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  • Review count
    2
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    May 6, 2009
  • Last review
    May 13, 2010
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Bjj73129's Reviews
 
Customer Rating
5 out of 5
5
One of Denzel's best.
on May 13, 2010
Posted by: Bjj73129
from OKC, OK
This was an great story and Denzel shines as the lone wanderer on a mission. The cinamatography was almost as if I was watching a movie based on the video game Fallout 3. The bleak colors set the stage for a post-apocolyptic world in which Denzel navigate his way through, looking for food and tasked with protecting a very valuable book. I won't give away any plot spoilers, but what the book is, is not the mystery. In fact, it is revealed rather early on, and specifics are few and far between leaving it to the veiwer to fill in the gaps. The mystery is trying to understand why Denzel was given this task and what exactly that task is. Great directing, great acting, and the ending will have you thinking about it for days. I saw this in the theatre and have been looking forward to seeing it again ever since so I could watch it with the knowledge of what is revealed in the end. It makes it a totally different story all together.
What's great about it: Amazing cinamatography, solid acting, and a great twist ending.
What's not so great: Small plot flaws but overlookable.
I would recommend this to a friend!
+7points
8of 9voted this as helpful.
 
Dalton Trumbo was one of Hollywood's most successful and respected screenwriters, but he was also a committed political activist -- his leftist views led to him being blacklisted during the "Red Scare" of the 1950s -- and in 1938 he wrote an impassioned anti-war novel, Johnny Got His Gun, that was a major critical success. In 1971, Trumbo hade his belated directorial debut with a screen adaptation of the book, but the film received only a limited release, and it found its widest audience through a most unlikely circumstance -- the heavy metal band Metallica used clips from the movie in the music video for their song about a victim of war, "One". Shout Factory has finally given Johnny Got His Gun its North American video debut with a DVD edition of the picture. Johnny Got Hs Gun has been given a widescreen transfer to disc, letterboxed at 1.85:1 on conventional televisions and enhanced for anamorphic playback on 16x9 monitors, and the image looks just a bit soft, with a muted color palate in the scenes not presented in black and white, suggesting the disc may have been mastered from a PAL video source. However, the transfer was taken from a clean looking print, free of scratches and blemishes, and it's noticeably better than the bootleg videos that have circulated on this title for years (some taken from European VHS copies of the film). The audio is in Dolby Digital Stereo, retaining the film's original monophonic sound mix, and the fidelity is good though not unusually so. The dialogue is in English, with no subtitles or multiple language options. A number of bonus features appear on this release, most notably Dalton Trumbo: Rebel In Hollywood, a documentary which looks in detail at Trumbo's career, his years under the blacklist, and the making of Johnny Got His Gun. Also included is a recent interview with actor Timothy Bottoms about his experiences making the film, an audio-only presentation of a 1940 radio adaptation of the novel featuring the voice of James Cagney, an article on the production from American Cinematographer magazine, the original theatrical trailer, and Metallica's "One" video. If this release of Johnny Got His Gun is a few stops less than perfect, it looks very good if not great and makes an elusive title available in North America at last, and the extras offer a fascinating perspective on its history and production.
 
Customer Rating
5 out of 5
5
A classic movie about the horrors of war.
on May 6, 2009
Posted by: Bjj73129
from OKC, OK
This film has been a cult classic for a VERY long time and was nearly impossible to find for over a decade. Although most people haven't ever heard of this film, it still remains as one of the quintesential movies on the subject of the horrors of war.
This film first gained most of its mainstream attention in the early '90s when scenes from it were used in the music video for the Metallica song "one". This is when I first became familiar with this movie. I then proceeded to try to obtain a copy of it, only to find it wasn't carried by any of the major Video stores. This is when the only format was VHS. I finally did find a copy at a family owned rental store and was required to put down a $100 deposit because of the films rare nature. (They required the same deposit for their only copy of Faces of Death!) I'm glad that rare films like this are now being made more accessable to the public.
That being said, being a 2x war veteran myself, this film approaches the topic of war in a very unique way and in doing so, becomes even more relevant today as more and more Americans are coming back from fighting overseas permanently wounded or worse. This film revolves around a young soldier who is wounded by a mortar round(?) that lands in his trench during a battle in WWI. He is severely wounded, losing all 4 limbs as well as his face leaving him with no senses except that of touch. No sight, smell, hearing, or voice. Amazingly he lives and is taken to the Army hospital where he is put in a back room on life support. This is where the movie really explores many different things. Mostly the first movie to touch on euthinasia, but the main concept it explores is the young soldier's attempt to come to terms with his surroundings as he is haunted by flashbacks of his youth and nightmarish dreams of being a freak in a circus. An amazing standout is Jason Robards(sp?) who plays his father in the dream sequences and forces the young soldier to ask himself how is he supposed to differentiate between when he is dreaming and when he is awake.
He does eventually begin to tell the difference and starts counting the days by when the nurses come in to check on him. Eventually he is able to nod his head ever so slightly to tap out a message in morse code. The doctors finally realize that he is trying to communicate and once they do he gives them his one and only message over and over again....
Although slow in parts, which also emphasises his own frustration in trying to communicate but not being heard, this movie is a powerful commentary on the real toll that war, all war, takes on the soldiers who fight it.
What's great about it: The story is very compelling and told from a unique point of view.
What's not so great: Story moves slow at times.
I would recommend this to a friend!
+1point
1of 1voted this as helpful.
 
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