Stars:
Bruce Willis, Colin Farrell, Terrence Howard |Storyline
Fourth-generation Army Col. William McNamara is imprisoned in a brutal German POW camp. Still, as the senior-ranking American officer, he commands his fellow inmates, keeping a sense of honor alive in a place where honor is easy to destroy, all under the dangerous eye of the Luftwafe vetran Col. Wilhelm Visser. Never giving up the fight to win the war, McNamara is silently planning, waiting for his moment to strike back at the enemy. A murder in the camp gives him the chance to set a risky plan in motion. With a court martial to keep Visser and the Germans distracted, McNamara orchestrates a cunning scheme to escape and destroy a nearby munitions plant, enlisting the unwitting help of young Lt. Tommy Hart. Together with his men, McNamara uses a hero's resolve to carry out his mission, ultimately forced to weigh the value of his life against the good of his country.User Reviews
Not bad This film is absorbing
because you are kept guessing until the very end. Hart, the lead
character, isn't exactly an angel; and the Nazi Kommandant conjures up a
measure of sympathy, with other motives of characters such as Col.
MacNamara (Willis) truly unclear until the end.
Thus, it's
enough to keep you watching, although I wish I'd read the book first.
Also, it's not an "action" film in the Schwarzenegger sense, but it is
fast-paced and holds your attention, as the plot keeps twisting and
turning.
Contrary to what others thought, I found HART'S WAR to
be reasonably historically accurate. It's frequently pointed out that
by late 1944 / early 1945, the Germans were reeling, desperate and
disorganized, while HART'S WAR portrays them firmly in control. This is
a fair criticism, but I would respond as follows:
1. HART'S WAR
coincides with the Ardennes offensive (Battle of the Bulge), which was
the last major German offensive of the war and which came perilously
close to succeeding. Puffed up from that near-victory, not knowing (as
we know today) that this was the last gasp of a dying reich and not a
turning point towards victory, and now holding hundreds if not thousands
of Allied POW's to boot, it's no surprise that the Germans are still
confident of victory.
2. Also, HART'S WAR takes place in a short
period of time (I would guess 2-3 weeks between Hart's capture and the
end of the trial, which itself is only a week). The story does not drag
into the spring of '45, at which point the Germans knew they were
losing.
3. The Nazi Kommandant epitomizes this German
confidence, yet because he was educated in the US, he has at least a
measure of sympathy for his American prisoners and treats them with an
equal measure of military courtesy, with a few exceptions. Other
Kommandants during this time may not have been as "humane," but, because
of his background, Visser's lack of brutality (again, with exceptions)
is understandable.
Bruce Willis is clearly a supporting actor in
this film, but I felt he had a strong and important role and was,
arguably, the CENTRAL character while Colin Farrell is the LEADING
character. However, Willis gets top billing for one simple reason -- TO
SELL TICKETS. It worked for me, at least.
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