The title character leads viewers through an accidental travelogue of American social history from the early 1960s through the present in this revisionist fable. Vietnam, desegregation, Watergate and more are presented from the perspective of Hanks' lovably slow-witted character as he finds himself embroiled in situations he .. Read more
| Starring | Tom Hanks, Sam Anderson, Sally Field, Gary Sinise |
|---|---|
| Director | Robert Zemeckis |
| Genres | Drama |
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The title character leads viewers through an accidental travelogue of American social history from the early 1960s through the present in this revisionist fable. Vietnam, desegregation, Watergate and more are presented from the perspective of Hanks' lovably slow-witted character as he finds himself embroiled in situations he can't quite comprehend. Academy Award Nominations: 13, including Best Picture, Best Actor--Tom Hanks, and Best Director. Academy Awards: 6, including Best Picture, Director, Actor and Adapted Screenplay.
| Starring | Tom Hanks, Sam Anderson, Sally Field, Gary Sinise, Robin Wright, Mykelti Williamson, Hanna R. Hall, Rebecca Williams, Bob Penny, John Randell, Robin Wright Penn, Michael Conner Humphreys, Peter Bannon |
|---|---|
| Director | Robert Zemeckis |
| Studio | PARAMOUNT HOME ENTERTAINMENT |
| Run time | DVD: 2 hrs 16 mins Blu-ray: 2 hrs 16 mins |
| Certificate | |
| Collections | Best Picture Oscar Winners, Oscar Winners |
| Genres | Drama |
| Language | DVD: English Blu-ray: English |
| Dubbed | Czech, German |
| Hearing-impaired | English |
| Subtitles | DVD: Czech, English, German, Hungarian, Polish, Turkish Blu-ray: Spanish, Dutch, Norwegian, Finnish, Italian, French, German, Danish, English, Swedish |
| Released | DVD: 05 Nov 2001 Blu-ray: 09 Nov 2009 Production year: 1994 |
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Winner of six Oscars, including best picture, actor and director, this comedy drama was a box-office blockbuster in America, though its simple-minded patriotism was greeted with a certain cynicism in Europe. Gump, played by Tom Hanks, is a chump: a semi-literate everyman who drifts through recent American history (Vietnam, the civil rights movement, assassinations, Watergate) and emerges triumphant. He's an athlete, war hero and hokey southern savant, a one-man palliative for a nation's political and moral bankruptcy. His personal credo is Life is like a box of chocolates. You never know what you're going to get, and that's as profound as the movie gets. But Hanks's performance is truly remarkable and, this being a Robert Zemeckis film, the effects are stunning: Gump meeting people such as JFK and Nixon is amazingly believable, and Gary Sinise as an amputee combines brilliant acting with state-of-the-art technology. One can sneer at it, but one can't ignore it.
A slick comedy as simple-minded as its hero, worth watching for the clever manner in which it slots Gump into the same historical frame as Kennedy, Johnson and Nixon. He remains a blank on which an audience can project any feelings it chooses, while the f
Forrest is a purely innocent, well-meaning individual, and there can be no fault found in him. It's the rest of the world that is realistic, impure, and ... more
i've seen many awesome david jason moments in my life, i'm sure we all have, but i feel that his portrail of forest gump, the 1920's botanist, was ... more
Actor Jerry O'Connell became an object of fun for a group of drunk baseball fans after he asked them to stop ruining his pal Gary Sinise's day at the ballpark. The two stars were watching a game at the Dodgers stadium in Los Angeles when the fans recognised Sinise from Forrest Gump and started referring to him by his amputee character, Lieutenant Dan. At first it was fun, but when the fans didn't stop, O'Connell decided to do something about their behaviour - only to receive a backlash about... Read more