Hart's
War DVD Review:
The Movie
Fourth
generation military Col. William McNamara (Bruce Willis) is
imprisoned in a German POW camp. Still, as the camp's highest-ranking
American officer, he commands his fellow inmates, keeping
a sense of honor alive in a place where honor is easy to destroy,
all under the dangerous, ever-watchful eye of German Col.
Werner Visser (Marcel Iures). Never relinquishing his duty
as a soldier, McNamara is silently planning, waiting for his
moment to strike back at the enemy.
A murder in the camp gives him the chance to set a risky plan
in motion. With a court martial to keep Visser and the German
guards distracted, McNamara orchestrates a cunning scheme
to escape and destroy a nearby munitions plant, enlisting
the unwitting help of young Lt. Tommy Hart (Colin Farrell).
Together with his men, McNamara uses a hero's resolve to carry
out his mission, ultimately forced to weigh the value of his
life against the good of his men and his country.
I thought
Harts War was extraordinary. Its not a war movie,
aside from what you see in the trailer; the action is minimal,
whereas character interaction and courtroom drama constitutes
most of the movie. The film is about honor, racism, and redemption.
The film strength bides on communication rather than combat
and the film is influential because of it. The movie is promising
and engaging, but suffers plot lapses. In the way of plot,
Hart's War is divided; one element somewhat dramatic and exciting
and another element somewhat drab. Hart's War gives Farrell
the chance to outshine in the role of Lt. Hart and successfully
allows him to show off his lead quality. Willis provides his
trademark smirk and a credible acting presentation;
his commanding role works well. Harts War is a solid
film with an authentic traditional feel.
>Read
Dan Peters' Film Review!
The Video
Harts
War appears in an aspect ratio of 2.35:1 on this double-sided
DVD; the film has been enhanced for 16X9 televisions. The
image looked first class. Sharpness was superb. The film stayed
crisp and detailed; no concerns with jagged edges, but there
were a couple of scenes containing edge enhancement. Colors
were tangible. Black levels looked dense and rich, while shadow
detail was thick but not too dark. Harts War presented
a very pleasing image.
The Audio
Harts
War is presented in Dolby Digital 5.1 soundtrack. The mix
worked well. The sound was very broad and engaging, with some
excellent stereo separation. The front three channels often
displayed discrete audio that opened up the spectrum delightfully
and brought the action to life. Rear channels kicked in accurately
during the action scenes. Audio quality was excellent. Dialogue
was natural, with no issues related to irritability. Music
score was brilliant and deep. Special effects presented themselves
accurately and presented a good impact when necessary.
The Extras
Extras:
Commentary
by Director Gregory Hoblit, Actor Bruce Willis and Screenwriter
Billy Ray
>The DVD promises a commentary by Willis yet he hardly
speaks. In fact, his comments come from selected bits of interviews
which are sliced in-between the real commentary that features
Hoblit and Ray. They are easy to listen to and have quite
a few interested things to say.
Commentary
by Producer David Foster
Deleted
Scenes With Director's Commentary
>Hoblit acknowledges the fact that he doesn't speak much
during these scenes, but he reasons that he's seeing these
again after taking them out a while ago. These scenes were
cut for time, but add more to the film had they remained in
the film.
Photo
Gallery
>Choose from four different galleries, including "the
poster shoot" -- which looks kind of silly.
Theatrical
Trailers (Hart's War, Windtalkers)
The DVD
is not as good as it could have been, especially since a behind-the-scenes
featurette is missing.
EXTRAS
reviewed by Dennis Landmann.
Overall
Overall,
I felt Harts War benefited from its solid acting
performance from Farrell. Harts War is not for everyone,
but its still a delightful and charming film nonetheless.
MGM provides superb picture and sound with this DVD presentation.
Harts War is a DVD well worth your time and money. Highly
recommended.
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