Not many, only a particular few, can say they achieve that. None more so perhaps than Saving Private Ryan.
Hacksaw Ridge badly wants to be something akin to that, and it does come somewhat close. This is Mel Gibson's latest after all so there's bound to be a decent story as well as a significant amount of bloodshed and violence.
Ridge is a remarkable story in a somewhat unremarkable film, but one can't help but be wowed by it's main protagonist and the incredible heroism that he displays.
We follow Desmond Doss (Andrew Garfield) as he enters the war and during a portion of the battle of Hacksaw Ridge. It's a battle that I was completely unfamiliar with that took place in the Pacific of World War II. Doss was a combat medic, extremely convicted in his beliefs. He would not kill in this war, nor would he arm himself. In addition to entering the battlefield without a weapon (and even importantly, without the intent to kill) he saved over 75 lives as a medic, often going back for men who had previously been given up on. As the tagline for the film states: "he was a hero without ever firing a single bullet". Given the horrors of the Pacific theater, this is as about as impressive as war stories get.
![]() |
As usual, Teresa Palmer can make chemistry with anyone or anything |
![]() |
Astonishing acts of courage |
The battle of Hacksaw Ridge is one of the better war scenes I've witnessed in quite some time. The initial battle is its best, but overall out of 3-4 different fighting scenes, they're all strong. It gets a bit generic at times, but it's rarely not intense. My biggest gripe though is that it can't seem to make up its mind about being PG-13 or R. There's a litany of gore, much of it hard to bear, but then there are a multitude of scenes where you'd think there'd be gore and it's very tamed down. For example, why does one grenade explosion simply push people backward and another, seemingly identical explosion, blow both a man's legs off, hurtling toward the camera? It was a very odd contrast that kept pulling me out of the scene. That aside though, these war scenes are violent, and filled with horror. By now I think we all know how intensely the Japanese fought in the Pacific and Gibson does a solid job capturing that insanity. There are a few really inspired cinematography shots scattered throughout that I was blown away by and overall the action is filmed with grace and concentration of where each character is at.
![]() |
True American Hero ^^ |
CONS:
- Lacked some heart or that special something. Not always something I can put a finger on, but that's what will unfortunately result in it not sticking with me come end of year
- Feels like two separate films
- Each of which is a little bit longer than they need to be
- War scene, while great, feels like it is consistently conflicted with wanting to be PG-13 or R
- Flat original score
- Solid first half that helps us to truly understand Doss as a character
- Great supporting cast, particularly Palmer
- Garfield gives a fantastic performance, especially in the film's climax, of a true hero
- This is an astonishing story. Simply amazing
- The battle of Hacksaw Ridge is horrific and intense, much like the fighting in the Pacific actually was
- A few key moments of unique, memorable cinematography
- Ending interviews were a very nice touch
Rath's Review Score | 7.5/10
Just a side note here: unfortunately Blogger's YouTube search function for inputting trailers has plummeted in quality. I can rarely find actual trailers anymore and instead am finding only "Trailer Reactions". Since I know you don't want to see those (and let's be honest, who does?) I'll be inserting the trailer with a link instead from now on. Thank you!
I used to copy and paste a trailer URL into the blogger youtube search and it would link that trailer. Is that no longer an option?
ReplyDeleteThanks for the tip. I'll have to try that. A bit ridiculous that when I search "XXX movie trailer" all I get is stupid trailer reaction videos.
DeleteYeah that drove me crazy! I don't understand the difficulty and/or why Google wouldn't fix it!
Delete