I reviewed over 80 movies in 2017 and naturally at
this stage most of them were not good.
Basically, I have seen a vast majority of the good war movies, which
leaves a lot of the bottom dwellers to be endured. It’s amazing that after seven years, there
are still so many war movies I want to see.
Fortunately, some on my “to be watched” are supposed to be good. Here are the worst war movies I reviewed this
past year:
5. Ironclad:
Battle for the Blood (2014) - This
is the sequel to the guilty pleasure “Ironclad” which had James Purlfoy. This movie does not. Is that a clue as to whether it would be
worse than the original? If you like
frenetic blood splattering, you might enjoy it. In one of the fights, a guy
kills another with a severed arm! For the rest of us non-psychopaths, it is
terrible and headache-inducing.
4. Beyond Valkyrie - You
know what they say about sequels. It’s
especially true when the sequel has one percent of the budget of the
original. Needless to say the plot is
ridiculous and the acting is atrocious.
It’s a Tom Sizemore movie, ‘nuff said.
There is a copious expenditure of ammo if you like that sort of
thing. Not enough to drown out the
dialogue, however.
3. Dad’s Army
(2016) - I am not British, so I am not required to
love “Dad’s Army”. The movie was based
on the much beloved series. I think even
fans of the series had to admit the movie was a bomb. The acting is terrible and the production is
shoddy. The movie plot is silly, but not
silly funny like you would expect from the British. I am a big fan of British comedy, but this
movie did not make me laugh even once.
But then again, I watched the supposed best episode of the series and
did not find it special. I’ll stick with
“Allo! Allo!”
2. USS Indianapolis: Men of Courage -
Another Sizemore movie. And it
stars Nick Cage. If that is not enough
to a bad vibe, then enjoy this movie.
Even the sharks are bad actors.
Robert Shaw’s character in “Jaws” would have been more traumatized by
being in this movie than actually being on the Indianapolis. Prepare to laugh
guiltily.
1. “The Red and
the White” is a joint Russian-Hungarian project to commemorate the Russian
Revolution. Director Miklos Jansco
decided to jump two years to the Russian Civil War and not make a celebratory
film. The fact that he survived that decision tells you that the Soviet
government was not as evil as thought. The resulting film met critical acclaim in the
West, but its negative portrayal of its topic did not sit well in the Soviet
Union. It was reedited to make it more
heroic for Soviet audiences. I must have
seen the original version.
The
movie is set in 1919 on one of the twenty-one fronts of the Russian Civil
War. A unit of Hungarian volunteers are
fighting on the side of the Bolsheviks (the Reds) versus the anti-communist
Whites. It opens with a slo-mo cavalry
charge at the camera. The cavalry are
chasing two foot soldiers and catch and kill one. In an ominous development from the
perspective of this viewer, they don’t bother to get the other guy even though
they can clearly see him. This will not
be the last head-scratching moment. Here
are some others. The cavalry strip some
prisoners and tell them to run home. The
White leader chooses three and shoots them in the back. Then the remainder are chased and lined up
and shot. Next, some nurses are taken into the woods and
suddenly they have dress gowns on and there is a military band. They are forced to dance with each other and…
then they are told to go. I assume there
is some symbolism here. A prisoner is
forced to sing and then told to jump in a river and is speared. Lots of aimless walking. Some stuff happens at a hospital. Finally, the big battle scene. The Hungarians charges a larger unit, then
runs back, then makes a suicide attack.
Well, it was either them or me because at this point if the movie had
not ended I might have slashed my wrists.
“The
Red and the White” is an “emperor’s new clothes” movie. In other words, it’s a movie that critics
insist is a masterpiece and if you don’t get that than you are a moron. Well, I may be a moron, but I have seen
enough good war movies to know a piece of shit when I see one. It is not a single piece, but a steaming
pile. And I don’t say this because I was
hoping for a heroic take on the Bolsheviks.
I think Jansco was trying to depict the insanity of war. Or rather, that must have been his excuse
when he faced all the WTF looks from the opening night audience. Why did I shoot some of the deaths of main
characters from a far distance? Because
war is confusing! Why did the nurses
dance in the woods? If you have to ask,
you don’t deserve to know! Was the movie
meant to be a comedy? I don’t know, what
do you think? Seriously, do you have any
idea what I was trying to do? Help me understand
my own movie, please.
The
movie does have some strengths. The
cinematography is showy, really artsy-fartsy.
Jansco loves long shots. And he
films from an airplane! Awards
please. Another strength is it is one of
the funniest war films I have seen. I
actually laughed out loud at some parts.
Sorry, highbrows. I couldn’t help myself. But most importantly, it lasts only 90 minutes. Trust me, it seems like many more.
If
you want to learn more about the Russian Civil War, read a book. Don’t watch this movie. There are some good movies that can inform you
that war is fucked up. Try “The Burmese
Harp”, which came out the same year.
Hell, if you want to watch a entertainingly confusing war film from that
year, try “Beach Red”. At least you can
decipher what Cornel Wilde was trying to do.
GRADE
= F-
Sounds like some real dogs!
ReplyDeleteMutts.
DeleteI'm glad you took the "bullet" for us and watched them so we don't have too! :-)
ReplyDeleteSadly, I was not purposely trying to watch bad movies.
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