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Big Red One, The - The Reconstruction on DVD (1980)

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Average rating: (66%)
1126620101736
3.0
 
Starring: Lee Marvin | Mark Hamill | Robert Carradine
Director: Samuel Fuller
Studio: WARNER HOME VIDEO
Run time: 156 mins
Certificate: 15
User collections: My favourite War Flms | An eclectic list of goodies in alphabetical order
Genres: Action/Adventure | Drama
Languages: English
Released: 02/05/2005

Brief synopsis of Big Red One, The - The Reconstruction

An intimate and powerful film which exposes the human side of war, where the real glory lies in surviving.

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Critics Reviews

Rating of 4 stars out of 5 Radio Times

Samuel Fuller's skills had been blunted by working in American TV in the 1960s, but the director returned to form on the big screen with this war movie, arguably one of his most accomplished features. Fuller had, in fact, regularly tried to make this picture for about 30 years. Drawing on his graphic memories of life as a crime reporter and infantryman in the Second World War, he produces a powerful and, at times, poetic tale of five soldiers who experience the brutal realities of combat. Lee Marvin, a perfect choice as the tight-jawed, bullish, growling sergeant, is reminiscent of Fuller himself.

Rating of 3 
	  stars out of 4 Halliwell's Film Guide

Symbolic action drama, very well made. A restored version, running at 158 minutes, was released in 2004, revealing it to be one of Hollywood's best war movies, concentrating on the isolation of battle and the craziness of combat.

Newsweek

A must see event. Lee Marvin's performance may be his finest.

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Members Reviews

Reviews Voted Most Helpful

Rated - 5 stars"Factual Life based on actual death"

Northernsky Northernsky from Halifax [Highly rated reviewer] , 25/07/2005

This is the restored version of Director Sam Fullers WW2 epic, the original was deemed too violent by the studio (Imagine, a violent war film…..tsskk) and cut to ribbons so it made no narrative sense. Original material has been added by a restoration team and now this is a film with the resolute stamp of empirical authority. Fuller fought in WW2, taking part in the Omaha beach landings and his minds eye view of proceedings lends this film a veracity few can match.

The main characters are all part of the 1st Infantry, the “Big Red One” of the films title, named after their insignia,. Ex Marine Lee Marvin in his last great role plays the gruff Sergeant along with Privates Griff, Zab Vinci and Johnson. Griff is played by Mark Hamill at the peak of his “Star Wars” fame. We follow them from North Africa to Sicily onto Omaha Beach and through Europe until they liberate a Concentration Camp in Czechoslovakia. The film is a series of intense battle sequences, interspersed by periods of quiet reflection, jokey banter and the cold dread of death.

There is grim humour in the script, but also poetry and understated emotion. Modern films about war are now made by people referencing other war movies and while The Big Red One doesn’t have anything as viscerally shocking as the opening sequence of “Saving Private Ryan”, unlike that jingoistic preposterous movie it rings true with an almost documentary realism.

  8 out of 10 people found this review helpful
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Rated - 3 starsGrim but Compelling

Nimrod from London , 03/05/2005

Based on Fuller's own wartime experiences, this tells the picaresque story of a sergeant and four of his men as they travel through the various theatres of WW2. The tone is one of reportage and although sequences are handled with flair, there is deliberately no attempt to make a definitive statement about war.

This appears to be the "reconstructed" version (the studio made Fuller cut entire battles out of the 1980 release).

Although Fuller notably denounced "Full Metal Jacket" as "a recruiting poster", this film is probably nearer in tone to that than to any other war movie. Although it has surreal moments, it never veers off into "Apocalypse Now" territory and in many ways harks back to earlier WW2 films, albeit with far more grit.

It's also a lot more more realistic about what soldiers are like than for example Spielberg.

Bleak and almost nihilistic, this shows war as utter madness which you survive as best you can through luck and cunning. Surely a lesson many of us need to relearn in 2005.

  5 out of 6 people found this review helpful
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Rated - 4 starsThe most poignant war film ever?

A customer from Wales , 01/05/2005

This is one of the most poignant war fils ever made. Indeed it helped inspire the beach battle sequence in Saving Private Ryan. Lee Marvin is perfectly cast as the Sergeant, indeed he was able to draw on his experience as an ex-marine. Ultimatley the film drives home the futility of war.

  4 out of 5 people found this review helpful
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Rated - 4 starsA Good film, but dated

A customer from London , 27/05/2005

For it's time, this was an excellent war film, especially now, with all scenes restored. However, with all of the modern, big budget films and series such as Privae Ryan and Band of Brothers we have grown to expect more: acting, drama, as well as technical effects.

Still, well worth the viewing.

One funny note: not only did Lee Marvin not get any older between WWI and WWII, but after 20+ years in the army, he still is only an E5 Sargent!

  2 out of 2 people found this review helpful
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