me chuckle, now that I’m in my 30’s, but that’s no reason to turn your back on a piece of animation history.

Back in those days you couldn’t tell an animated story quite as maturely as you can today. Stuff like Batman: The Animated Series, The Simpsons, or even Clone Wars wasn’t something cartoon writers or producers could even think about, so the folks behind the scenes at the production company had to figure out how they could tell a story about soldiers fighting terrorists without death or without bullets. The end result was an animated adventure that seemed more super hero than military and was, of course, quite campy for a military action/adventure. But if you take a closer look you can see, even amongst the conveniently timed parachutes and odd colored lasers, that this was actually a smartly written show, especially geared towards the under-10 crowd.

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Beyond that, though, there’s a heaping helping of nostalgia, a nice taste of simpler times where good and evil were a lot more clearly defined. Where you could sit down and watch your action figures jump around on the TV screen for 22 minutes without looking for deeper meaning aside from wondering what rhymes Roadblock was going to come up with, or how Cobra Commander could possibly screw things up worse than he had the previous episode. The cartoon was ludicrous, but it was fantastically ludicrous, and it gave birth to a whole generation of G.I. Joe fans who identify with the characters born on screen.

The best thing is, this set has EVERY SINGLE EPISODE. Every last “Cobra, RETREAT!!!” uttered by Cobra Commander. Every last “Yo, Joe!” by Duke or Gung Ho. Every octive of that catchy theme song that folks know so well, and every “Knowing is Half the Battle!” spoken by each character. Two full seasons, a wealth of 5-parters, and more special features than you can shake a stick at, this boxed set has about everything you could look for in a Sunbow Series collection. If you want a rundown of exactly what this series has to offer, I’ve reviewed it on my website as well: [...].

While G.I. Joe: The Movie from 1987 is noticeably absent, there is even a slot for it amongst the jewel cases, and even without that dubious end to the Sunbow era, this is one full and complete collection of animated goodness from the 80’s.

Whether your a child of the 80’s trying to relive your youth, an adult who just saw The Rise of Cobra, and want to explore G.I. Joe’s history, or most importantly, a parent who wants some wholesome and enjoyable entertainment for your new young Joe fan, this set is a can’t miss proposition. The best, the worst, and everything in between, whatever you want to know about the G.I. Joe cartoon you can find in these discs. I cannot recommend it enough!

I got this set back then as an exclusive purchase at SDCC. I’m amazed by the details and extensive bonus features. Most of all, the complete series of GI JOE are collected in one box. Great bonus features,especially men & women of action. Really explains the development and production of this animated series. This has been my kids’ Saturday morning TV programing lately.

We got the previous shoddy none-complete Rhino release, those bonus features aren’t really relevant to the original animated series. Poor picture quality. But this new set is awesome! My recommendation: BIG THUMBS UP. Glad that I got it early at SDCC because I saw the set on other sites for much higher price.
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Frontier(s) Movie Streaming

February 7th, 2010 by abigayle7319418
Frontier(s) Movie Streaming. Frontier(s) Movie Streaming.

Movie Title: Frontier(s)
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Frontier(s) is available for streaming or downloading.

