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Home of the Brave (2006)
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Reviews Counted:53
Fresh:12
Rotten:41
Average Rating:4.2/10
Consensus: The ensemble cast works hard, but hammy direction and a script lacking in nuance ruins this movie’s noble intentions.
Runtime: 1 hr 45 mins
Genre: Action/Adventure
Synopsis: The Vietnam War provided plenty of cinematic ruminations on the futility of battle and the struggle of returning soldiers to adjust to normal life. With HOME OF THE BRAVE director Irwin Winkler... The Vietnam War provided plenty of cinematic ruminations on the futility of battle and the struggle of returning soldiers to adjust to normal life. With HOME OF THE BRAVE director Irwin Winkler (THE NET) applies similar concepts to the Iraq War of the early 21st century, positing actors Samuel L. Jackson, Jessica Biel, Brian Presley, and 50 Cent (credited here under his real name, Curtis Jackson) in the roles of army recruits who tussle with the mundanity of life after war. The action begins during the heat of battle, with an ambush that leaves many of its victims either dead or wounded. Winkler subsequently transports the action to the struggles his characters endure once safely back home, with alcoholism, prosthetic limbs, parental abuse, and a hostage crisis all causing innumerable problems, none of which are helped by a military that remains uninterested in their frantic pleas for help and guidance. Winkler infuses his film with an equal mixture of anger and grief, and while he may not reach the heights of Oliver Stone's BORN ON THE FOURTH OF JULY or Michael Cimino's THE DEER HUNTER, he draws on similar frustrations felt by the characters in those movies. HOME OF THE BRAVE was shot while the violence still raged in Iraq, which will doubtless make it a fascinating curio in years to come, especially as this denied Winkler a distance from his subject that many of the filmmakers who masterfully dissected the Vietnam War undoubtedly benefited from. [More]
Starring: Samuel L. Jackson, Curtis Jackson, Jessica Biel, Christina Ricci
Starring: Samuel L. Jackson, Curtis Jackson, Jessica Biel, Christina Ricci, Chad Michael Murray
Director: Irwin Winkler
Director: Irwin Winkler
Producer: Rob Cowan, Randall Emmett, George Furla
Composer: Stephen Endelman
Studio: MGM
Reviews for Home of the Brave
Brave reduces everything to riotously loathsome television movie standards, bleeding the potency of what should be a very significant and disturbing story dry.
Shows some significant strengths but ultimately misses the mark due to incompletely developed characters and hesitation to hit home as hard as the subject matter justifies.
There is less truth in this entire work than in a few minutes of such recent documentaries as The War Tapes or The Ground Truth.
The war in Iraq gets a lathery soft soap treatment in producer-cum-director Irwin Winkler's distortion of emotions and realities associated with a group of returning soldiers.
Jamal is a peculiar figure, part fantastic and part fearsome, a gangster trained and used up by the military, then left without any recourse.
This is Hollywood's first big-screen attempt at portraying the plight of the tens of thousands of Americans returning from Iraq. They deserve a deeper, more substantive portrait of their transition back to the homefront, and some day, they'll get it.
...there's certainly no denying the effectiveness of one unintentionally hilarious moment in which Biel's spurned boyfriend exclaims, "I guess it only takes one hand to push people away!"
A motion picture that isn't just bad, it's abysmal. One of the worst films of the year, and nothing but a disservice to everyone fighting in Iraq (and to everyone sitting through the movie).
Another ill-conceived war drama that doesn't do justice to the men and women serving in Iraq.
There was more reality, dramatic conflict, emotional texture, and even humor in The Best Years of Our Lives and The Men (Brando's debut), which were made half a century ago, than in this well intentioned but formulaic drama about vets of the Iraq War.
Dr, Will Marsh (Samuel L. Jackson) has to reintegrate with a family that no longer really understands him. The problem with the film is, while Winkler and writer Mark Friedman try, we can't really understand either.
A vote against its heavy-handedness does not make you or I a troop hater. In fact, I believe they deserve a narrative free of after-school special dramatics.
In an attempt to honor the veterans of our Middle East misadventure, Winkler and screenwriter Mark Friedman wind up reducing their experiences to the stuff of bad TV movies.
Important subject, good intentions, bad movie...its sheer ineptitude trumps its noble aspirations.
A predictable and not-bold-enough account of the struggles of a band of National Guard soldiers after returning home from the war in Iraq.
After the action shifts from the deserts of the Middle East to the relative calm of the home front (specifically, Spokane, Washington), it devolves into a morass of melodramatic clichés.
A noble effort that nonetheless results in the kind of movie words like 'wallow' were made for; sitting through it is a drag.
If there's a way to do justice to the story of American troops coming home from Iraq, Home of the Brave hasn't found it.
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