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-   -   Saving Private Ryan - Thin Red Line (https://forum.dvdtalk.com/dvd-reviews-recommendations/69848-saving-private-ryan-thin-red-line.html)

hung lo 11-09-99 01:08 AM

I'm still watching SPR as I type this but I'm curious as to how TRL compares to it

Gallant Pig 11-09-99 01:35 AM

Personally I prefer TTRL to SPR. It's a matter of taste, they are both stunning movies about WWII on two different fronts. TTRL is less graphic, but for me, more powerful. It doesn't show the enemy as being the enemy, most the time you can't see the enemy and when you do, it's when they are being captured it's in a sad light.

The story in SPR is a lot more contrived than the story in TTRL.
*****SPOILER*****
I didn't like it that the german they set free in SPR was the one that came back to kill them... To me, that was the worst part of the movie.

[This message has been edited by Gallant Pig (edited 11-09-1999).]

Scott McCool 11-09-99 10:25 AM

I agree with Gallant Pig both on both posts (: I liked both movies, but found TTRL to be a better war movie and SPR to be a better hollywood story thats a lot like a war movie.

I'm not ripping on SPR, I really liked the movie and was totally blown away by the DTS version, which is easily the best sounding disc in my collection and a great movie anyways.

I just found I got more involved in TTRL, it evoked more emotions and showed much more how the war really affected people. My brother this History major much prefers SPR, but points out that the reason for such a stark contrast between the two movies is because they were showing very different fronts of the war, and fighting in Europe was not at all like fighting in Asia...

In the end I just thought SPR was a little too much Hollywood.


El Pollo 11-09-99 10:58 AM

I'm sure other people have mentioned this, but the whole German guy getting set free thing is more to prove a point than to actually be believable. Something to the effect of "sometimes you have to do what you have to do in the face of war". Or whatever Hollywood-like. Still, I don't have any problems with that part once I figured out that line of rationalization http://forum.dvdtalk.com/ubb/smile.gif

Gallant Pig 11-09-99 12:05 PM

*SPOILER*
The reason I didn't like the German let go being the same German that comes back is that he is no longer an innocent young kid fighting for his life like the American soldiers are, he becomes another evil enemy with a german accent in an american movie. One feels truly bad for this young man facing his death, fighting a war he had no choice to fight in, just like the Americans. One could sympathize and identify with him, thus showing that war truly sucks, that war is about killing people like you or I and not some cruel, evil enemy. But Spielberg doesn't let us feel sorry for any German in the end, in the end this man is the most evil figure in the movie. Perhaps one could say he is a metaphor for Germany itself. After being captured in the first world war, Germany is helpless like this man, whom we feel bad for and let go free, then they come back to seriously injure us last on, just like this man.... Kinda Ironic, kinda metaphoric, but I prefer the first message more, it's truly a more anti-war message.

I think it's easy to see that Spielberg hates those the Americans are fighting against much more than Malik does (his portrait of the enemy is without hatred and more filled with pity).

soundwave106 11-09-99 12:32 PM

Yeah, the anti-German portrait was a little bit Hollywood cliche, a shame after Schindler's List. I don't buy the analogy: history shows that Hitler's rise to power largely came about because of the hyperinflation the victors of WWI forced on Germany. Ultra-nationalism begins to look good when it takes buckets of currency to buy a loaf of bread.

DodgingCars 11-09-99 12:49 PM

yeah, but the Germans weren't stupid either. I believe most of them knew that Jews were being led off to death camps or at least had the idea that it was happening...


I'm not saying that all the Germans who supported the war were evil, but it does make you feel a little less pity for any of the german soldiers. I just don't buy the whole -- German were in a bad time and Hitler gave them a promise of a better life -- excuse. cause thats what it is... an excuse.

Just like people rationalizing the encampment of the Japanese during WWII.

I dunno. My opinion. I loved SPR -- and haven't seen TTRL.


Gallant Pig 11-09-99 02:10 PM

It might not be a perfect analogy, but Germany certainly wasn't crippled after WWI like they were after WWII, thus leaving them the ability to fight one of the fiercest wars ever a couple decades later.

As for having no pity for Germans, certainly the nazis committed many terrible atrocities, but not every 18 year old German was responsible for the holocaust and an evil bastard. I mean sure in the higher ranks there were some terrible people, but grunts are grunts on any side.

[This message has been edited by Gallant Pig (edited 11-09-1999).]