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It seems like France right now have come up with some of the best horror films of the past couple of years, I think it started off with High Tension and the controversial revenge thriller Irreversible. Frontier(s) has come out during a period where horror films right now are going through a decline in quality and it seems like Hollywood are only interested in re-making old horror films, while Frontiers wasn’t as brutal as other reviewers have said it still was a great film although I’m not sure why it got an NC-17 rating, there are some gory parts and some extreme violence but I have the feeling that I’ve already seen this before and there was some cliches in it and the villains are neo-nazi cannibals thats probably the only difference. The film was written and directed by Xavier Gens and his script was outstanding but there were a few problems, it does take a few elements from modern horror films and mixes it up with some older 70’s and 80’s slasher films. The story follows a group of young bank robbers who are on the run from the law while violent protests and riots are taking place against a current election which is being held. Some of them make it out while others aren’t so lucky, the surviving members of the group take refuge in an inn located on the outskirts of town to escape from the cops, this is the point in the film which becomes very familiar if you’ve seen TCM or House Of 1000 Corpses they meet a group of weirdos two guys and two women and these weirdos like killing, torturing and messing around with their victims. Sure there is some bloody mayhem that happens during the course of the film but I wasn’t shocked its as if it was trying to hard however it was still great, one particular scene involves a band saw which was very gory and a guy who has his tendons sliced off with large metal clippers (this was ripped off from Hostel) as well as some other creative torture and death scenes like a large oven there is some slightly disturbing stuff. The victims in the film were quite sympathetic and weren’t like the typical characters you would see in this type of film, they were likable except for one guy. There were some great chase scenes and one very memorable scene that takes place in a dark tunnel that raises the level of suspense and tension, the film also kicks into high gear during the second half and the villains were truly despicable nazis which makes it great when the final victim gets his/her revenge I’m not going to spoil it was a surprise. I’ve seen so many awful horror movies these last couple of days and its nice to finally see something great, its all about the action and gore which was all done with such class that it doesn’t feel like a cheap exploitation it has a good atmosphere that draws you in, while not the most original horror film I’ve seen it was still very tight and fast paced I give this film a rating of 4.5/5 stars. If you enjoyed Haute Tension and Inside then you might like this, it seems like France is the new country for horror flicks. Now I haven’t seen Inside but if its as great as the reviews have said then it must be awesome and worthwhile. Check out the excellent reviews done by Dave K., D.Wilson, Clint and Woopak, they’ve all done a great job of reviewing Inside so I’m convinced. I highly recommend this film to hardcore horror fans but if your the type of person thats squeamish and hates over the top blood and gore then forget it.

By the time “Frontier(s)” was over my teeth really hurt. That was because I kept clenching them during the moments in this French horror film (the correct spelling of which would be “Frontière(s)”). This 2007 film is being promoted as the ninth of the 8 films 2 die 4 for last year’s After Dark Horrorfest, because when it earned an NC-17 rating in the States it had to be pulled from the lineup. So it has the whole vibe of being too much horror for Horrorfest, which means the expectations are pretty high when you sit down to watch this one. On the other hand, the second crop of Horrorfest films were rather disappointing so you figure this one has to be an improvement, and the good news is that it certainly delivers. I am not the sort to close my eyes while watching the gory parts of movies (although I did close one of them in sympathetic reaction to the opening game of “Saw II”), which is why I went the clenched teeth part. A bad case of the measles as a child took out some of the calcium in my permanent teeth, so I am surprised some of them did not crack.

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France is in the throes of some political upheaval having to do with the election of a hard line government, and while a century ago this might have sent young people to the barricades, in these trouble times they turn to crime. With the cops on their trail they decide to hole up in this filthy little bed and breakfast. This, of course, turns out to be a really bad mistake, and while the victims are not deserving of our sympathy on the basis of their characters, they are the hope of the future compared to their tormentors. There is really nothing more to say in laying out the plot, because you should just enjoy the ride, if you sense of the word “enjoy” encompasses what happens in this film. The film breaks down into three acts and how much you like the movie will probably come down to whether you think the final act tops the second.

Writer-director Xavier Gens (”Hitman”) gets the credit for coming up with all this sick stuff, but credit also goes to cinematographer Laurent Barès, who gives the film is visual style, and especially film editor Carlo Rizzo, who crafts some moments of bizarre beauty through his creative use of montage. A few horror films of recent vintage have attempted to be “arty,” and “Frontier(s)” certainly has some moments where you can argue it is cinema rather than just a horror movie.

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The obvious cinematic touchstone here is supposed to be “Hostel,” but I was reminded more of the original version of “The Texas Chainsaw Massacre.” You will pick up echoes from a lot of other films, but it speaks to the film that I never got the feeling this was a pastiche. I still think “Wolf Creek” is at the top of the list for the torture-porn genre, although I am sure I have not seen everything that is out there. But “Frontier(s)” is closer to that than it is to the “Hostel” movies or “The Saw Trilogy,” where there are mystery element in play that divert your from the blood, guts, and whatnot. This is just one of those bloody movies where you wait to see if anybody is going to get out alive.

