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The Deer Hunter (1978) (AFI: 82)
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Rated: |
R |
Starring: |
John Cazale, Robert DeNiro, John Savage, Meryl Streep, Christopher Walken. |
Director: |
Michael Cimino |
Genre: |
Drama | War |
DVD Release Date: 03/31/1998 |
This powerful motion picture tracks a group of steelworker pals from a Pennsylvania blast furnace to the cool hunting grounds of the Alleghenies to the lethal cauldron of Vietnam. Robert DeNiro gives an outstanding performance as Michael, the natural
leader of the group. THE DEER HUNTER is a searing drama of friendship and courage, and what happens to these qualities under hardship; it is a shattering emotional experience you will never forget.
Storyline: Michael, Steven and Nick are young factory workers from Pennsylvania who enlist into the Army to fight in Vietnam. Before they go, Steven marries the pregnant Angela and their wedding-party is also the men's farewell party. After some
time and many horrors the three friends fall in the hands of the Vietcong and are brought to a prison camp in which they are forced to play Russian roulette against each other. Michael makes it possible for them to escape, but they soon get separated
again. Written by Leon Wolters
Cast Notes: Robert De Niro (Michael Vronsky), John Cazale (Stan), John Savage (Steven), Christopher Walken (Nick), Meryl Streep (Linda), George Dzundza (John), Chuck Aspegren (Axel), Shirley Stoler (Steven's Mother), Rutanya Alda (Angela), Pierre
Segui (Julien), Mady Kaplan (Axel's Girl), Amy Wright (Bridesmaid), Mary Ann Haenel (Stan's Girl), Richard Kuss (Linda's Father), Joe Grifasi (Bandleader).
User Comment: RICHARD CALLAGHAN (rcalla6725@aol.com) Coventry, England • I've found myself watching a lot of Vietnam films recently, many by some of the greatest directors of all time. And Oliver Stone. Yet despite it all, I still don't
think I've found one that's perfect. When Marlon Brando gasped "the horror, the horror" at the end of Apocalypse Now he could easily have been talking about tedious, navel-gazing Vietnam movies.
Maybe it's the subject matter that's so difficult to successfully realise. After all, the conflict is still just two generations away, a painful memory for many, making it a morally dubious venture to serve it up as entertainment. Perhaps as a result,
many have tried to disguise the subject, to dress it up with a veneer of pretension. The films are often overlong and worthy, too, with the four I've seen (Born on the Fourth of July, Full Metal Jacket, Apocalypse Now and The Deer Hunter) lasting over
nine and a half-hours between them. It sounds ridiculous, but maybe a better way is to present the conflict not as a film, but as a movie. A 90-minute popcorn romp that finishes before it disappears up itself, yet still gets the message across. Decent
Vietnam films have been made of action movies (First Blood) and sci-fi/horror (Jacob's Ladder) without the need for any great artistic merit.
Probably the most disappointing of all four is Stanley Kubrick's resoundingly average Full Metal Jacket (6), which is technically commendable but never as meaningful as it would like to think it is. Apocalypse Now (7) is a better bet, which contains more
of the conflict than any of the other movies, a huge celluloid landscape of explosions and death. It lacks a certain something, though, possibly a little depth, that leaves it only on the edge of greatness. Born of the Fourth of July (6), crammed in
between Cocktail and Days of Thunder marks one of Cruise's earliest attempts to break free of the bland macho roles he'd previously attempted. Cruise is fine, though the film's lack of subtlety soon becomes tiresome. The incidental theme by John Williams
sounds strikingly like his sentimental swoops for Jurassic Park, but then again he'd got away with Superman/Star Wars for years and no-one had mentioned it. Williams, surprisingly, had a (guitar) hand in the gentle and quite moving theme to The Deer
Hunter.
The Deer Hunter, then, is the best of the bunch, the best Vietnam movie ever made... at least up until now. Certainly not a film you would watch for pleasure, it contains the most depth, the most psychologically reaching aspects. It's still not as
emotionally reaching as I would like it to be, the film perhaps containing a clinical distance between the viewer and it's content. Okay, I realise that alienation and the sense of inner isolation is what the film's about, but even before the characters
go to war DeNiro's Mickey isn't quite all there. Some of the characters, such as Chuck Aspegren's loutish Axel with his obnoxious catchphrase "f***in' A!" offer little empathy for the audience. Yet it's really only Walken, DeNiro and Streep who get
genuine characters anyway, the rest are just support.
I remember being unimpressed with the film the first time round, and I admit that, in the main, I was wrong. Direction is almost flawless by Cimino, though oddly he's never had great success since, his post-Deer CV including the flop Heaven's Gate.
Acting, too, is top-rate, and the realisation of Pennsylvanian village life, juxtaposed with life in the Saigon village, is exceptional. The picture scores because the nature of war as evidenced by most directors (loads of helicopters, macho bluster,
explosions, and graphic deaths) are largely absent, the film being an intense, character-based piece. The famous highlighted section of the war is Walken, DeNiro and John Savage as POWs, forced to undertake harrowing turns in a game of Russian Roulette.
8/10.
Summary: "I feel a lot of distance... I feel far away."
IMDb Rating (07/24/14): 8.2/10 from 181,947 users Top 250: #147
IMDb Rating (10/15/07): 8.1/10 from 51,952 users Top 250: #133
IMDb Rating (08/19/01): 8.1/10 from 10,433 users Top 250: #96
Additional information |
Copyright: |
1978, Universal Studios |
Features: |
• Production Notes
• Talent Bios
• Film Highlights
• Theatrical Trailer |
Subtitles: |
English, Spanish, French |
Video: |
Widescreen 2.35:1 Color |
Audio: |
ENGLISH: Dolby Digital Surround [CC]
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Time: |
3:03 |
DVD: |
# Discs: 1 -- # Shows: 1 |
UPC: |
025192017728 |
D-Box: |
No |
Other: |
Producers: Michael Cimino, Michael Deeley, John Peverall, Barry Spikings; Writers: Deric Washburn; running time of 183 minutes; Packaging: Keep Case; Chapters: 16; [CC]. One of the American Film Institute's Top 100 American
Films (AFI: 79-53). {[V4.0-A4.5] MPEG-4 AVC - } |
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