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Three Kings (1999)
Archie Gates is a career soldier, a Green Beret who’s proven his bravery and intelligence in conflicts around the globe, but his experiences have left him cynical, detached and unwilling to take orders from those less seasoned than he is. He’s ready to leave the Army behind, but the undefined civilian existence ahead of him holds only marginally more appeal.
Troy Barlow is young, capable, sincere, and homesick for his wife and baby daughter back in Detroit. An Army Reserve soldier, he believes in the job he was sent to do and he’s proud to be doing it for America.
Chief Elgin is a baggage handler at Detroit Airport when he’s not on active duty. His civilian life offers him little, as does his military life, but his firm Christian beliefs and his stoic commitment to his responsibilities earn him respect.
Conrad Vig is a redneck who never finished high school. For him, the Army offers a chance to live out adventures he’ll embellish back home; he has little understanding of the political implications of the conflict in Iraq, or of the consequences of war. Being out of his element has stimulated Vig to the point where his naivete and excitement are on the verge of becoming an explosive combination.
The soldiers’ lives are complicated by the constant, intrusive presence of television war correspondents, especially the hard-bitten Adriana Cruz (NORA DUNN), who badgers Army personnel incessantly for exclusive information.
As the Americans prepare to dismantle their base camp and return home, Troy, Chief and Conrad unexpectedly come into possession of a map that indicates the location of a stash of Kuwaiti gold bullion stolen by the Iraqi army.
While they puzzle over the map and what it implies for them, Archie Gates learns of their acquisition and takes command of the situation. In his words, "Saddam stole it from the sheiks; I have no problem stealing it from Saddam… Just one stash would be easy to take…and that would be enough to get us out of our day jobs – unless you reservists are in love with your day jobs."
Armed with little more than high expectations, the foursome jumps in a Humvee and launches its own private maneuver. Their plan is to "leave at dawn and be back by lunch."
However, fate plays a trick on these AWOL treasure hunters. Their brief, single-minded foray into Iraqi territory becomes their first face-to-face encounter with the Iraqi people and the complex circumstances of life in a country at war with itself.
One misadventure leads to another, alternating grim reality with surrealistic dark humor, until the four soldiers’ mission changes radically, becoming a journey of discovery and redemption, and an adventure they’ll never forget. [Less]
Genre: Dramas
Starring: George Clooney, Mark Wahlberg, Ice Cube, Spike Jonze, Nora Dunn
Screenwriter: David O. Russell
Producer: Paul Junger Witt, Charles Roven
Composer: Carter Burwell
DVD Info
Release:
May 10, 2001
Reviews
(The) screenplay abruptly changes tone after the first half-hour, eventually incorporating some genuinely harrowing sequences... The final picture becomes something noticeably deeper and smarter than its first reels suggest.
Keilich strikes a sweetly engaging balance between humor and pathos.
It's an outrageous comedy and a challenging morality play, while at heart its a classic Western (set in an unlikely context).
Combinando humor e drama com talento, funciona como uma dura crítica à política belicista dos EUA – sendo tão (ou mais) relevante hoje em dia do que quando foi lançado.
The violence and profanity are there, but so is a sharp-edged political point of view, interesting characters and a plot enhanced with dark humor.
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