All I can say now is: What a difference a movie makes. “Frontier(s)” was replaced in the Horrorfest 2007 lineup by “Unearthed,” which means that what would have been my highest rated one of the 8 films 2 die 4 was replaced by the one I rated the lowest (although you have to grant that they were right not to have included “Unearthed” in the first place). The original Horrorfest lineup earned an average rating of 3.7 from me and this year’s were a step lower at 3.0; but replace “Unearthed” with “Frontier(s)”) and the average jumps to 3.4. I had sworn that next year I would rent the Horrorfest movies rather than go ahead and buy them when they came out on DVD (we did not get the festival the second time around), but I am glad I saw enough of the buzz about “Frontier(s)” to go ahead and pick it up. The only real complaint is that there are no DVD extras. Final Note: I wonder if the people behind the After Dark Horrorfest have noticed that their best flicks are being made in foreign lands, because that’s certainly what has happened so far.

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Stream The Witch Who Came From the Sea Movie Online

February 6th, 2010 by abigayle7319418
Stream The Witch Who Came From the Sea Movie Online. Stream The Witch Who Came From the Sea Movie Online.

Movie Title: The Witch Who Came From the Sea
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The Witch Who Came From the Sea is available for streaming or downloading.

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Kinda like a strange variation of REPULSION if re-written by Charles Manson. THE WITCH WHO CAME FROM THE SEA is about a troubled woman named Molly who had a horrible childhood thanks to her dad raping her nonstop. Now as a heavy drinkin’, pill poppin’ adult Molly has a few problems of her own. The visions of mutilated corpses and the commercials telling her to kill are pretty serious, but that’s nothing compared to her habit of hacking off men’s dongs with a razor!

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You’d think with a storyline like that that things would escalate until finally the film explodes into an orgy of blood, nudity and gore. Well, that’s at least what I was hoping for. Sadly things actually slow down as the movie goes on until finally at the end I was getting pretty depressed.

If you’re looking a film about female madness then stick with REPULSION, but if you want some psychotic sexy violence that’s gonna make your eyes pop out then watch A CHINESE TORTURE CHAMBER STORY 1 & 2.

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Also for all you fans of the Don Knotts/Tim Conway classic THE PRIVATE EYES check out Stan Ross in a brief scene as the tattoo artist Jack Dracula. He’s even on the back of the DVD case.

The poster art for “The Witch Who Came from the Sea”–which is reproduced in gorgeous color, but frustratingly cropped form, on the cover of the DVD–has absolutely nothing to do with the movie itself. “Witch” is not a horror film, but rather a scathing indictment of child sexual abuse which occasionally veers into horror-like territory.

Millie Perkins plays Molly, a spacy barmaid who idolizes men on TV, dotes on her two young nephews, and often recalls her late, seafaring father with unnatural reverence. She also has ugly castration fantasies that she acts upon about fifteen minutes into the film(don’t worry, I’m not giving away the movie’s major revelation here). Perkins is really good in this role, and Lonny Chapman also gives a fine performance as her grizzled boyfriend.

What else works in this film? The dreary, battered Venice Beach and Santa Monica location shots. The creepy soundtrack. Molly’s sad, uncomfortable, frightening flashbacks to childhood. What DOESN’T work is the dialogue. Robert Thom(Perkins’ husband at the time) wrote in the Ernest Hemingway-Rod Serling style; everyone in the film speaks exactly the same way, and they all sound so nutty that you’ll often be left scratching your head in frustration. I think that Thom was going for a folksy, man-and-woman-on-the-street feel(for 1976), but the language comes off as goofy and stilted. That said, watch the film anyway–it really is worth it. You’ll never, ever forget “Witch”. (Without giving anything away, the final scene is wonderful, almost perfect.)

Extras include commentary by Perkins, director Matt Cimber, and cinematographer Dean Cundey; interviews with the same; and trailers for some other movies. What’s really interesting about the film itself is that there are two or three scenes which I never saw on the ancient VHS print I used to rent. Brace yourself before you see this; obviously the film is not suitable for children, but many adults will find it extraordinarily unpleasant as well.

