best WAR films

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HERE WE POST ANYTHING RELATED TO WAR FILMS, ITS A GREAT WAY
TO GATHER ALL INFO ABOUT WAR FILMS IN ONE TOPIC, SO PLZ PARTICIPATE TOO

ALL THE FILMS HERE ARE THE BEST, SO ANY FILM POSTED IS RECOMENDED TO BE SEEN
ill post my films in order of my favourites, ill post other films later
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THE THIN RED LINE (1998)
the thin red line to me is one of the BEST war films ever made
and with the most incredible number of cast of pro. actors
in 1 film..when i saw it i was in shock to see all these stars
..the film came out same time as saving private ryan..
although it wasnt as much popular, but to me its a much better film
im a hanks fan..but this film is exquisite, incredible, and most of all
FULL OF HOLLYWOOD STARS. with one of the greatest music compoositions,
screenplay and professional acting...this film is a MUST SEE to all war fan movies.
this is one of the most influential film of the 1990's

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comment: 7 academy award nominations, one of the best war films ever made

PLOT: Based on the novel by James Jones, THE THIN RED LINE tells the story of a group of men, an Army Rifle company called C-for-Charlie, who change, suffer and ultimately make essential discoveries about themselves during the fierce World War II battle of Guadalcanal. The story takes place as Army troops are moved in to relieve battle-weary Marine units. It follows their journey, from the surprise of an unopposed landing, through the bloody and exhausting battles that follow, to the ultimate departure of those who survived.

The story is more than a tale of men fighting a key battle, one which would ultimately stem the Japanese advance through the Pacific Islands. It explores the intense bonds that develop between men under terrible stress, even evil; to Jones, who served with an Army unit in Guadalcanal, the soldiers' feelings and emotions developed into nothing less than a sense of love...of family. The horrors of war helped them lose their idea of self and of the world around them. They were no longer fighting solely for patriotic reasons or the larger world and its issues which had brought them there; they were fighting for survival and for the men next to them.


The motion picture THE THIN RED LINE marks the return to the director's chair by Terrence Malick, who also wrote the screenplay. Malick made two previous pictures, "Badlands" and "Days of Heaven." For the latter, he received Best Director nods from the New York Film Critics, the National Film Critics and the Cannes Film Festival. Malick attended the Center for Advanced Film Studies at the American Film Institute, where he first met AFI founder and THE THIN RED LINE executive producer George Stevens, Jr.

Malick's adaptation of Jones' work adds a new thematic strand, as it creates a strong awareness of the physical and anthropological environment in which this clash was fought. The film presents a juxtaposition of a vicious mechanized battle taking place in a pristine wilderness, where the forces of destruction collide with a people living in quiet harmony with their natural surroundings; these were the Melanesians of the Solomon Islands, whose way of life centers on family and tranquility.

In 1988 Malick suggested his idea of adapting James Jones' novel to producers Robert Michael Geisler and John Roberdeau, whereupon they approached the author's widow, Gloria Jones, and acquired the rights. Geisler and Roberdeau then went to Malick's friend and former agent, Phoenix Pictures chairman Mike Medavoy, to help develop, produce and bring the financing to the picture. Malick had originally intended only to write the screenplay. Comments George Stevens, Jr. and Mike Medavoy: "Terry was not initially planning to direct, but as time passed, he decided that THE THIN RED LINE would be his next directing project."


In September, 1996, Malick and Phoenix approached producer Grant Hill, who was working on "Titanic" in Rosarita, Mexico. "Terrence and I developed a strong telephone relationship," comments Hill, "and I was delighted when he invited me to join him."

Fox 2000 Pictures, under the stewardship of president Laura Ziskin, came aboard, and the film was given a "green light." "Before we knew it," add Medavoy and Stevens, "we were in Australia, shooting the movie."

One of the first priorities for Malick at this stage was to assemble a close group of old friends and collaborators; production designer Jack Fisk, first assistant director Skip Cosper, casting director Dianne Crittenden and editor Billy Weber had all worked on Malick's previous films. Added to this team were two Academy Award winners - cinematographer John Toll and composer Hans Zimmer. Fisk, who designed both "Badlands" and "Days of Heaven," found the opportunity to reunite with Malick irresistible. "When I heard that Terry was going make another film, I became jealous about even the possibility that somebody else would be designing it. So I sent him a fax, saying that I'd finally recovered from 'Days of Heaven' (on which they had collaborated twenty years earlier), and that I'd love to work with him again."


