Wednesday, March 8, 2017
'Eleven Hundred Men Went Into The Water'... "U.S.S. Indianapolis: Men of Courage"
U.S.S. Indianapolis: Men of Courage (2016)
Rated R
Starring Nicolas Cage, Tom Sizemore, Thomas Jane, Matt Lanter, James Remar, Brian Presley, Yutaka Takeuchi,
Directed by Mario Van Peebles
The Story:
Captain McVay (Cage) receives orders to deliver a Top Secret cargo which will help end World War II. Because of the secrecy, nobody is tracking the departures and arrivals of the U.S.S. Indianapolis. Once the cargo is delivered, McVay requests their tracking to be announced, but he is told since they "never officially arrived, how can they officially depart?" As they return home, they are torpedoed and sank in the Phillipine Sea. No rescue efforts were mounted, as no ship was presumed missing.
Naturally, this one is based on the true story of the U.S. Navy's single worst disaster in history.
If you've seen the movie Jaws, then you've heard this story encapsulated into one of the best monologues ever delivered in cinematic history, that of Quint's recount of surviving the sinking and the subsequent days of shark attacks on the survivors.
This movie stretches that 5 minute scene into 2 hours, but the film divides the storyline very well.
We get to know the Captain and the crew in the first half, so that when the attack and subsequent sinking occur, we feel sympathy and sadness as each character meets their fate, whether they survive the initial sinking or perish days later due to a shark or exposure.
Of the 1,100 men that went into the water, days later just a little over 300 came out alive when they were finally rescued.
The film ends with the court martial of Captain McVay, the only Naval commander to be court martialed for losing a ship during the war. Even the enemy submarine commander (Takeuchi) testified on whether or not McVay's decision of not to zig zag the ship played any part in the attack.
The attack haunted McVay in the years that followed. Families of those that lost someone called him for years and said hateful things to him until he could take it no longer.
It's a good, but not great account of the tragedy.
If you don't have the time though, spend 5 minutes and look up Quint's speech on YouTube if you've never seen Jaws before, or it's been years, and you'll save a few hours instead.
Final Grade: C
Labels:
Brian Presley,
DVD Review,
James Remar,
Jaws,
Mario Van Peebles,
Matt Lanter,
Movie Review,
Thomas Jane,
Tom Sizemore,
True Story,
U.S.Navy,
U.S.S. Indianapolis: Men of Courage,
WWII,
Yutaka Takeuchi
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