Flags of Our Fathers (Two-Disc Special Edition) [HD DVD] | ![Flags of Our Fathers (Two-Disc Special Edition) [HD DVD]](http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/516Ojl5XrTL._SL500_.jpg) | Director: Clint Eastwood Actors: Ryan Phillippe, Jesse Bradford, Adam Beach, John Benjamin Hickey, John Slattery Studio: DreamWorks Home Entertainment Category: DVD
List Price: $39.99 Buy New: $5.45 as of 2/9/2010 21:36 EST details You Save: $34.54 (86%)
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Seller: DVDFORLESS Rating: 277 reviews Sales Rank: 33807
Format: Anamorphic, Color, Dolby, Subtitled, Widescreen Languages: English (Original Language), French (Original Language), Spanish (Original Language), English (Subtitled), Spanish (Subtitled), French (Subtitled), French (Dubbed) Rating: R (Restricted) Media: HD DVD Region: 0 Aspect Ratio: 2.35:1 Number Of Discs: 2 Running Time: 132 Minutes Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 6.7 x 5.4 x 0.5
MPN: PARHD123530 UPC: 097361235301 EAN: 0097361235301 ASIN: B000O77QDI
Theatrical Release Date: October 20, 2006 Release Date: May 22, 2007 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Product Description Studio: Paramount Home Video Release Date: 05/22/2007 Run time: 132 minutes Rating: R
Amazon.com Thematically ambitious and emotionally complex, Clint Eastwood's Flags of Our Fathers is an intimate epic with much to say about war and the nature of heroism in America. Based on the non-fiction bestseller by James Bradley (with Ron Powers), and adapted by Million Dollar Baby screenwriter Paul Haggis (Jarhead screenwriter William Broyles Jr. wrote an earlier draft that was abandoned when Eastwood signed on to direct), this isn't so much a conventional war movie as it is a thought-provoking meditation on our collective need for heroes, even at the expense of those we deem heroic. In telling the story of the six men (five Marines, one Navy medic) who raised the American flag of victory on the battle-ravaged Japanese island of Iwo Jima on February 23rd, 1945, Eastwood takes us deep into the horror of war (in painstakingly authentic Iwo Jima battle scenes) while emphasizing how three of the surviving flag-raisers (played by Adam Beach, Ryan Phillippe, and Jesse Bradford) became reluctant celebrities - and resentful pawns in a wartime publicity campaign - after their flag-raising was immortalized by Associated Press photographer Joe Rosenthal in the most famous photograph in military history. As the surviving flag-raisers reluctantly play their public roles as "the heroes of Iwo Jima" during an exhausting (but clearly necessary) wartime bond rally tour, Flags of Our Fathers evolves into a pointed study of battlefield valor and misplaced idolatry, incorporating subtle comment on the bogus nature of celebrity, the trauma of battle, and the true meaning of heroism in wartime. Wisely avoiding any direct parallels to contemporary history, Eastwood allows us to draw our own conclusions about the Iwo Jima flag-raisers and how their postwar histories (both noble and tragic) simultaneously illustrate the hazards of exploited celebrity and society's genuine need for admirable role models during times of national crisis. Flags of Our Fathers defies the expectations of those seeking a more straightforward war-action drama, but it's richly satisfying, impeccably crafted film that manages to be genuinely patriotic (in celebrating the camaraderie of soldiers in battle) while dramatizing the ultimate futility of war. Eastwood's follow-up film, Letters from Iwo Jima, examines the Iwo Jima conflict from the Japanese perspective. --Jeff Shannon Beyond Flags of Our Fathers  Other World War II DVDs |  Essential DVDs by Director Clint Eastwood |  Flags of Our Fathers by James Bradley | Stills from Flags of Our Fathers (click for larger image)
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Showing reviews 1-5 of 277
Huge disappointment! January 30, 2010 Fred Smith (SF Bay Area) I bought this DVD after reading the book and anxiously waited for it to arrive. I guess great anticipation leads to great disappointment because this is one of the worst movies I have seen in a long time. I even watched it again just to be fair thinking maybe I had had a bad night. No, it was even worse the second time.
