3 out of 6 people found the following review useful:
Pearl Before Swine., 16 August 2009
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Author:
dunmore_ego from Los Angeles, California
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
In garish detail and stunning investigative probing, PEARL HARBOR digs
deep below the surface of the gasoline embargoes and jingoistic
fomenting and reveals exactly what this WWII conflict was all about -
the love triangle between three young American Models.
You see, Ben loves Kate. And Kate loves Ben. But Ben's best friend,
Josh, also likes Kate. And there's a war with Germany or something
happening. Ben is a hot pilot, and reports to somewhere overseas that
is Not America for hot dogfights that make his biceps thrum with the
need to hold Kate.
Ben is shot down and reported Missing In Action back in the United
States, a land where every waking hour is spent looking to get laid (if
you were a nurse like Kate) or looking to get laid (if you were a
flyboy like Josh). So when Ben is reported missing, Kate cannot face
the next five long days wondering if she will ever get laid again, so
she falls in love with Josh.
Now Josh loves Kate. And Kate loves Josh. But Ben comes back. And he
hits Josh for falling in love with Kate. Then they have a beer. And
then the Japanese attack Pearl Harbor. The end.
Don't even want to go into the real politics behind that Day of Infamy,
December 7, 1941, when the Japanese launched a surprise attack that
wasn't really a surprise on the American Pacific Fleet anchored at
Pearl Harbor, on the Hawaiian island of Oahu. God knows, director
Michael Bay doesn't.
Remember, if it weren't for those young models in love, none of this
woulda happened. Written with emotive overkill by Randall Wallace
(BRAVEHEART, 1996, THE MAN IN THE IRON MASK, 1998), HARBOR reminds us
of TITANIC (1997), where the insufferable love story sucked all the
oxygen out of the movie until James Cameron redeemed himself with that
magnificent CGI boat-tipping.
Discounting the three-way pap between Ben Affleck, Josh Hartnett and
Kate Beckinsale, PEARL HARBOR's redeeming war scenes are cinematography
gone insane. Spielberg never took to the air in SAVING PRIVATE RYAN
(1998) - he still holds the crown for best ground skirmishes - it takes
Michael Bay's sweeping cranes to now claim the crown for best air
battles: Affleck gets to fly a Spitfire, the coolest fighter plane
ever, in rampaging dogfights that put us so square in his hot pilot's
combat seat that we can feel the sweat puddling on the backs of our
patriotic thighs.
The scenes of the stealth Japanese planes flying low over American
farmers and people out enjoying the world, thinking the war was in some
other country, look surreal enough now - imagine how it must have
looked in 1941. The thunderous grumble of amassed Zero engines
splitting the rural morning, each plane loaded with one bomb each,
tilting low over fields and schools, under American radar, Bay's
characteristic American Blond Kids in slow motion below them.
The Pearl Harbor attack is launched with a tracking shot of a bomb
loosed from a Japanese plane down to the USS Arizona, silently falling,
then exploding and actually undulating the ship like a steel snake
spasming. From there, the incredible realism of old school battle is
more exhilarating than walking in on Kate Beckinsale sandwiched between
Ben Affleck and Josh Hartnett.
Bay and cinematographer John Schwartzman have such a knack for creating
iconic images that even whilst we cringe at the melodramatic slomo and
hero framing of certain scenes, they wring a tear as well with their
beautifully evocative composition. The art overshadows the story.
Cuba Gooding Jr. fires a big deck gun. Tom Sizemore runs around his
airfield and swears. Jon Voight shucks off his Republican idiocy to
play Democratic president, FDR with great empathy. Obvious that Bay
believes HARBOR to be his MIDWAY (that 1976 war epic with A-Listers
piled on A-Listers: Heston, Fonda, Coburn, Mitchum, Mifune, Wagner...),
as he populates his film with numerous "names" in smaller roles: Alec
Baldwin, Jennifer Garner, Mako, Colm Feore, Dan Aykroyd, Ewen
Bremner...
Beckinsale - ever the female double standard bearer - asks boxer, Cuba
Gooding Jr., "So why do you have to fight with your fists to get
respect?" completely forgetting that her own boyfriend is gunning down
strangers in planes to keep her respect, with his big Spitfire-shaped
penis.
Kate tells Josh as he's going off to war, "I love you and I'll be here
waiting for you when you come back." Of course, that's provided you
don't go MIA and my thigh twitch compels me to turn to the Next Best
Thing...
Cuba looked pretty hot on that big gun...
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