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[personal profile] cairistiona
We saw The Last Full Measure as planned (based on the real life story of airman/pararescuer William H. Pitsenbarger).

Full disclosure: you all know Seb has become my favorite actor, but I honestly don't like a lot of his films and won't see a lot of them (like Viggo, my other fave, he has done a lot of drecky films just to keep working and keep his name out there), but this is one I've been looking forward to since the first news came out he'd be the lead. It did NOT disappoint! My goodness, what an incredibly moving and uplifting film. You could tell all the actors were really invested in the story and their characters. It was a film that could have swayed too schmaltzy or too dark, but the themes were all handled with good balance (it may have leaned a bit toward schmaltzy, but that's a strength in my book). It had a political element but not partisan political, in that it didn't use political party to paint people as villains or heroes, which was refreshing and kept that side of things from stealing the spotlight. I don't know how much they fictionalized the way Pitsenbarger's Medal of Honor was given, but that storyline did an excellent job of showing how history can affect the present, in good ways.

My only frustration with it is the lack of marketing--either they didn't have a good distribution team or didn't have the budget or something, but they seem to be relying mostly on word of mouth to get people to see it, and I fear that won't be enough for it to earn a wider distribution. It was only showing in one theater here, and at the smallest screen at Alamo Drafthouse at that, and there were only about a dozen people at our showing--but it was a dozen people who left blowing their noses and smiling and sighing in that happy/sad way when you see something that touches your heart in the way that good movies do. I had to laugh when, in the bathroom afterward, a lady in the next stall said to her friend in another stall, "Well, Dr. Dolittle would have been funnier!" But I had heard her entire group chattering as we left the theater (they were all older, who no doubt lived through the Vietnam era as young adults) and knew they had been very moved by the film.

The cast was stellar: Sebastian Stan in his first ever lead role, supported by the likes of Samuel L. Jackon, Ed Harris, Christopher Plummer, Peter Fonda, William Hurt, Diane Ladd... really, any film with THAT array of actors should have been released in November when awards voters are on the lookout, not in the dead zone of January. It's mystifying and frustrating. Anyway, this film drove me to create a Rotten Tomatoes account just to be able to give it 5 stars! I noticed that it has 98% audience score.

War movies aren't for everyone, but if you get a chance to see this one, do. It's about friendship, valor, recovery, loyalty and learning how to become a better human being. It's rated R mostly because of battle scenes that showed some gnarly wounds, but I didn't find it any worse than some of the stuff in LOTR. There were also some f-bombs, probably more than the one that a PG-13 rating allows.

Two thumbs way up.

Date: 2020-01-26 03:10 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] mrowe.livejournal.com
Glad you liked it.

As there is no Dutch release listed on IMDB, I'll have to take other steps to see it. Should it come out in the cinema here, I'll still go see it then.

Date: 2020-01-27 02:01 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] cairistiona7.livejournal.com
I saw an article saying it did "respectably well" and crossed the million-dollar threshold for its opening weekend, so hopefully that means a wider release may happen? Especially if word of mouth helps it grown each weekend. I'll keep fingers crossed it comes to your theater. (Are you still on the all-the-movies subscription deal?)

Date: 2020-01-27 02:15 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] mrowe.livejournal.com
I do hope it comes out here - but the lack of a release date on IMDB suggests not, and my cinema's search engine denies all knowledge of it. (I'm still on the all-the-movies dietdeal>
Edited Date: 2020-01-27 02:15 pm (UTC)

Date: 2020-01-26 09:27 pm (UTC)
shirebound: (Default)
From: [personal profile] shirebound
Moving and uplifting... my kind of movie. :)

Date: 2020-01-27 02:02 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] cairistiona7.livejournal.com
I do think you'll enjoy it. The battle scenes do get a bit intense but I didn't think horribly so? Just enough to show how awful it was.

Date: 2020-01-26 10:42 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] imbecamiel.livejournal.com
Oooo, good to have such a positive review! I'm so glad it didn't disappoint. :D Sadly, it looks like it's not showing in our theater... Boooo. Which just goes to your point about the odd lack of marketing/release locations. If nothing else, with a cast like that, you would think they would be more tactical about getting it the viewing it deserves!

I'm gonna have to take a look at some of the theaters in the wider surrounding area to see if there are other options - and if not, at least keep an eye out for it to get here coming up. Definitely one I'll want to see at some point, that's for sure!

Date: 2020-01-27 02:03 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] cairistiona7.livejournal.com
I was soooo glad it was as good as I'd hoped... it's awful to look forward to something forever and then have it disappoint. Crossing all fingers that it comes to your area!

Date: 2020-01-27 12:39 am (UTC)
ysilme: Close up of the bow of a historic transport boat with part of the sail. (Season)
From: [personal profile] ysilme
Thank you for the rec! I'll keep it in mind, although I'm usually not keen about war movies - but various ones I really enjoyed show that on occasion, I do. *g*
I hear you on favourite actos often playing films I don't like. I really love Marton Csokas, but most of the films with him I didn't exactly enjoy (although he was great in them), and some I don't dare to watch... XD

Date: 2020-01-27 02:10 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] cairistiona7.livejournal.com
I'm not usually into war movies either, but this was more of a "aftermath" movie than a war movie. There were far more scenes set in the present (or actually, in the year 2000, I think, when the Medal of Honor push was renewed and completed) than in the war itself. The flashbacks were to show Pitsenbarger's heroism and how it affected the survivors all the way to the present. So it's not a "follow the generals making military plans and then follow the soldiers who follow the plan and the plan blows up and they have to scramble" usual fare of war movie.

If I've learned anything from being a fan of Viggo Mortensen through the years, it's that you can still be a fan even if you don't see EVERY film (I've seen *nearly* every one of his and, honestly, there are a few that I would love to unsee :P).

Date: 2020-02-06 07:10 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] layne67.livejournal.com
Looking at the picture of William H. Pitsenbarger ( from your link ), it seems that Sebastian Stan is the right person to play him. Seb looks a lot like Mr Pitsenbarger!

Date: 2020-02-06 03:20 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] cairistiona7.livejournal.com
I initially had the same thought, but Seb plays the Pentagon official who fights to get Pitsenbarger his medal, which actually is the bigger role in the movie--the scenes with Pitsenbarger were mostly just snatches of the battleground and him doing his medic/soldier/heroic things. Pitsenbarger's elderly parents and the effect they had on Seb's character was actually the bigger storyline, not that it took anything away from their son's heroics. It was very much a "how does something that happened 30 years ago affect people in the present" sort of movie, and done very well.

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