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100 Greatest War Film -- What is your favorite war movie?
Channel 4 ^ | 2-6-006 | Channel 4

Posted on 02/08/2006 7:32:44 PM PST by Bender2

Channel 4 brings you the results of the 100 Greatest War Films of all time, as voted for you.

1. Saving Private Ryan, 1998 The first 20 minutes of Saving Private Ryan is a visual assault, acclaimed as one of cinema's most accurate realisations of warfare. Capt John Miller (Tom Hanks) is among the US troops storming Omaha Beach on D-Day. Thereafter, you follow this everyman soldier on a humanitarian military mission to rescue the surviving brother of three soldiers killed in the same week. Spielberg crafts a shocking and moving illustration of the Second World War.

2. Apocalypse Now, 1979 Francis Ford Coppola's epic hallucination of the Vietnam War, in which Martin Sheen journeys through Vietnam and Cambodia to terminate a flipped-out renegade US colonel played by Marlon Brando. The shoot was notoriously troubled, but the result is a war movie unlike any other: a spectacular opera, a straightforward plot blown up by rampant imagination, and a deft comment on America's Vietnam folly.

(Excerpt) Read more at channel4.com ...


TOPICS: TV/Movies
KEYWORDS: betweenthestates; civil; film; indian; mini; movie; one; series; terror; tv; war; world
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To: Bender2; tuffydoodle
In no particular order but here are my Top 5:

1. Aliens (Colonial Marines were sent in to wipe them out. This was war, man!)
2. Kelly's Heros
3. The Great Escape
4. Battle of the Bulge
5. Saving Private Ryan
201 posted on 02/09/2006 5:45:26 AM PST by Maximus of Texas (On my signal, unleash hell)
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To: Maximus of Texas

I don't like war movies so I don't have a favorite. The only ones I've seen are Casualties of War, Platoon and Full Metal Jacket. Full Metal Jacket was the lesser of all the evils.


202 posted on 02/09/2006 5:48:12 AM PST by tuffydoodle (Shut up voices, or I'll poke you with a Q-Tip again.)
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To: Clemenza
8. The Alamo (John Wayne Version).

Have you seen the most recent verison? I know it got panned by the critics but I actually thought it was pretty good. Plus, from a historical perspective, it was more accurate that Wayne's verison. I love the way that Thorton portrayed Crockett - put up a front to fit his persona but underneath he would rather run than fight.
203 posted on 02/09/2006 5:50:01 AM PST by Maximus of Texas (On my signal, unleash hell)
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To: tuffydoodle
If you'll notice, three on my list were made during the 60's or 70's, when Hollywood didn't feel it was necessary to show body parts exploding. Plus, there is just something about WWII movies (European campaign, not the Pacific), that just draw me in, regardless of when they were made.
204 posted on 02/09/2006 5:52:54 AM PST by Maximus of Texas (On my signal, unleash hell)
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To: Holicheese
. How about "Breaker Morant".

I didn't know we had so many Breaker Morant fans here. Edward Woodward was flawless.

205 posted on 02/09/2006 6:06:19 AM PST by antiRepublicrat
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To: Bender2
Starship Troopers the novel by Robert A. Heinlein is one of the best military books every written past, present or future!

It's on the reading list at all four military academies, the only sci-fi novel to get that distinction, plus on the Army and Marine Corps reading lists.

206 posted on 02/09/2006 6:08:25 AM PST by antiRepublicrat
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To: Bender2

"I love to watch it with someone really young who look askew when the characters all rise at the dance when they play "God Save the Queen."

My daughter caught that they were in Britain during
WWII. I explained what was happening.

Her question: "Dad, why are they standing? They're playing
'America.' I thought they were English.


207 posted on 02/09/2006 6:18:23 AM PST by righttackle44 (The most dangerous weapon in the world is a Marine with his rifle and the American people behind him)
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To: Bender2

You are sooooo right about that scene. Meow!


208 posted on 02/09/2006 7:12:57 AM PST by Holicheese (Sold my house in MA. Another Yankee moving to NC!)
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To: MikeinIraq
Much better list.

Apocalypse now was not a good "war movie." It was a good piece of liberal propaganda.

...and a deft comment on America's Vietnam folly.

The only folly in Vietnam occurred in the Capital and Whitehouse! The war was won when we walked out in forfeit.

The Thin Red Line was so bad, that many people walked out of it, including us, long before it was over. I've never seen so many people talking during a film in a theater before, and I've never seen anyone walk out of any film in numbers as the film went on.

