The Vietnam War Movie Apocalypse Now Reviewed
Francis Ford Coppola is a director who has dabbled a little in every genre, never really settling down, never developing his own “tropes”, never becoming predictable. Masters like Martin Scorsese certainly deserve their credit, but watching a Scorsese film, you know you’re going to get fast-dolly-in movements, and you’re probably going to get some Rolling Stones soundtrack. There are few similarities between Apocalypse Now, Rumble Fish and The Godfather, so with Coppola, you really never know what to expect.
The film is said to be based on the novel Heart of Darkness, and while there are some parallels, it’s really nothing like a direct adaptation. The film follows Martin Sheen as Captain Benjamin J. Willard, a veteran secret operatives specialist who, after his last tour of duty, has apparently taken to heavy drinking and grown psychotic in the meantime.
He only wants to get back in the field, while he’s still strong, and sane, enough to fight. He’s not patriotic, he simply has nothing else to live for and can’t take another day imprisoned in this room. We start with helicopters flying overhead, and Benjamin Willard going slowly insane.
When Sheen punches the mirror, that wasn’t in the script. In fact, the entire production of the film is a tale of legend, of insanity, of incredible difficult and of more odd and unusual happenings than even occur in the film itself. We could discuss them more in depth, but that would take more time than we have for this review, so we’ll just focus on the film for now.
The movie is simply loaded with unforgettable characters. Without even discussing the main cast, we have Cockroach, a youth from Harlem capable of sleeping through the most intense battle, waking up to launch a perfectly arced grenade at an enemy hiding in the shadows, eliminate him, and go back to sleep. We have Dennis Hopper as a maniacal photo journalist, and Robert Duvall as Lieutenant Colonel Bill Kilgore, a mix of samurai, Patton and surfer dude, sending his men out to hit the waves amidst napalm detonating against the beach.
You could remove any of these characters still tell the story, these are not major characters, but, they provide more color and personality to the film than the entire cast of most films. The real heart of the film is Colonel Kurtz, as played by Marlon Brando. He defines the nihilistic dread that casts itself over the entirety of the movie.
The movie is a success on literally every level. At times it can be quite endearing, when you see the love and camaraderie between the men on Captain Willard’s boat. It’s often funny, and Coppola has even described it as a comedy. It’s exciting, with “Ride of the Valkyries” being amongst the greatest action scenes of all time. But Kurtz’s nihilism is what overwhelms the film in the end.
While Coppola claims Rumble Fish as the personal favorite amongst his body of work, his fans typically consider it to be between Apocalypse Now and The Godfather Part II. It is, at the very least, his most wild, insane and epic film to date.
That was his motivation, while millions asked, “why’ watch full movies Many of these stars don’t own the millions of dollars’ worth of jewelry that they were wearing. The father of the bride punches him out, but Julia is there to come to Robbie’s aid.
No related posts.
Tags: arts, downloads, Entertainment, leisure, Movies, recreation, reviews