THE THIN RED LINE also brings together an extraordinary cast of actors who play the men of C-for-Charlie Company and the officers who send them into battle. Among them are Sean Penn, Jim Caviezel, Ben Chaplin, George Clooney, John Cusack, Woody Harrelson, Elias Koteas and Nick Nolte. Says George Stevens, Jr.: "I don't recall a picture like this where so many gifted performers were willing to accept whatever role was offered. It presented a tremendous opportunity to Terry.

"I think there are two reasons for this," Stevens continues. "One is that they admired the story and the script. Then, of course, each of these men had a very strong desire to work with Terry Malick."

Malick's appreciation of actors and their work was also a significant factor in assembling the cast. "Terry knows many actors personally and enjoys a tremendous rapport with them," comments Hill. The director's vision of the story and characters were further enticements. "I would guess that they wanted to be participants in Terry's vision," adds Hill, "and have the opportunity to experience a different and rewarding directorial approach."

Cast members were pleased to take on any role, large or small, for the chance to work on THE THIN RED LINE. Says Nick Nolte, who plays Colonel Tall: "It was a great pleasure working with Terry. He's done very few films, so when he does direct, it seems like his last time. So he never compromised."

Adds Ben Chaplin, "I took the role of Private Bell without hesitation. Terrence's first two films were classics, and I knew THE THIN RED LINE would be a once in a lifetime opportunity."

Echoes Woody Harrelson, who plays Sergeant Keck: "Terry was wonderful to work with. I've always thought that if a movie is going to work, the people involved need to become something of a family. That's exactly the type of environment Terry created."

While pleased at the list of star talent that was coming aboard the project, the filmmakers were determined to find some relatively new faces to take on key roles. With more than fifty speaking parts, the casting process was long and exhaustive.

Among the new "recruits" was Jim Caviezel, who takes on the role of Private Witt, from Kentucky. The opportunity was certainly not lost on the young actor. "I count myself very fortunate not only to be in this movie, but to have the role of Witt; he's a real hero, and a wonderful character to have played."

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Cast:

Sean Penn .... Sergeant Welsh

Adrien Brody .... Corporal Fife

James Caviezel .... Private Witt

Ben Chaplin .... Private Bell

George Clooney .... Captain Bosche

John Cusack .... Captain Gaff

Woody Harrelson .... Sergeant Keck

Elias Koteas .... Captain Staros

Jared Leto .... Lieutenant Whyte

Nick Nolte .... Lt. Colonel Tall

John C. Reilly .... Sergeant Storm

John Travolta .... Brig. General Quintard
Dash Mihok .... Private Doll
Tim Blake Nelson .... Private Tills


Directed by
Terrence Malick
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watch trailer: http://us.imdb.com/title/tt0120863/t...ay-E10464-13-2



SCHINDLER'S LIST (1993)
the movie this time is a film that shocked the whole world, became a landmark
cinematic masterpiece, won 7 oscars, made over 400 million world wide but the irony is
the film subject is very sensitive...for me..it is one of the most important films ever made
i think the film was banned in egypt, not sure though, but if u can get a hand on a copy
even on kazaa u MUST see it, GDR2 i told him about it, he is a spilberg fan, he didnt c it
i told him to c it, he really praised the movie to me after seeing it
Academy Award:
Best Picture
Best Director - Steven Spielberg
Best Adapted Screenplay - Steven Zaillian
Best Art Direction-Set Decoration - Ewa Braun, Allan Starski
Best Cinematography - Janusz Kaminski
Best Film Editing - Michael Kahn
Best Original Score - John Williams
Academy Award Nomination:
Best Actor - Liam Neeson
Best Supporting Actor - Ralph Fiennes
Best Sound - Andy Nelson, Steve Pederson, Scott Millan, Ron Judkins
Best Costume Design - Anna Biedrzycka-Sheppard
Best Makeup - Christina Smith, Matthew Mungle, Judith A. Cory

Schindler's List is an indelible story of devastation, genocide, and the triumph of one man who made a difference.
Winner of seven Academy Awards®, it is a cinematic masterpiece that has become one of the most honored films of all time.

whoever saves one life saves the world entire

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comment: the subject about jews and the holocaust is sensitvive to some...but its a historic fact...a film is very touching, it remorsed, and got a lot of ppl together, it LITREARLY
changed a lot of ppls lives helping and teaching ppl about history
this film has changed my way of thinkin on certain asipects...first..it printed that war really is a ****ty way out of anything, and 2nd..ya we do hate jews for wat they done, and vice versa...but there are still good jews, like there is good muslims and christians...war is a devistating result that destroys never helps, and i have to admit, the shoah jews have been through hell, and all of them lives changed one way or the other..

