Plot
Taking place towards the end of WWII, 500 American Soldiers have been entrapped in a camp for 3 years. Beginning to give up hope they will ever be rescued, a group of Rangers goes on a dangerous mission to try and save them.
Release Year: 2005
Rating: 6.7/10 (10,806 voted)
Critic's Score: 48/100
Director:
John Dahl
Stars: Benjamin Bratt, Joseph Fiennes, James Franco
Storyline Set in the Philippines in 1945 towards the end of WWII, under the command of Lieutenant Colonel Henry Mucci and Captain Robert Prince, the 6th Ranger Battalion undertake a daring rescue mission against all odds. Traveling thirty miles behind enemy lines, they intend to liberate over 500 American Soldiers from the notorious Cabanatuan Japanese POW camp in the most audacious rescue ever.
Writers: William B. Breuer, Hampton Sides
Cast: Benjamin Bratt
-
Lt. Colonel Mucci
James Franco
-
Captain Prince
Robert Mammone
-
Captain Fisher
Max Martini
-
1st Sgt. Sid "Top" Wojo
James Carpinello
-
Cpl. Aliteri
Mark Consuelos
-
Cpl. Guttierez
Craig McLachlan
-
2nd Lt. Riley
Freddie Joe Farnsworth
-
2nd Lt. Foley
Laird Macintosh
-
2nd Lt. O'Grady
Jeremy Callaghan
-
Lt. Able
Scott McLean
-
Lt. LeClaire
Paolo Montalban
-
Sgt. Valera
Clayne Crawford
-
PFC Aldrige
Sam Worthington
-
PFC Lucas
Royston Innes
-
Sgt. Adams
Opening Weekend: $3,376,009
(USA)
(14 August 2005)
(819 Screens)
Gross: $10,166,502
(USA)
(16 October 2005)
Technical Specs
Runtime:
Did You Know?
Trivia:
Many of the Extras were recruited off the streets of the Gold Coast.
Goofs:
Errors made by characters (possibly deliberate errors by the filmmakers):
The beach where the Americans landed is written as "Calasio". There is no place in the Philippines with that name. The correct place is "Calasiao" (in the Province of Pangasinan). Also, the front line where the prisoners were brought safely to is not "Talevera". Again, there is no place in the Philippines with that name. The correct name of the place is "Talavera".
Quotes: Lt. Colonel Mucci:
How you feelin? Captain Prince:
Alright. Lt. Colonel Mucci:
I'm proud of you. Captain Prince:
Thank-you Sir.
[They salute each other and walk off]
User Review
Small tale told in a big way
Rating: 8/10
While Hollywood has gone after the Nazis and the European campaign in
World War II over and over again, ad nauseam, little has been produced
depicting the Pacific Theatre or the thousands of Americans and others
who perished there.
In fact, only a handful of motion pictures have touched on the subject
over the last two decades, namely Steven Spielberg's "Empire of the
Sun," Terrance Malik's "The Thin Red Line," and the Nicolas Cage bomb,
"Windtalkers." The best film in this genre was probably 1957's "Bridge
On The River Kwai," which won Oscars for David Lean and Alex Guinness,
among others, but that was almost 50 years ago.
Now John Dahl ("Rounders," "Joyride," the TV series "Tilt") has shed
some light on a little-known rescue attempt in the waning days of the
conflict in the Philippine Islands. "The Great Raid" is a fine little
film, smart, patriotic and fairly historically accurate.
The film begins with a crisp narration (accompanied by actual film
footage) of the quick successes of the Imperial Japanese Army in the
days following Pearl Harbor. Gen. Douglas MacArthur - thanks to
Roosevelt's decision to devote more to the European effort through the
Lend-Lease to Churchill program - is forced to evacuate the Philippines
and retreat to Australia.
Meanwhile, thousands of American troops are trapped by the swift-moving
Japanese forces on the islands of Bataan and Corrigidor and are
compelled to surrender. While WWII German brutality is everywhere in
motion picture, few have addressed the stark horrors of the Bataan
Death March. Even this movie skirts the terror with a simple voice-over
in filling in the background story of a group of surviving prisoners
held for over three years.
Receiving word of mass killing of American POWs by the Japanese, top
brass in the Pacific orders a raid on a camp still behind enemy lines,
led by Army Ranger Lt. Col. Mucci (Benjamin Bratt, "Law & Order) and
Capt. Prince (James Franco, "Spiderman," "Spiderman 2").
Military minutia abounds with the planning and execution of the
assault, which pits a handful of rangers against over 200
battle-hardened Japanese troops, led by sadistic Maj. Nagai (Motoki
Kobiyashi).
The movie also shows the strong relationship between the Americans and
Filipinos which was not the greatest in the years after the
Spanish-American War, but was cemented against the common Nipponese
enemy. Nice composition between rangers, prison camp and the occupied
capital of Manilla, where civilian nurse Margaret Utinsky (Connie
Nielson, "Gladiator," "One Hour Photo")is working with the Filipino
underground resistance.
This is no "Saving Private Ryan," and the acting sometimes leaves a bit
to be desired, but the strength of the story, the fact it was inspired
by true events, and the historical importance of the film, make this
one a must-see, even for casual fans of the genre. It will not make
much money, but it was very important that it was made.
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