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Watch Ronald Reagan – The Signature Collection Online

February 6th, 2010 by abigayle7319418
Watch Ronald Reagan - The Signature Collection Online. Watch Ronald Reagan – The Signature Collection Online.

Movie Title: Ronald Reagan – The Signature Collection
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Ronald Reagan – The Signature Collection is available for streaming or downloading.

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here’s the rundown from Warner’s Home Video press release about this collection.

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The Hasty Heart offers a commentary by director Vincent Sherman and John Meroney, a vintage Joe McDoakes comedy short So You Want to Be in Pictures, a classic cartoon The Hasty Hare and a theatrical trailer, with Subtitles in English, French and Spanish.

Kings Row will feature an Oscar® nominated short United States Marine Band, a classic cartoon Fox Pop and a theatrical trailer, with the main feature subtitled in English and Spanish.

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Knute Rockne All American includes an Oscar® winning Technicolor historical short Teddy, the Rough Rider, a classic cartoon Porky’s Baseball Broadcast, an audio-only 1940 Lux Radio Theater Broadcast with Pat O’Brien and Ronald Reagan, and a theatrical trailer. Subtitles are in English, French and Spanish.

The Winning Team and Storm Warning both come with a trailer and feature subtitles in English, French and Spanish.

for those of you wondering about why certain titles aren’t in this boxset “Bedtime for Bonzo” came out from Universal. “Hellcats of the Navy” is owned by Sony.

There are those who write off Ronald Reagan’s acting talent as minimal, and his Hollywood career as a long list of ‘B’ movies, like “Bedtime for Bonzo”. Nothing could be further from the truth, and “Ronald Reagan – The Signature Collection” offers the future President in movie roles that display his charisma, charm, intensity, and integrity, over a 14-year span. The choices made are all exceptional, and certainly worth watching (The only reason I don’t give the collection ‘five stars’ is the lack of commentaries for any of the features other than “The Hasty Heart”; certainly, “Knute Rockne” and “King’s Row” deserve them!)

The titles include:

“Knute Rockne All American” (1940) – Lloyd Bacon’s sentimental, rousing biopic of the legendary Notre Dame coach became the signature role in Pat O’Brien’s long career, and launched Reagan to stardom (with only ten minutes of screen time!) With script and actor approval, both Notre Dame and Rockne’s widow, Bonnie Skiles Rockne, made casting difficult (James Cagney, the first choice for the lead, was nixed by the Catholic university for his liberal political stands), but O’Brien, a gifted mimic, could match the coach’s staccato vocal delivery flawlessly, and with bleached hair and a false nose, made a convincing Rockne.

Reagan actually ‘tested’ for the role of George Gipp (Dennis Morgan was his major competition), and his natural athletic ability and likable cockiness won him the role. His ‘dying’ scene with O’Brien would become the stuff of legend, introducing the phrase “Win One for the Gipper” into the national consciousness.

While the film has glitches (the studio football uniforms don’t match the actual game footage ones), and Rockne is incorrectly credited as ‘inventing’ the forward pass (it had been legal since 1906; his contribution was in using it as the major offensive weapon), the film, and the famous school fight song, have become a genuine part of our heritage!

“Kings Row” (1942) – Reagan’s favorite film, and finest performance, in Sam Wood’s moving production of Henry Bellamann’s ‘unfilmable’ novel. Much as “Peyton Place” would cause an uproar, a generation later, “Kings Row”, a thinly-disguised version of Fulton, Missouri, Bellamann’s home, exposed the seamy underbelly of respectability, with incest, rape, medical incompetence, and malicious gossip…little of which would reach the screen. What did, however, made for great melodrama, with a starring cast of some of Warner’s best young actors.

While Tyrone Power was the original choice for Parris Mitchell, with Dennis Morgan as Drake McHugh, Darryl F. Zanuck, remembering MGM’s less-than-stellar treatment of Power during the filming of “Marie Antoinette”, refused to ‘lend’ him to WB, and the studio went with Robert (later ‘Bob’) Cummings as the idealistic young doctor. Reagan, who had seen the script, knew he’d be perfect as McHugh (the likable wastrel who would lose his legs, and nearly his soul), and lobbied hard for the role; his instincts proved correct, as he was unforgettable, with incredible chemistry with both Cummings and Ann Sheridan (unforgettable as Randy Monaghan, the love from the ‘Wrong Side of the Tracks’).