Blade 11-09-99 04:15 PM

I've only seen Saving Private Ryan once, but I didn't think that the purpose of letting the German go and having him come back as part of the forces that kill Capt. Miller was to show that the Nazi's were evil bastards.

I felt that Speilberg was trying to show that this is war and not the place for giving someone the benefit of the doubt. That doing things like that can get you killed.

I also felt that it was a statement on all the negative press heaped on American soldiers (in other wars) for "atrocities". Of course it's wrong for them to do these things, but this is war, not a debating society. If you make mistakes out there you get people killed.

I initially didn't see this film in the theaters because I thought it was going to be a special effects laden anti war message. I'm kind of sorry now that I didn't see it in the theater, because you just can't beat the big screen. But I definitely don't think that this film was pro or anti war. I don't think that Spielberg has any question in his mind as to whether WWII was a good war or not. I think he was more trying to convey two things: the soldier's experience of being in the middle of the fighting and the debt that we owe to these men for the sacrifices they made to us (this last was, in my opinion, the true purpose of the bookends).

Perhaps these messages were put out a in a heavy handed manner, but that didn't make them any less effective for me.

I haven't seen The Thin Red Line yet, but I'm looking forward to seeing this too. Should be a very interesting experience as the war in Asia was indeed very different from the war in Europe.

------------------
-David

Blip 11-09-99 05:00 PM

hung lo:

I liked both films, though I do prefer The Thin Red Line. As other people have said, the two films are nothing alike. Saving Private Ryan is like a Tolstoy short story, while TTRL is like a Pynchon novel. (In fact, I think it is pretty obvious that in terms of character and plotting Malick was very influence by Pynchon's Gravity's Rainbow .)

I also think you should know that, for all practical purposes, TTRL isn't a war film. It is more concerned with the mind-body problem than with combat or historical accuracy.

Gallant Pig:

I agree with you. It seems Spielberg wanted to have the perspective of an anti-war person coming to terms with the sometimes necessity of war, but he pretty much overshot there and it came out being way too contrived.



------------------
"If it were all in the script, why make the film?"--Nicholas Ray



The Zizz 11-09-99 06:39 PM

I must also agree that while I liked the two films, TTRL was the better of the two. SPR would've been great if it weren't for the silly ending and beginning.

Gallant Pig 11-09-99 08:18 PM

Zizz, how interesting.. I thought that was the movie's strongest parts, showing the harsh ugly reality of war, the rest of the movie was filler.


Mr. Cinema 11-09-99 09:44 PM

Saving Private Ryan is by far better than The Thin Red Line. I did like TRL, but Malick's poetic look at war just didn't connect. War is not supposed to be poetic or full of art. War is death, fear, courage, etc. Saving Private Ryan gives you the plain truth about war and forces you to watch it. The Thin Red Line is too busy reciting poetry. The Oscar voters felt SPR was better, since it won 5 Oscars and was nominated for 11. The Thin Red Line got 7 nominations and won zero. It was the "only" Best Picture nominee to not record a win. Poor Malicky. http://forum.dvdtalk.com/ubb/smile.gif

Apparition 11-09-99 09:44 PM

I definitely preferred SPR over TTRL. SPR was a lot more powerful emotionally and really showed the chaos and horror of war. TTRL tried to sound deep with its quaint little observations and (oftentimes senseless) philosophizing, but, having nothing really to say, ended up sounding more like a Calvin Klein commercial. However, TTRL did have some gorgeous cinematography. I'm just sorry they wasted it with a meandering storyline bogged down with pseudo-philosophical blathering.

But that's just my opinion. http://forum.dvdtalk.com/ubb/smile.gif Just be warned, TTRL appears to a much smaller category of people than does SPR.

--Apparition

Blip 11-09-99 10:21 PM

Gallant Pig:

I think The Zizz was referring to SPR's bookends set in the present day, not the battle scenes.

Mr. Cinema:

Are you actually suggesting that the Academy voters are able to discern good films from bad?

------------------
"If it were all in the script, why make the film?"--Nicholas Ray



Gallant Pig 11-09-99 10:31 PM

Blip - OK makes sense now.

Apparition - are you saying that probably the most graphic violence to ever be shown in a movie appeals to more people or maybe it's just Tom Hanks?