PLOT: The true story of Czech born Oskar Schindler, a businessman who tried to make his fortune during the Second World War by exploiting cheap Jewish labour,
but ended up penniless having saved over 1000 Polish Jews from almost certain death during the holocaust. "Schindler's List" is the based-on-truth story of Nazi Czech business man Oskar Schindler, who uses Jewish labor to start a factory in occupied Poland. As World War II progresses, and the fate of the Jews becomes more and more clear, Schindler's motivations switch from profit to human sympathy and he is able to save over 1100 Jews from death in the gas chambers.
In 1939, when Germany overran Poland, Oskar set out for Krakow to find his fortune in the profitable business of war. Through local Nazi connections, he took charge of a confiscated enamelware factory that made mess kits and field kitchenware for the German army.

Oskar settled comfortably into life in Krakow. While his wife remained in Moravia, a series of mistresses kept him company.

He prospered in Krakow, making the most of his friendships with district heads of various Nazi security forces and Amon Goeth, commandant of Plaszow, the forced labor camp nearby. The contracts he obtained through Nazi connections brought him huge profits. Oskar quickly learned how to work inside the corrupt and savage system the Nazis operated and knew how to manipulate it to his own good fortune.

His accountant Itzhak Stern encouraged him to employ Jewish workers; his personnel grew from 45 workers to more than 250 as army contracts poured in.
His affinity for the Nazi party waned as he continued to witness the sporadic raids and killings to which the Jews of Krakow were subject. Most brutal was the Nazis’ liquidation of the Krakow Jewish quarter, where Schindler saw soldiers drag families from their apartments and shoot anyone who resisted on sight. The Nazis excluded no one — including a little Jewish girl in a scarlet coat — from witnessing these sidewalk executions. Watching these killings, Schindler realized that if they were content to commit their crimes in full view of children, they must have planned to murder the witnesses as well.

Schindler then worked with Stern to protect as many Jews as possible. The workforce at Emalia, as he called his factory, burgeoned triplefold; whenever a worker at Plaszow was put in direct peril, Schindler traded a blackmarket item for that worker’s transfer to his factory.

When the Nazis’ "Final Solution" threatened Emalia itself, Schindler set up his factory in Brinnlitz, a small town on the Polish-Czechoslovakian border. He was allowed to draw up a list of "essential" Jewish workers — those from Emalia and others with special talents he deemed useful — whom he could take with him. When word spread that there was a list, everyone prayed to be on it. With the help of Itzhak Stern, he drafted a register of more than 1,100 names. Schindler and these workers waited out the war in relative safety.

Schindler lost everything he possessed at the end of the war. He was penniless. Never again did he prosper.

After the war, he and his wife emigrated to Argentina, where he took up farming. After 10 unsuccessful years, he abandoned Emilie and returned to Germany. For the remainder of his life, his "family," the Schindlerjuden, cared for him.

In 1961, Jerusalem’s Yad Vashem Museum complex, which commemorates the Holocaust, planted a tree in Schindler’s honor in the Avenue of the Righteous, dedicated to gentiles who helped Jews during the Nazi’s reign. The tree now also bears the name of his wife, Emilie.

Schindler died in 1974. In accordance with his wishes, he was buried in Israel, in the Catholic cemetery on Mount Zion in Jerusalem. A special epilogue to Schindler’s List was filmed at his gravesite, with 128 Schindlerjuden from around the world, as well as Emilie Schindler, participating.

Cast :
Liam Neeson .... Oskar Schindler
Ben Kingsley .... Itzhak Stern
Ralph Fiennes .... Amon Goeth
Caroline Goodall .... Emilie Schindler

Directed by: the great
Steven Spilberge
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watch trailer: http://us.imdb.com/title/tt0108052/t...ay-E10524-13-2



SAVING PRIVATE RYAN (1998)

The were only one man left in the family, and the mission was to save him
comment: 11 oscar nominations, became a start of close friendship with steven spilberg and some clame that movie to be the best war film ever. with the most suspensful opening scene.
this film influnced the tv series BAND OF BROTHERS, put VIN DIESEL on the screen and made tom pay tribute to wwII soldiers.
plot: During WWII, Chief of Staff, General Marshall is informed that three of a woman's sons have been killed and that she's going to receive the notifications of their demise at the same time. And when he learns that a fourth son is still unaccounted for, the General decides to send a unit to find him and bring him back, despite being told that it's highly unlikely that he is still alive and the area that he was known to be at is very dangerous. So the unit consisting of 8 men are sent to find him but as stated it's very dangerous and one by one, each of them are being picked off. Will they find him and how many of them will still be alive.

