Reviewed by: Trail Reeves
CONTRIBUTOR
Moral Rating: | Average |
Moviemaking Quality: |
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Primary Audience: | Teens Adults |
Genre: | Drama |
Length: | 165 min. |
Year of Release: | 1965 |
USA Release: |
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This star studded movie is worth adding to any serious video collection. Stars include John Wayne, Kirk Douglas, Patricia Neal, Henry Fonda, and a host of other faces one will readily recognize.
The movie proceeds from the hours just prior to the attack on Pearl Harbor through the ensuing months. Kirk Douglas turns in a powerful performance as a Navy commander who struggles with the loss of his family and a continuing battle with alcohol. John Wayne is his usual great self as a Navy Captain trying to re-establish a relationship with a son he hasn’t seen in 20 years.
The storyline moves along briskly and the 2½ hours fly by. You will laugh, cry, and cheer as the story unfolds in this human drama.
There is some war related violence, but no gore. There is some alcohol use in a social setting, and John Wayne has a sexual encounter with Patricia Neal, but nothing is shown. (Let’s hear it for leaving things to an audience’s imagination!) Still, I recommend renting or purchasing this video. It is more than just another WW2 hero movie. The cast alone makes this a collector’s dream.
Best of all, it is the way that John Wayne’s character hold’s private information private that I wish our current day media could adopt. John Wayne becomes aware of Kirk Douglas’s rape, and the suicide of his victim. Kirk Douglas knows he is about to be discovered, and so he chooses to fly a suicide mission. After he radioes details of the Japanese strength and position, he is killed. In the radio room, Burgess Meredith suggests to John Wayne that Douglas should get a medal for his sacrifice. All in the room are shocked when Wayne refuses to recommend Douglas for the medal. Says Wayne: “For what ever reason he did it, it wasn’t for the medal.” The virtue here is that Wayne does not yield to the demons of gossip. He allows for people to believe that we can and should live life heroically. This virtue is repeated and supported in other scenes. John Wayne by demonstrates what Thumper teaches the smaller children “If you can’t say some thing nice, don’t say nothin' at all.” This response to gossip is an over looked point, and the world would be a better place if we handled it like John Wayne did. The bottom line is: Review this film yourself before you show it to your children, there are unpleasant surprises, but you may agree with me that it has great value for Christians as well.