Saving Private Ryan
Saving Private Ryan Oh my god! That's really about all I can say about Saving Private Ryan, Steven Spielberg's new World War II epic. I'm afraid I won't be able to do justice to this movie in my review. My senses are still numb from experiencing the film. Not watching, experiencing. Because Spielberg throws you right down there in the middle of all the action, and you have no choice but to experience it. You are there, on Omaha Beach, as you watch thousands of civilians, with homes and families, get mowed down in an instant by the carnage of war. You witness the nausea, the insanity, the total death war brings. It is one of the most powerful antiwar statements ever put on film. After the carnage at Omaha Beach, we find out that one of the men who died on the beach, Daniel Ryan, also had two other brothers, Sean and Matthew, die in the same week. This leaves Private James Ryan (Matt Damon) as Mrs Ryan's only living son. General Marshall (Harve Presnell), who is not down there experiencing the bloodshed, decides that he must do the "proper" thing, and sends a platoon off its course from Normandy, with the sole intent being to bring Private Ryan home alive. The plato
The human scenes are just as engaging. One beautifully directed scene, miles away from all the action, consists of no dialogue, and very little light. Mrs Ryan is in the kitchen doing the dishes, and looks up to see a car. She looks back down again, then realizes it's a military vehicle. She goes to the door to hear the news, perhaps one of her sons was injured. In the same shot in which we see her collapsing to the ground, sobbing, we also see a photo in the bottom-right side of the screen of the four brothers when they were in the same unit. Very subtle, but devastatingly effective. Saving Private Ryan is just as harrowing as Schindler's List, and just as great a film as Spielberg's holocaust epic. Both of them are amazing films, but are too numbingly realistic to be considered enjoyable. It was originally supposed to be rated NC-17 because of all the carnage, but Spielberg used his influence to convince the ratings board otherwise. This is a movie that should be seen by everyone, especially younger men and teenage boys, who oftentimes think they're invisible. This film definitely proves otherwise. Saving Private Ryan is a powerful, disturbing look at war, and is arguably the greatest film of the 1990s. As they make their way through German held territory, they wonder, as do we, whether the lives of an entire platoon of men are worth risking just to save one, for what looks to be a public relations stunt. Thankfully, the film doesn't answer these questions. Saving Private Ryan is a brilliant film, possibly one of the best ever made, certainly the best of the 1990s. It is also
Some common words found in the essay are:
James Cameron, Omaha Beach, Schindler's List, Private Ryan, John Williams', Corporal Upham, War II, Ribisi German, Edward Burns, Janusz Kaminski, private ryan, saving private ryan, saving private, omaha beach, giovanni ribisi, jeremy davies, corporal upham, majority film, edward burns, medic wade, spielberg regular,
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Approximate Pages = 4 (250 words per page double spaced)
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