Cast:
Tom Hanks .... Capt. John Miller
Edward Burns (I) .... Pvt. Richard Reiben
Tom Sizemore .... Sgt. Michael Horvath
Matt Damon .... Pvt. James Ryan
Jeremy Davies .... Cpl. Timothy Upham
Adam Goldberg .... Pvt. Stanley Mellish
Barry Pepper .... Pvt. Daniel Jackson
Giovanni Ribisi .... Pvt. Irwin Wade
Vin Diesel .... Pvt. Adrian Caparzo
Directed by: Steven Spilberg





I am having a nervous breakdance
Hey, it is nice to see that someone besides me thinks that The Thin Red Line is the best war film ever.
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The novelist does not long to see the lion eat grass. He realizes that one and the same God created the wolf and the lamb, then smiled, "seeing that his work was good".

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They had temporarily escaped the factories, the warehouses, the slaughterhouses, the car washes - they'd be back in captivity the next day but
now they were out - they were wild with freedom. They weren't thinking about the slavery of poverty. Or the slavery of welfare and food stamps. The rest of us would be all right until the poor learned how to make atom bombs in their basements.



Only for the weak
Man I hate to admit I've never seen The Thin Red Line. It sucks having no good movie stores around here

So far though my favorite war movie I guess is Saving Private Ryan. I would say Apocalypse Now but that's not really about the war so much as it is other things.
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Early morning moments, a glimpse of joy. But soon it's over and I return to dust. As I try to be, everything everyone. I shrivel up and, waste away.



Man, I wish people would use the stinkin' search option. There are 3 other threads just like this. NAMELY MINE!!!
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"Today, war is too important to be left to politicians. They have neither the time, the training, nor the inclination for strategic thought. I can no longer sit back and allow Communist infiltration, Communist indoctrination, Communist subversion and the international Communist conspiracy to sap and impurify all of our precious bodily fluids."



I am having a nervous breakdance
Originally Posted by Muzzy
So far though my favorite war movie I guess is Saving Private Ryan. I would say Apocalypse Now but that's not really about the war so much as it is other things.
Oh, I would say that it is at least as much about the war as Schindler's List or Saving Private Ryan. Actually, I think Schindler's List is about The Holocaust specifically, not the WWII. Apocalypse Now is my runner up to The Thin Red Line. Frankly, they are equally good in a way, only Apocalypse Now is one of those films I "grew up" with sort of (like Taxi Driver) but I saw The Thin Red Line in a theatre the same year it was released and didn't know what to expect, and I was totally blown away.



Ready!Set!Go!...Er..Actio n!
Um, how about "The Big Red One"? Or "Magnificent 7" or "Father Goose"?
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The Bear with the Funk
Apocalypse Now is too formalistic to me.....I'd say Platoon or Full Metal Jacket is about the best war films of all time.
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- Platoon is the best War movie ever.



RIP www.moviejustice.com 2002-2010
There is an answer to this question and that answer is All Quiet on the Western Front (1930) the only two movies that come close are Paths of Glory and Apocalypse Now
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I am having a nervous breakdance
Originally Posted by Pappa Bear
Apocalypse Now is too formalistic to me.....I'd say Platoon or Full Metal Jacket is about the best war films of all time.
Hmmm... Isn't the second part of Full Metal Jacket pretty "formalistic" here and there?



guyz there are still other excellent war films like apocalypse now, braveheart, etc...why dont we hear ur review about them?



Originally Posted by GODFATHER
guyz there are still other excellent war films like apocalypse now, braveheart, etc...why dont we hear ur review about them?
Probably because there are a bunch of reviews already done by a lot of posters in the three other threads exactly like this one.



Saving Private Ryan
Apocalypse Now
Tigerland
Platoon
Casualties of War
Stalingrad
Full Metal Jacket
The Deer Hunter
Forrest Gump ()

In no particular order.



SystemicAnomaly's Avatar
0100001101001101
i liked We Were Soldiers

Full Metal Jacket and Saving Private Ryan also come to mind.
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jamesglewisf's Avatar
Didn't see it.
LOL! My wife would agree with Father Goose.

I'll have to give it some thought, but Jacob's Ladder is up there near the top.
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To BE or Not to BE, or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Barium Enema
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RIP www.moviejustice.com 2002-2010
Originally Posted by LordSlaytan
Man, I wish people would use the stinkin' search option. There are 3 other threads just like this. NAMELY MINE!!!

yes but this is his thread and he did a wonderful job in the fact that he described why he thinks the way he does.

me I say

All Quiet on the Western Front
Apocalypse Now
Paths of Glory



All he did was copy someone else's review and paste into here. What's special about that again?