Let me say that I was incredibly moved by the book. It made the human experience of WWII real to me in a way that no History Channel documentary ever could. I felt I knew the characters and was moved to tears by their stories.
The screenplay and direction of this film is so muddled and disjointed that, if I hadn't read the book, I don't know if I could have even figured out who the characters were. There is virtually no character development so it's hard to know who the people are or why they are doing what do in the film - or why you should care. The battle scenes are intense but the grey, jerky, surreal filming technique is distracting and annoying.
I'm a huge fan of Clint Eastwood's movies but this time he just fell down flat.
Flags of our Fathers December 8, 2009 Beth Hughes (Seeley Lake, MT USA) 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
This product came to me in a timely manner, Thank You for getting this dvd out to me so quickly!
EASTWOOD CRACKS A TOUGH NUT! November 21, 2009 drkhimxz (Freehold, NJ, USA) 1 out of 2 found this review helpful
Just had a look at a description of the book on which this film was based. Made understandable the structure of the film which somewhat puzzled and a little disturbed me as I saw it. Felt the interweaving of combat with later events weakened the impact of each. However, turns out the book was an extensive study of the lives of 6 men and the combat which united them at the pole on which they placed and raised the American flag on a hill in Iwo Jima. Not having a mini-series of 10 or more hours at their disposal and yet having to, (by contractual arrangement), or wanting to, they had to cover both facets of the book in one two hour movie. They did a fine job. The combat scenes stand up very well, the civilian scenes less so since the personalities formed in the early years prior to service might have explained better the situational accommodations made to post-combat conditions. At any rate, this is a film worth seeing mostly for the thesis that men (and, now, women )in combat are mostly ordinary people who have to adjust to extraordinary circumstances and react often in extraordinary ways. While the brutality of war is suggested, no film can convey the extent to which fear, hatred, the close bonds of the primary group in the military, the shattering of bodies and souls, and sheer necessity create a boiling cauldron out of which anything can emerge.
Certainly, a notable film despite minor flaws.
Love the Blu Ray November 19, 2009 Phillip E. Matthews (Memphis) This DVD is blu ray and really looks crystal clear on my HDTV! Great interactive menus and docudrama included.
The picture is set in WWII and has that "look" about it. It's NOT your TV, it's the way it was filmed. You know the story, six Marines raise the flag on Mt. Suribachi, in February of 1945. A picture was taken that mesmerised the country and the three marines that weren't killed, in the meantime, were sent on a bond tour that raised more money than ALL previous Bond tours combined! You learn about the men who raised the flags(yes there were TWO flags raised that day. The flag that became famous and which the picture won a Pulitzer prize was hardly even noticed when these Marines changed the first flag out, because a politician wanted that first flag) in a way that was never told before. Great story, well filmed! The actual war scenes are graphic, but the main story is about the men who raised the flag and less on the actual battle.
reasonably impressed September 22, 2009 Jackson Hill With only a few reservations, I have to say I was reasonably impressed with this Clint Eastwood creation that documents the life stories of the men who raised the American flag at The Battle of Iwo Jima in World War II. I thought they did a convincing job of showing us how facts and reality can be so liquid, how the government and military tries to manipulate the public and, ultimately, how the public so craves certain icons--heroes to hold high on their shoulders, worthy of such status or not--that they're willing to believe whatever they're sold. The war scenes I found brutally effective and gripping, something you just kind of sit there and absorb in a trance, vaguely thankful that the path of your life has never taken you there. I was also struck by the casual, accepted racism towards the Native American Ira Hayes. What a different world it was then, worse in many ways, but so much better in others as well. Using a cast of relative no-name actors also added to the overall effect for me; rarely was I thinking, Oh I remember him from some other movie or TV show. I did feel it dragged on at the end, getting perhaps overly sentimental with certain aspects. But still, I liked it overall. And the photo sequence that ran during the credits that was capped off by a film shot from the memorial on Iwo Jima today was a fitting touch to end on.
Showing reviews 1-5 of 277
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