Men
of Honor DVD Review:
The Movie
The movie
starts off sometime in the middle and dissolves to the young
Carl Brashear running to a lake. Right when he jumps into
the water, you know he's got a thing for it. Many years later,
Carl is a young man (Cuba Gooding, Jr.). He joins the Navy
and hopes of success. First job he gets is on the U.S.S. Hoist
as a cook. Carl later catches a glimpse of Master Chief Billy
Sunday (Robert DeNiro), a very good deep salvage diver. This
sparks Carl's love for diving. He eventually became Master
Chief, but before that he had to endure racial hardships throughout
his career. Even losing his leg didn't make him give up on
things. Carl Brashear was the first African-American Navy
Diver and this movie tells his story.
Men of
Honor is a movie with a big scope. It starts in the early
years and ends in the later years. Its life span is long.
George Tillman Jr. really did a great job on directing this
real life story. The movie works well because of the great
performances, skilful directing, and careful writing. Men
of Honor doesn't make the racial exploits seem too contrived
or over the top. Sure, Carl Brashear had to endue a lot of
it. Reporting for diving school, nobody accepted him because
of his color, except Snowhill (Michael Rapaport), a stuttering
and shy Wisconsin boy. Carl was failing his tests, and since
he only had seven years of education, he asked a young librarian
to help him with studies. They got married later on.
Sunday,
a former master diver whose injured lung has left him permanently
above water, leads the diving education. All of the underwater
scenes felt quite claustrophobic and added to the reality
that these Navy divers, during the old days, really had everything
to risk. But during the second half of the movie, Sunday simultaneously
becomes Brashear's most vicious adversary and most loyal supporter.
Men of Honor is at times heartbreaking and painful to watch,
but the triumphant ending makes for a deeply satisfying payoff.
This movie wasn't perfect, however, because it sometimes over
dramatized things. Yet, little flaws such as pace vanished
as time passed. Men of Honor is a moving film and deserves
an honorable mention, just like Carl Brashear.
8 out
of 10
The Video
The video
transfer is clear and sharp. I didn't notice scratches or
lines on the screen so nothing wrong here. What else to say?
The movie feels somewhat yellowish on the land and blue-ish
(duh!) in the water. It's not a perfect quality, but what
FOX offers you is more than you can ask for.
9 out
of 10
The Audio
The sound
is very well done. There's the usual English 5.1 Surround
and DTS track. While they don't necessarily rock the speakers,
the dialogue and music communicate enough presence. It's not
THX quality, but a little more of extra vibes wouldn't hurt.
The enjoyment of the movie was not affected by it so it's
all good.
8 out
of 10
The Extras
Speaking
of extras, I there's 10 deleted scenes and an alternate ending.
This ending is definitely heartbreaking because it deals with
Billy Sunday's death. He tried to save the life of a drowned
man, but because of his injured lung, he didn't make it to
the top and died. The subsequent funeral scene was emotional
but felt unsatisfying. It wasn't a happy ending so I can see
how the director left it in the cutting room. The rest of
the deleted scenes are mostly extended scenes which you can
choose to view with commentary. Lasting about 20 minutes as
a whole, they'd probably amount to only 10-12 minutes of actual
"deleted" scenes. To top it off, Tillman Jr.'s introduction
revealed that his first cut lasted 3 hours and 10 minutes.
This kind of makes you wonder where that hour went and why
it wasn't included here.
The real
treat is commentary by Cuba Gooding, Jr., director George
Tillman, Jr., producer Robert Teitel and screenwriter Scott
Marshall Smith. They definitely had a great time making this
movie. Yet, they also had some problems (budget and so on).
I mean, what movie doesn't? The commentary is insightful and
fun to listen to as some inside information (but not really
secrets) is discussed: Hale Barry was up for Brashear's wife,
DeNiro suggested Charlize Theron to play Sunday's wife, aspects
of how Men of Honor was shot, etc. Definitely not a run-of-the-mill
commentary.
Then FOX
offers an HBO "first-look" featurette (filled with
interviews and actual behind-the-scenes footage; 15 mins)
and a documentary of a tribute to Carl Brashear (nicely done
and appreciated; 15 mins). The animated storyboard feature
(with optional commentary) is also neat, but it isn't for
everybody. All in all, these features really make this FOX
DVD a great special edition.
9 out
of 10
Movie
8
Video
9
Audio
8
Extras
9
Final (not an average)
8
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