Full Metal Jacket [Blu-ray]
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Product Description
Matthew Modine, Adam Baldwin, Vincent D'Onofrio, Lee Ermey. Young Marines suffer through boot camp before fighting the last major battle of the 1968 Tet Offensive in Stanley Kubrick's harrowing tale of the Vietnam War. 1987/color/117 min/R.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #5885 in DVD
- Brand: Warner
- Released on: 2007-10-23
- Rating: R (Restricted)
- Aspect ratio: 1.85:1
- Number of discs: 1
- Formats: AC-3, Closed-captioned, Color, Dolby, Dubbed, NTSC, Subtitled, Widescreen
- Original language: English, French, Spanish, German, Italian
- Subtitled in: English, Spanish, French
- Dubbed in: French, Spanish
- Dimensions: .25 pounds
- Running time: 116 minutes
Features
- Marine recruits endure basic training under a leather-lunged D.I., then plunge into the hell of Vietnam. Matthew Modine heads a talented ensemble in this searing look at a process that turns people into killers.Running Time: 116 min. Format: BLU-RAY DISC Genre: DRAMA Rating: NR Age: 085391186274 UPC: 085391186274 Manufacturer No: 118627
Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com
Stanley Kubrick's 1987, penultimate film seemed to a lot of people to be contrived and out of touch with the '80s vogue for such intensely realistic portrayals of the Vietnam War as Platoon and The Deer Hunter. Certainly, Kubrick gave audiences plenty of reason to wonder why he made the film at all: essentially a two-part drama that begins on a Parris Island boot camp for rookie Marines and abruptly switches to Vietnam (actually shot on sound stages and locations near London), Full Metal Jacket comes across as a series of self-contained chapters in a story whose logical and thematic development is oblique at best. Then again, much the same was said about Kubrick's 2001: A Space Odyssey, a masterwork both enthralled with and satiric about the future's role in the unfinished business of human evolution. In a way, Full Metal Jacket is the wholly grim counterpart of 2001. While the latter is a truly 1960s film, both wide-eyed and wary, about the intertwining of progress and isolation (ending in our redemption, finally, by death), Full Metal Jacket is a cynical, Reagan-era view of the 1960s' hunger for experience and consciousness that fulfilled itself in violence. Lee Ermey made film history as the Marine drill instructor whose ritualized debasement of men in the name of tribal uniformity creates its darkest angel in a murderous half-wit (Vincent D'Onofrio). Matthew Modine gives a smart and savvy performance as Private Joker, the clowning, military journalist who yearns to get away from the propaganda machine and know firsthand the horrific revelation of the front line. In Full Metal Jacket, depravity and fulfillment go hand in hand, and it's no wonder Kubrick kept his steely distance from the material to make the point. --Tom Keogh

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