Date: Fri 14-Aug-1998
Date: Fri 14-Aug-1998
Publication: Bee
Author: SHANNO
Quick Words:
Playing-Ryan-Hanks-Spielberg
Full Text:
(rev "Saving Private Ryan" for Now Playing)
Now Playing--
Spielberg's "Ryan" Is Not A Film, Nor A Subject, To Be Taken Lightly
By Trey Paul Alexander III
"What a great movie! You've gotta go see it!" is the response one might expect
from someone who has just seen the most critically acclaimed movie to hit the
big screen so far this year. But it most probably will not be the reaction of
a moviegoer exiting a showing of Saving Private Ryan , which is the most
soul-shattering, engulfing movie I have seen in recent memory.
From the hand of director Steven Spielberg, this motion picture may well
surpass his own Schindler's List as one of those rare films that leaves you
speechless as the final credits roll, but will keep you talking days after you
have left the theatre. It's more like something one experiences than merely
watches, and the overwhelming sensation of this 2â¹-hour effort is not
something I can casually recommend. It is most definitely suitable only for
mature teens and older. Many adults may also find it difficult to stomach what
is at times a stressful ordeal. But for those who can withstand its stark
realism and often frank brutality, it may prove to be as close to a
transforming encounter as mainstream movies get.
Saving Private Ryan drops the audience into the middle of World War II. After
a gripping, relentless and appropriately graphic opening scene, in which
Spielberg so palpably conveys the horror and carnage Allied soldiers faced
when they stormed Omaha Beach on the French coast in 1944, the film never lets
go of our hearts and our throats. Most movies would have used this shocking
yet riveting sequence as a climax, but Spielberg practically opens the
curtains on this representation of the bloody D-Day battle, and Saving Private
Ryan is all the more impressive because it lives up to this striking
beginning.
Tom Hanks stars as Captain John Miller, the enigmatic leader of a group of
infantrymen in the 29th Division who emerge from the initial bloodbath of the
invasion of Normandy to receive a special assignment: infiltrate the enemy
lines and retrieve the missing Private Ryan (Matt Damon), a young soldier who
is the sole survivor in a group of four brothers who went off to war. Miller's
men are reluctant to undertake such a risky task, but as good soldiers they
march off under the command of their leader and seek to bring home the lost
man.
As Miller's men begin to search the French countryside, the ominous tone set
by the unforgiving opening sequence looms over every footstep the men take.
Even during fairly tranquil exchanges, the threat of war and battle is ever
nearby. When there are moments of stillness, opportunities for the grunts to
share their minds, thoughts, hopes and memories of home, we as an audience
relish the respite from the cruelty of battle. Yet in the back of our minds,
we also steel ourselves for the possibility these characters with whom we are
beginning to identify and come to know may not get to return to the home for
which they so desperately long.
Spielberg equals the fierce, kinetic power of his opening sequence -- 30
minutes of making us feel like we're right in the thick of the battle, with
lethal bullets whizzing all around us -- by ending with a climax that now puts
faces and names on the bodies which fall so mercilessly to the rages of war.
Whereas the beginning of the film shocks with its unswerving depiction of the
gross horrors of war, the climax arguably tops it by putting men who have
become known and dear to us into another such situation. Now each death
becomes that much more devastating.
Spielberg's directorial hand has never been more sure than it is here. He uses
his proficient technical skills as a filmmaker to aid him in telling the
story, but he does not let these skills tell the tale, and the film is all the
more richer for it. Plus, he is assisted by a uniformly fine cast, with the
stellar work of Hanks at the center. Saving Private Ryan , rated R for
intense, graphic war violence and occasional profanity, earns a rating that
should not be taken lightly, but neither should its subject matter. Spielberg
has given his new film a gravity and emotional punch that warrants his strong
approach.