While Cummings’ character is ‘too good to be true’, and his dialog, a bit stilted, Reagan and Sheridan, with a supporting cast including Claude Rains, Charles Coburn, and Judith Anderson, make the film a classic…featuring a spectacular score by Erich Wolfgang Korngold.

“The Hasty Heart” (1949) – The finest of Reagan’s post-WWII WB films, this Vincent Sherman-directed drama, based on a modestly-successful Broadway play, tells the story of a British M.A.S.H. in Burma, as the Japanese surrender, and the patients (led by likable ‘Yank’, played by Reagan) await transportation home. A new patient arrives (Richard Todd), a Scot wounded that last day, bitter about his situation, and in store for even worse news…he has only weeks, maybe just days to live. Under the care of nurse Patricia Neal, Reagan, and the other patients, Todd must come out of his shell, learn to accept his fate, and find redemption.

The often somber, yet moving tale, filmed in England, benefited greatly by ‘discovery’ Todd, who was brilliant in the central role, and would achieve stardom. Both Reagan, who had just been divorced by Jane Wyman, and Neal, separated from her love, Gary Cooper, while unhappy about working overseas, would match Todd’s performance, and garner some of their best reviews.

The film was a hit (especially in England), and certainly discredits the claim that Reagan’s career was ‘finished’ when the war ended!

“Storm Warning” (1951) – In, essentially, the kind of ‘topical’ crime film that WB specialized in, back in the 1930s, this drama of the vise-like grip the KKK has on a small town after a reporter is murdered, has terrific elements of Noir, and some genuine suspense, until the predictable climax.

Model Ginger Rogers (in a role intended for Lauren Bacall), in town to visit pregnant sister Doris Day, witnesses the Klan killing (in a frightening scene of building lights going out, and deserted streets), but discovers the killer is her brother-in-law (played with ignorant malice by Steve Cochran). Despite the earnest pleas of prosecutor Reagan, she refuses to identify the killer, and even recants a statement that the Klan was involved.

But things begin to unravel, as Cochran attempts to rape Rogers, and the Klan bull whips her (both depicted pretty graphically for a 1951 movie!) Can Reagan save her from the KKK? Are you kidding? This is the man who defeated Communism!

Reagan’s role is decidedly secondary, and the studio ‘cops out’ a bit, in ultimately placing the blame on the greedy Klan leader (Hugh Sanders), rather than the organization, but the film does have it’s share of great moments…

“The Winning Team” (1952) – In his last film at WB, Reagan was again teamed with Doris Day, in this glossy biopic of early baseball legend, Grover Cleveland Alexander.

The real Alexander’s life was the stuff a great movie could be made from; beaned by a baseball, his head injury was aggravated during WWI, resulting in epilepsy and acute alcoholism. Despite all this, he’d make a comeback, becoming the hero of the 1926 World Series, and one of the first inductees into the Baseball Hall of Fame. Sadly, much of his later life would be tragic (dying in a flop house, in 1950), but this being the 50s, expect the edges smoothed over, and a happy ending!

Reagan is actually very good as Alexander (if the oldest-looking ‘rookie’ since Redford in “The Natural”), as he captures both the pitcher’s love of the game, and self-destructiveness that would wear him down. Even better is Day, as his loyal wife; their scenes together have a remarkable warmth and depth, and she captures the real Aimee Alexander’s devotion to her ailing husband (she would actually marry him three times!)

With a terrific supporting performance by the wonderful Frank Lovejoy (as Rogers Hornsby), “The Winning Team” may not be the most accurate baseball movie, but it is one of the more entertaining ones!

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Stream Twelve O’Clock High Movie Online

February 6th, 2010 by abigayle7319418
Stream Twelve O'Clock High Movie Online. Stream Twelve O’Clock High Movie Online.

Movie Title: Twelve O’Clock High
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Twelve O’Clock High is available for streaming or downloading.

