Saving Private Ryan

Reviewed by: Boohab

September 1, 1998

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ok so i finally saw saving private ryan. and as usual during 'important' films such as these i couldn't resist the temptation to turn around and smirk at the audience as they were 'experiencing' this 'powerful drama'. but unlike the last great picture show (amistad) i didn't hang around after the film to watch them exit the theatre in a stunned and mumbling state. i just got out quickly to return my pages. but considering the subject, i did put my pager on vibrate. herds can be dangerous when provoked.

spielberg has invented the next version of shaky-cam. it's the full screen vibration, and the deaf-from-the-blast scene. in this, spr is landmark, bravura and all that. his vision of the chaos of battle is profound, uncanny and resolutely realistic. not once, during any of the earth-rending destruction was there the slightest hint of artifice. there will be, after this film, no turning back. no gasoline fireballs, no baking-powder enhanced cannon shots, no public library sound-effects record ricochets, no tracerless bullets, no stuntmen falling forward from heights. all that is cheese and all that is in the past. the war movie is dead, long live the battle movie.

i know what a soldier is, today. and i have a vague idea of what kind of soldier i might be. besides scared to death, i believe i'd be a humorless maniac. so to the extent that a film can inform as well as entertain, i found myself quite upset that spielberg sought to lighten with anything but the most perverse humor. no matter what was said, i could not bring myself to laugh - except once - when the fay soldier, upham i believe, failed to find 'fubar' in his phrasebook. there was no lightening my mood as i imagined myself wrestling with the john miller's dilemmas of leadership, futility and irony. indeed i even considered whether or not today in my own job, i am adequately open to my peers and associates. but these are passing fancies, and i simply thank god that i am not a soldier, today.

spr gives us some insight into the constriction of time to an ever present now. it becomes clear exactly why the soldier's mind must be that of a human weapon - disciplined to the point of instinct. considering that battles and skirmishes may last for hours or days, and death comes in split seconds, the battle realism works against the plot. i am glad that the human drama in this film is reduced to bare bones - that the battle scenes win - for there are few things as disappointing as the recognition in mid-film that 'somebody has to live to tell this tale'. thus the tale is simple and gets adequately lost in the melee. our memory becomes a soldier's memory. we remember the midget who walked on his hands and pissed his initials. and it's ok to accept that one day we care about what somebody's mom thinks, and the next day we don't. thus is private ryan saved - for no good reason at all, just soldier's work.

there is an american flag flying peacefully at the beginning and closing of this film. i've never seen it in quite that way - its very physical being indicating an absence of flying shrapnel, of peace. for that alone, i am grateful - yes grateful. for we are at peace, and i thank god that i am not a soldier, today.

(btw. i give it a 92% - it's spielberg's best movie.)

 

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