Olongapo Subic Volunteers

Sunday, August 14, 2005

'Great Raid' strikes patriotic note as US fights wars

NEW YORK - "The Great Raid" is an old-style World War Two movie about US Army Rangers rescuing prisoners of war, but its makers caution it should not be seen as "flag-waving" for America's military today.


Pitching a war film at a time when tens of thousands of US soldiers are at war in Iraq and Afghanistan invites comparisons to the patriotic black-and-white war movies of the 1940s that tried to boost morale at home and on the front.

Most of the film is a long build-up to a dramatic assault on a Japanese prison camp in the Philippines by 120 Army Rangers, aided by Filipino resistance fighters.

The slow pace has been criticized by several reviewers.

"When people say this is an old-fashioned movie I see it as a compliment," director John Dahl said in an interview before Friday's release of the film, starring Benjamin Bratt of "Law and Order" fame, as well as Joseph Fiennes and Connie Nielsen.

"When movies are released they have to feed into the zeitgeist of the moment," Dahl said.

He says he first read the script for the film in August 2001, a few weeks before the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks that set America on a course for war in Afghanistan and then Iraq.

"I read it four years ago, it's pretty hard to figure out what's going to be happening in four years," he said, adding that production company Miramax's enthusiasm to make a World War Two film was later fueled by post-September 11 patriotism.

Miramax is a unit of the Walt Disney Co.

Fiennes said that at a time of war, the film paid tribute to the stoicism of the generation that fought World War Two.

"It's not about flag-waving," he said.

VJ Day release

The movie, shot in 2002, is being released just before the 60th anniversary on August 14 of VJ Day, which marked the Allied victory over Japan and the end of the war.

Based on a true story, it ends with documentary footage of the Rangers and the men they saved from Cabanatuan camp.

Bratt plays the charismatic Lt. Colonel Henry Mucci who commits his men to what appears to be a suicide mission, sneaking 30 miles into enemy territory to assault a heavily guarded camp and rescue more than 500 men.

A gaunt Fiennes, best known for "Shakespeare in Love," plays the senior officer among the POWs, who is weakened by malaria and pining for an aid worker played by Nielsen, who has been assisting the Filipino resistance.

Reviews have been mixed: "For all its noble intentions, its striving for authenticity, its unblinking look at the savagery of war, "The Great Raid" is far more dutiful than dramatic," the Wall Street Journal said in a review on Friday.

James Franco, who played alongside Tobey Maguire in "Spider-Man," plays Captain Robert Prince, a studious officer who plans and leads the raid. To prepare for the role, Franco met the elderly veteran Prince, who lives in Seattle.

"What's amazing is that Robert Prince still really believes that this mission was simply part of his duty and he almost shrugs it off," Franco said.

Dahl said Prince was wary about having the story made into a film, fearing he would be built up into a "big action hero."

"Most war movies have one superhero who manages to save the world by the end of the film through all kinds of death-defying stunts," Dahl said, adding that his film was different, with an ensemble cast who work together like a real military unit.

"It's hard for a movie like this to compete with a Hollywood version of a war film...that's all-out action," he said. "This movie has to kind of succeed or fail based on more of the historical value that the film has."

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