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I do not recall another film whose opening and closing scenes are more effective than those in this brilliant portrayal of the 918th Bombardment group based in England which flew almost daily missions to Germany during World War II. The character of General Frank Savage (Gregory Peck) is reputedly based on Brigadier General Frank A. Armstrong, Jr. Sy Bartlett wrote the book and then the screenplay. Brilliantly directed by Henry King, we are introduced to a combination of combat fatigue and self-pity which results in the replacement of Colonel Keith Davenport (Gary Merrill) by his friend Savage who is told by his commanding officer, General Pritchard (Millard Mitchell), to shape up the 918th while avoiding Davenport’s problem: Becoming overly involved emotionally in decisions to send B-17 crews on exceptionally dangerous missions, day after day after day. Savage immediately establishes his authority and almost immediately loses whatever goodwill he may have had. He applies and then maintains constant pressure on the crews to improve their performance in all areas of flight operations. Underachievers are reassigned to one B-17 renamed “The Leper Colony.” Morale deteriorates to such a point that those at headquarters become concerned. A formal investigation of the situation is conducted. This is a critical moment for Savage. If he has “lost” his men, he cannot continue. In fact, he expects to be relieved and begins to pack his personal items. However, for reasons best revealed in the film, Savage remains in command. And then….

It would be a disservice to those who have not as yet seen this film to say any more about the plot. Suffice to say that brilliant direction, great acting by everyone involved (notably by Dean Jagger who received an Academy Award for best actor in a supporting role), superb cinematography (Leon Shamroy), and haunting music (Alfred Newman) are seamlessly integrated in this analysis of effective leadership (especially decision-making) under wartime conditions. The film begins when Harry Stovall (Jagger) makes an especially significant purchase in an antique store and then proceeds to what has by then become an abandoned air base. As we begin to hear the bombers’ propellers whine as the engines roar to life, we are transported back in time. Later, as the film ends, civilian Stovall climbs back on his rented bike and departs what is again an abandoned air base. Stunning images throughout both sequences.

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Peck included this among his favorite films, while adding that he was especially proud of his performance as Frank Savage. When first released more than 50 years ago, it did not receive the recognition (much less the appreciation) it so obviously deserves. Whenever CEOs and other senior-level executives ask me to suggest war films which offer important lessons about leadership and management, Twelve O’Clock High is first on the list, joined by (in alphabetical order) Command Decision, The Dirty Dozen, The Enemy Below, Fort Apache, The Hunt for Red October, Paths of Glory, Pork Chop Hill, The Red Badge of Courage, They Were Expendable, and Zulu.

If there is one war story to keep on your shelf besides “Saving Private Ryan,” this is it.

It starts with a lawyer visiting England as a tourist years after war’s end. He discovers a cheap, ceramic antique which the store owner tells him is of little value. “Value?” replies the lawyer. “Wrap it very carefully” he adds. So begins his mental journey back in time to the English airstrip where he served as adjutant of the 918th (nine, eighteenth) Bomb Group.

This “hard luck” group is taken over by a brigadier general from a colonel who has “over-identified” with his men, thus putting them before his missions. The general, Frank Savage, must restore group discipline and performance before the group disintegrates as an effective fighting unit.

General Savage puts mission before men and turns the disgruntled men who despise him into a cohesive unit. They turn into a group that will do anything to keep from being left behind, or letting down their new leader. (Each announcement of a mission for the following day is characterized by the operations officer going to the mantel over the fireplace, in the Officers’ Club, and turning the head of a ceramic pirate face outward.)

But the tough general will not make the same mistake that the last group commander makes. He will always keep the mission first, and will not over-identify with his men. He will not let the loss of his men affect him.

Or, will he?

This black & white story is exceptional and superbly acted. It shows the mental tug-of-war a leader must make in the decisions that will cost the lives of men he has come to admire and respect. It depicts how the ugliness of war brings out the best in ourselves, and creates fraternal bonds that last a lifetime.

This is not a gory story, but it is one that will leave you breathless. It may sadden you, but it will not disappoint you. It does not end with everyone living, or happy.

War never does.

P.S. The “whole nine yards” refers to the length of ammunition in a box that was attached to each machine gun in the bomber. When the linked ammunition was stretched to its full length, it measured nine yards.
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