It was nothing but a liberal war infomercial. How it even made the top-20 is beyond me. The cast was as liberal and the "statements" trying to be made so transparent, with little if any artistic or theme value at all. The "storyline" was essentially non-existant as well.

It shouldn't even qualify for the poll.

209 posted on 02/09/2006 7:19:52 AM PST by Fruitbat
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To: Emmet Fitzhume

Spot on!! Thanks!!!!

The hymn Randall Wallace and Nick Glenny-Smith composed for that movie, "Mansions of the Lord" (lyrics below), should become the Army counterpart to the equally beautiful Navy hymn "Eternal Father."

I cannot hear that music and those words without being moved to tears.

Perhaps because I lost at least one friend -- and will never know how many former students -- in Vietnam.

(http://www.virtualwall.org/ds/ShimpAH01a.htm)

***THE MANSIONS OF THE LORD***
from the movie "We Were Soldiers"

To fallen soldiers let us sing
Where no rockets fly nor bullets wing
Our broken brothers let us bring
To the Mansions of the Lord

No more bleeding, no more fight
No prayers pleading through the night
Just divine embrace, eternal light
In the Mansions of the Lord

Where no mothers cry and no children weep
We will stand and guard though the angels sleep
While through the ages safely keep
The Mansions of the Lord


210 posted on 02/09/2006 7:34:08 AM PST by Dick Bachert
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To: Bender2

I really liked that one too.


211 posted on 02/09/2006 7:38:22 AM PST by Holicheese (Sold my house in MA. Another Yankee moving to NC!)
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To: Supernatural

"Twelve O'Clock High"

An interesting note about this movie. While going through Navy OCS, my class had to sit through this movie for a leadership class.

As you know Gregory Peck is some hard charging O-6? who has to whip a air squadron into shape because the current CO is getting wore out and getting to close to his troops. Peck, as we all know is a good actor, but also a hard chargin' liberal. As expected, Peck also becomes consumed with his pilots well-being and he also has a nervous breakdown. I really didn't get why we had to watch it. We should have watched Patton instead.


212 posted on 02/09/2006 8:50:38 AM PST by Tulsa Ramjet ("If not now, when")
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To: Dick Bachert

Re Mansions of the Lord.............

What a wonderful creation. I cry like a fool every time I hear it.

Any recommendations on what and where a recording can be obtained?


213 posted on 02/09/2006 9:47:12 AM PST by HonestConservative (Bless our Servicemen!)
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To: Tulsa Ramjet
Funny that they didn't show you a Navy movie instead. Lots of good ones out there. I guess they wouldn't be showing the "Caine Mutiny" at leadership class! LOL
214 posted on 02/09/2006 9:55:15 AM PST by Supernatural (All the truth in the world adds up to one big lie! bob dylan)
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To: Maximus of Texas
I really liked the Alamo scenes in "Davy Crockett" as played by Fess Parker. Remember Georgie Russell and "busted luck"?

King of the Wild Frontier!
215 posted on 02/09/2006 10:13:55 AM PST by Supernatural (All the truth in the world adds up to one big lie! bob dylan)
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To: Bender2

WWIII

Red Dawn


216 posted on 02/09/2006 10:30:36 AM PST by hattend
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To: Bender2
"Behind Enemy Lines" was good.

"The Thin Red Line"

"The Great Escape"

217 posted on 02/09/2006 10:48:53 AM PST by MotleyGirl70 ("It's turkey jerky. Want some? Come on take a pull. No? Okay, more for me.")
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To: Holicheese
A Bridge to Far, Bridge on the River Kwai, Midway.

"Bridge on the River Kwai" was on last week. I need to watch it again, I didn't understand it very well.

218 posted on 02/09/2006 10:52:12 AM PST by MotleyGirl70 ("It's turkey jerky. Want some? Come on take a pull. No? Okay, more for me.")
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To: F16Fighter
Patton

I love "Patton". Good call.

219 posted on 02/09/2006 10:53:29 AM PST by MotleyGirl70 ("It's turkey jerky. Want some? Come on take a pull. No? Okay, more for me.")
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To: Bender2

Breaker Morant
Andrzej Wajda's War Trilogy
The Great Escape
Patton
The Longest Day
The Big Red One
Das Boot
Europa, Europa
Stalingrad


220 posted on 02/09/2006 10:54:08 AM PST by dfwgator
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