![]() |
| Advanced Search Help |
Midway | Year: 1976 Classification: Action/Adventure Directed: - Jack Smight Actors/Actresses: - Henry Fonda - Charlton Heston falls short Midway is awesome in scope. What director Jack Smight and the producers tried to do is a grand movie about the turning point in our battle for the Pacific in WWII. It has an impressive cast: Charlton Heston, Henry Fonda, Edward Albert, James Coburn, Glenn Ford, Hal Holbrook, ToshirĂ´ Mifune, Robert Mitchum, Cliff Robertson, Robert Wagner, Tom Selleck, Pat Morita, and James Ingersoll, all backed by a John Williams score. But the writing was weak--there was no suspense at all in the film. They hit a side story or two, but keep them uncompelling and unresolved. They tried to show the Battle from both the Japanese and U.S. point of view, but doesn't do it as successfully as Tora! Tora! Tora!. And the spliced in actual documentary footage of dogfights and crashes, but these are obvious splices (or poor quality) and detracts from the experience of viewing the film. Great idea, awesome in scope, doesn't live up to potential. Poor sound, over-edited Midway as originally filmed is one of the great movies of all time. This DVD is not. Problem #1: I have one of the best sound systems you can buy. The sound goes up and down and up and down on this DVD. You have to hold on to the remote just to be able to stay in the room with it because some combat footage is too loud, and other dramatic discussions are too low in volume. Problem #2: My wife grew to hate this move somewhere around 1990 because on the veteran related holidays, a good 4 hours were lost to watching this movie. Others claim that the original was over 5 hours. I'm very disappointed with the 2 hour version. I want to see it all. The manufacturer needs to do something to get us the complete movie. They won't, though, becuase they have to redo the sound for the DVD, and that's expensive. One of the better historical WWII movies A good friend of mine (and a contemporary) rode in the backseat of a dive bomber at the battle of midway. He's dead now, like three quarters of the men who fought in World War Two. Can you imagine riding backwards in a dive while the people below are doing their best to kill you? Unless you've been there, probably not. This is, historically, one of the most accurate portrayals of the war. One critic complained that "the writing was weak. There was no suspense at all in the film." Perhaps there'd have been enough suspense if he'd been there, like Bill. But Bill survived the battle and died of old age, so I can't ask him about whether he felt any suspense, although we talked a lot about the battle of Midway. In the film, they used top notch actors. For "Bull" Halsey they used Mitchum. Not a look alike, but of course Bull's dead, too, and Mitchum did a good job. Heston, of course, represented a fictional character (Matt Garth), but virtually all of the names of people in the film were real men who fought a real battle, and it was the turning point of the war. After Midway, we took a lot of lumps, but they were on the run from that point on. Of course Hollywood took some liberties, and since they used a lot of actual combat shots, some of the aircraft used were out of place (F6F "Hellcats" for F4F "Wildcats" several times, and the ditching scene where Ensign George Gay went in showed a "Hellcat" instead of the TBD Douglas torpedo bomber that he actually flew. And the shot of the "Hellcat" being torn apart on the carrier's island was well-known footage from the technicolor documentary, The Fighting Lady, which was shot on the old Enterprise during battle, with narration by Lt. Robert Montgomery (qv). Garth's (Heston's) fictional son was supposed to be flying it in the film, but it was an actual crash on board the "Big E", in an actual battle. "Hellcats" (F6F) were Grumman fighter planes (the big brother of the "Wildcat" (F4F) which was obsolescent when the war started, but in use at the Battle of Midway--as was the old Brewster "Buffalo") and the F6F never saw combat until late 1943 (on my birthday, as a matter of fact.) The battle of Midway was in June of 1942, six months after Pearl Harbor. It helps when you know a little history. For instance, Ensign George Gay actually did ride out the battle in the water, after he ditched, and was debriefed personally by the commander-in-chief, pacific fleet (CINCPAC), Admiral Chester Nimitz. He was the only survivor of his torpedo squadron, VT-8 (torpedo squadron 8). Altogether, when you see this picture, you are watching history (as near as Hollywood will ever get to it), and many of the people who died to entertain today's movie audiences are named in the movie. So, try to overlook the lack of a plot, at least in the battle sequences. History wrote them, not Hollywood script writers. Joseph (Joe) Pierre, USN (Ret) Buy Midway at Amazon.com Buy posters at Allposters.com Jamster - the latest ringtones for your phone! ![]() Search with Walhello on the Internet on Midway Search with the Priority Search Engine on Midway This page in other languages: Suomeksi | Nederlands | Deutsch
|