That first half is jaw-droppingly good.
Full Metal Jacket (1987)
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Reviews Counted:53
Fresh:51
Rotten:2
Average Rating:8.2/10
Runtime: 2 hrs 59 mins
Genre: Dramas
Synopsis: In this riveting look at military life during the Vietnam conflict, Stanley Kubrick, who made the powerful antiwar classics PATHS OF GLORY (WWI) and DR. STRANGELOVE (the Cold War), once again... In this riveting look at military life during the Vietnam conflict, Stanley Kubrick, who made the powerful antiwar classics PATHS OF GLORY (WWI) and DR. STRANGELOVE (the Cold War), once again explores the behavior of men in battle. FULL METAL JACKET (1987), adapted from Gustav Hasford's novel THE SHORT TIMERS, is broken down into two very different parts. The first half of the film focuses on the training of a squad of Marine grunts on Parris Island, and more specifically on the troubled relationship between the brutal drill sergeant (a frightening Lee Ermey) and an oafish misfit (a brilliant Vincent D'Onofrio) who just happens to be a sharpshooter. The second half takes the grunts to Hue City, where the climactic battle of the 1968 Tet Offensive--and the turning point of the Vietnam War--took place. The story is told through the eyes of Private Joker (Matthew Modine), a cynical aspiring photojournalist who is forced to fight for his life and the lives of his fellow recruits. Unusually for Kubrick, FULL METAL JACKET emerged at a time when a trend for films about Vietnam was in full swing. PLATOON had proceeded Kubrick's film by a year, and lesser efforts such as HAMBURGER HILL also emerged in 1987. London's abandoned docklands may not be the most obvious choice of location to replicate the ravages of the Vietnam landscape, but this is where Kubrick shot the film, sticking to his dogged principles of not shooting outside his adopted home. A moving commentary on the dehumanizing process that occurs when soldiers prepare and engage in battle, FULL METAL JACKET is an unforgettable experience from one of the most original voices to ever pick up a movie camera. [More]
Starring: Matthew Modine, R. Lee Ermey, Adam Baldwin, Ed O'Ross
Starring: Matthew Modine, R. Lee Ermey, Adam Baldwin, Ed O'Ross, Arliss Howard, Dorian Harewood, Kevyn Major Howard, Vincent D'Onofrio
Director: Stanley Kubrick
Director: Stanley Kubrick
Screenwriter: Gustav Hasford, Michael Herr, Stanley Kubrick
Producer: Jan Harlan, Michael Herr, Philip Hobbs, Stanley Kubrick
Composer: Abigail Mead
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Reviews for Full Metal Jacket
The director is ruthless in his depiction of combat and the process by which these soldiers come to realize that they are, like it says on the side of Matthew Modine's helmet, born to kill.
Kubrick's direction is as steely cold and manipulative as the régime it depicts, and we never really get to know, let alone care about, the hapless recruits on view.
The film’s most gut-wrenching horrors occur in the first half, thanks to the regimens imposed by real-life drill instructor Lee Ermey.
Albert Camus once urged that men be neither victims nor executioners. This film shows how in Vietnam, American soldiers were both.
Kubrick's harrowing, beautiful and characteristically eccentric new film about Vietnam, is going to puzzle, anger and (I hope) fascinate audiences as much as any film he has made to date.
Full Metal Jacket is not a realistic film -- it is horror-comic superrealism, from a God's-eye view -- but it should fully engage the ordinary movie grunt.
Kubrick's bleak anti-war satire is surprisingly conventional in form, but rolls like thunder in stretches.
[A] strangely shapeless film from the man whose work usually imposes a ferociously consistent vision on his material.
It is humanity as flawed system -- the faulty meat run through the grinder of war.
Kubrick seems to be directing his vision beyond the reality of the Vietnam War to issues far more universal and timeless.
Full Metal Jacket, ice and wildfire, order and chaos, is intellectual war, hard thought.
The movie warrants a response that is perhaps the closest thing possible on film to witnessing the mayhem firsthand.
Many call this the best war film ever, and they're not totally wrong.
No one who sees Full Metal Jacket will easily put the film's last glimpse of D'Onofrio, or a great many other things about Kubrick's latest and most sobering vision, out of mind.
The best movie ever made about the American experience in Vietnam happens to have been filmed by an American expatriate living in Britain.
| Tomatometer Percentage | Movie |
|---|---|
| 66% 66% | Public Enemies |
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| Tomatometer Percentage | Movie |
|---|---|
| 88% 88% | Inglourious Basterds |
| 78% 78% | The Hangover |
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| 47% 47% | The Girl From Monaco |
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