Run Forest!!


hung lo 11-10-99 01:50 AM

just finished SPR today and...it's an amazing cinematic http://forum.dvdtalk.com/ubb/biggrin.gif take on D-day, a bit too much hollywood here and there.

in anycase, I appreciate all the candor and I'll probably get TRL anyways to make the comparision myself, just wanted the take from you guys http://forum.dvdtalk.com/ubb/smile.gif

Apparition 11-10-99 03:36 PM

Gallant Pig--I think it's the combination of the great acting (not only by Hanks but also by several members of the supporting cast), the compelling storyline, the excellent pacing, and the superb direction (including its epic scope) that led most people to prefer SPR over TTRL. I'm not sure the graphic violence had a whole lot to do with it. For example, once SPR is edited for TV, I'm sure it will still pull in great ratings.

--Apparition

dfjkl 11-11-99 02:12 AM

<BLOCKQUOTE><font size="1" face="Verdana, Arial">quote:</font><HR>I'm not saying that all the Germans who supported the war were evil, but it does make you feel a little less pity for any of the german soldiers. I just don't buy the whole -- German were in a bad time and Hitler gave them a promise of a better life -- excuse. cause thats what it is... an excuse.<HR></BLOCKQUOTE>

Spoken like a person who doesn't understand much of what happened in that time in history. What you had at that time was a Germany that was being heavily punished, and somewhat unfairly I might add, there was not only quite a bit of resentment on their part, but the punishing sanctions placed on them, esp. by the French, sealed it. That, added to their depressionary times bred chaos. You thought the Great Depression was bad? They had it quite a bit worse at that time in Germany. Desperation breeds many things. I do believe that the Nazi atrocities were pretty well hidden, and even for what was not...do you think the general populace was really in a position to care? Realistically?

Aslan 11-11-99 02:32 AM

Here's my two cents - The Thin Red Line, though beautiful, was perhaps one of the more boring movies I've seen. Not once did I buy that these soldiers were thinking those thoughts. It was like listening to a college freshman philosophy report. I kept expecting the movie to end, but it was relentless.

I must admit, the scene where they charge the hill was incredible.

cowboy 11-11-99 03:24 AM

did anyone feel real thirsty during the flick? I saw it in the theaters and drank a lot of water after seeing this.

oh yeah...the movie was very long and drawn out. But after the viewing, it made me think about how war changes people. It made me realize what oppum was going through 4 months earlier in private ryan

nightliner 11-11-99 03:27 AM

I have now seen both films I bought SPR, rented TTRL. I am happy with my choices. I enjoyed both, but I see myself wanting to watch SPR more often than TTRL. TTRL is a bit to artsy and introspective. When I want a war movie, I want a war movie. If I ever do buy it it will be because of the disc. In one word, it is stunning.
Was that Nick Nolte doing is impression of George C. Scott doing Patton? I guess that is the next three hour war flick to watch.

DodgingCars 11-11-99 12:42 PM

dfjkl,

Actually, I've been to Dachau, and it was right in the middle of a town. I find it hard to believe that the residents didn't have any idea what was going on. I'm sure the smell of burning human flesh should have made them wonder. Do I think they should care? Absolutely. I think this is why many German residents were forced to dig graves after the Allies took Germany.

I understand that Hitler gave the people a scapegoat... I just don't agree that they should have so openly accepted it.

But you are right though, I don't know much about their economic hardships and I might have thought differently if I was among them.



[This message has been edited by DodgingCars (edited 11-11-1999).]

Trout 11-13-99 12:27 PM

If you want a german anti-war film, try Stalingrad (1994). Not all Germans in the army were pro-hitler and probably a lot of them had no idea of the Holocaust.

As for which film is better, I think it is a matter of taste. TRL is more about the soldiers and their relationship with each other, while SPR is more about "realism" (although the ending seemed a little over the top).

sfsdfd 11-13-99 01:32 PM

Everyone:

I completely disagree with your assessment of the returning Nazi soldier as a Hollywood stereotypically evil Nazi grunt. Rather, this serves as an example of the irony of war.

None of the soldiers in the movie were good or evil - they're all just men doing a job. If they'd shown this guy raping and killing women and children or working in a concentration camp after he'd been released, that'd be one thing. But he just became a soldier again. One of the American soldiers argued that this would happen when they released him.

Would it have helped if they'd show a 30-second clip of the released Nazi wandering back into town and getting forcibly reinstated?

I don't see the Nazi soldier as evil in any way. Okay, so he killed Tom Hanks. He was a soldier, fighting just like every other Nazi and American in the field. It's irony, folks... I-R-O-N-Y.

- David Stein


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