拯救大兵瑞恩Saving Private Ryan英文影评
Devastating. If, for some reason, I was asked to write a
one-word review of Saving Private Ryan,
that would be the term I would use. As was true of director Steven
Spielberg's other masterpiece, Schindler's
List, the impact of this motion picture must be experienced; it
cannot be adequately described. No film since last
year's The Sweet
Hereafter has left such a searing and
indelible imprint on my mind and soul. This movie did not need to
be released at the end of the year to be considered for a flood of
Oscar nominations; it's so forceful that no one who sees it will be
able to forget it -- not even Academy members with two-month memory
spans.
Saving
Private Ryan opens with a 30-minute cinematic
tour de force that is without a doubt one of the finest half-hours
ever committed to film. This sequence, a soldier's-eye view of the
D-Day invasion of Normandy, is brilliant not only in terms of
technique but in the depth of viewer reaction it generates. It is
certainly the most violent, gory, visceral depiction of war that I
have ever witnessed on screen. Spielberg spares the viewer nothing
of the horrors of battle, using every tactic at his disposal to
convey the chaos and senseless waste that lies at the core of any
engagement. We are presented with unforgettable, bloody images of
bodies being cut to pieces by bullets, limbs blown off, entrails
spilling out, and a variety of other assorted examples of carnage.
And, when the tide comes in with the waves breaking on the
body-strewn beach, the water is crimson. Those who are at all
squeamish will find the opening ofSaving Private
Ryan unbearable. This aspect of the film
almost earned it an NC-17 rating; only the fact that Spielberg
rigorously avoids even a hint of exploitation convinced the MPAA to
award an R.
In addition
to showing what happens when projectiles rip into the soft flesh of
the human body, the director employs other methods to capture the
essence of battle - hand-held cameras, a slight speeding up of the
images, muted colors, and several different kinds of film stock.
Put it all together, and it adds up to a dizzying, exhausting
assault on the senses. As good as the rest
of Saving Private Ryan is,
and it's very good, the
D-Day attack on Omaha Beach is the sequence that everyone will
remember most clearly.
Most World
War II movies fall into one of two categories: heroic tales of
glory and valor or biopics (my all-time favorite
film, Patton,
falls in the latter camp). Saving Private
Ryan is neither. Instead, it's a condemnation
of war wrapped in a tale of human courage and sacrifice. In many
ways, the picture painted by this movie is more grim than the one
Oliver Stone presented in Platoon, which
has often been cited as the most daring anti-war film to come out
of Hollywood. Saving Private
Ryan quickly and brutally dispels the notion
that war is anything but vicious, demoralizing violence that makes
a cruel joke out of the human body and spirit. Although the film is
only loosely based on a true incident, it's hard not to accept
these characters and events as real.
Saving
Private Ryan begins with a short sequence in
modern-day France that shows one man visiting a particular grave in
the sea of white crosses that marks the memorial to those who died
liberating the country. From there, the film slips more than five
decades back in time, to June 6, 1944. The D-Day invasion at
"Bloody Omaha" Beach forms a prologue to the main story. Following
the opening half-hour sequence, we learn that two of the four Ryan
brothers died in this action, while a third perished elsewhere. The
mother is receiving all three telegrams on the same day. The U.S.
army chief of staff, General George C. Marshall (Harve Presnell),
is stirred by the grief-stricken woman's plight, and decides to
send a group of men into the French countryside to find and rescue
the fourth son, paratrooper Private James Ryan (Matt Damon).
Captain John
Miller (Tom Hanks), a hero and survivor of the Omaha Beach battle,
is chosen to lead the team of eight men whose goal is, in Miller's
words, like finding "a needle in a stack of needles." His
hand-picked team includes six men who have served with him
throughout the war and one newcomer: Upham (Jeremy Davies), a
French/German/English translator who has never seen active combat.
Together, they strike out across the French countryside, heading in
the general direction of Cherbourg. Along the way, they learn that
skirmishes in small towns can be as deadly as the attack on the
beach.
There's
nothing especially complex about the structure
of Saving Private Ryan. The film, which
runs nearly three hours, is bookended by two major battle scenes.
In between, smaller fights alternate with quiet, character-building
moments that flesh out the soldiers, allowing them to escape the
threat of stereotyping. Spielberg, along with writer Robert Rodat
and the actors, ensures that everyone in the movie is developed
into a multi-dimensional individual for whom we can grieve if and
when they die. They are "citizen soldiers" -- ordinary men caught
in the teeth of extraordinary circumstances. With the exception of
a little manipulation at the end (when tears are actually a welcome
source of relief from the film's
intensity), Saving Private
Ryan rigorously avoids toying with our
emotions.
Although
this is not Tom Hanks' highest-profile role, it is one of his best
performances. His portrayal of John Miller is the perfect mix of
war-weariness, resignation, and a devotion to duty. The
teacher-turned-killer, who has lost 94 men in assorted battles from
Africa to France, survives the madness by recalling special
memories of his wife pruning rose bushes, while worrying that she
will not recognize the husband who returns to her, because, "With
every man I kill, the farther away from home I feel."
The
supporting cast is uniformly excellent. Edward Burns' Reiben uses
cynicism and sarcasm to hide his uncertainty about the validity of
his latest mission. Like the others in the group, he isn't sure
whether saving one man's life is worth risking eight others. Burns,
the actor/director who entered the public's awareness after
making The Brothers McMullen, turns in a
fine performance. Jeremy Davies (Spanking the Monkey) makes
Upham a believable figure whose horror at the sudden onslaught of
trauma and violence is something almost everyone in the audience
will relate to. Matt Damon, who exploded into the spotlight
with The
Rainmaker and Good Will
Hunting, is solid in a role that calls for the character to be
as much a symbol as an individual. Finally, perhaps the best
secondary performance is given by Tom Sizemore (The Relic),
whose portrayal of Miller's faithful friend and sergeant is vivid
and engaging.
Spielberg's
meticulous period detail effectively re-creates the war-torn
countryside of occupied France. The American soldiers visit two
bombed-out towns where all that remains standing are the
half-shattered husks of once-impressive structures. Many of the
weapons that appear in Saving Private
Ryan are authentic period pieces, bought from
collectors. And, following the successful landing at Normandy, we
are treated to a spectacular panorama of the beach, with a variety
of mighty ships anchored offshore and the sky thick with blimps.
Even though the Omaha Beach sequences were filmed in Ireland, they
nevertheless offer a sense of verisimilitude that those familiar
with the actual place on the English Channel shore will find hard
to dispel.
With Saving Private
Ryan set
alongside Schindler's List, Steven
Spielberg, once known as a purveyor of well-crafted-but-lightweight
feel-good fare, has given us two of the decade's most gripping,
disturbing, and powerful motion pictures. I considerSchindler's
List to be one of the most amazing movies I
have ever experienced, and, in many
ways, Saving Private
Ryan is its equal. Although both films take
place during the same time period, they focus on different
ideas. Schindler's
List personifies good (Schindler) and evil
(Amon Goeth), and plays out the struggle against a tragic backdrop.
In Saving Private Ryan, there are no human
villains, and the enemy isn't so much the Germans as it is the
implacable, destructive specter of war. The film's central question
(When is one life more important than another?) is never really
answered. For those who are willing to brave the movie's shocking
and unforgettable images, Saving Private
Ryan offers a singular motion picture
experience. I will be surprised if another film tops it for the
best of 1998.
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