Average Rating: 8.3/10
Reviews Counted: 37
Fresh: 33 | Rotten: 4
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Fresh: 3 | Rotten: 1
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Although he was not the first choice to direct it, the hit black comedy MASH established Robert Altman as one of the leading figures of Hollywood's 1970s generation of innovative and irreverent young filmmakers. Scripted by Hollywood veteran Ring Lardner, Jr., this war comedy details the exploits of military doctors and nurses at a Mobile Army Surgical Hospital in the Korean War. Between exceptionally gory hospital shifts and countless rounds of martinis, wisecracking surgeons Hawkeye Pierce
Dec 31, 1970 Wide
Jan 8, 2002
20th Century Fox
All Critics (38) | Top Critics (5) | Fresh (42) | Rotten (4) | DVD (31)
This is still watchable for the verve of the ensemble acting and dovetailing direction, but some of the crassness leaves a sour aftertaste.
In the end M.A.S.H. succeeds, in spite of its glaring faults.
One of the reasons M*A*S*H is so funny is that it's so desperate.
Although it is impudent, bold, and often very funny, it lacks the sense of order (even in the midst of disorder) that seems the special province of successful comedy.
Rollicking, biting, satirical classic is so 1970.
Altman chronicles the sardonic wasteland with a camera that's always in the wrong place at the right time
M*A*S*H is no Nashville. Hell, it may not even be O.C. & Stiggs. But for better or worse, it stands testament to the fact that at least one segment of the counterculture had no place for women.
A good dint lower than its reputation, more so if you look at it not as one of the seminal 1970s films but instead as the first chapter from the finest filmmaking career spent examining the American mystique.
The extras start with an excellent full-length audio commentary by director Robert Altman - his fans will love it - and also include well-made documentaries.
It's the first real film of the 1970s.
Impudent and bold, M.A.S.H., Altman's most commercial film, satirizes the glorification of war, military bureaucracy, social hypocrisy, repressed sexuality and other norms than have lost their validity.
A black comedy that rings hollow today.
Altman boiled away the muddled meat of literary pretension intended to smokescreen the essence of war: blood on the one side and semen on the other.
It shows Altman's stylistic signature in embryonic form.
A battle against the idea that 'a war movie' had to be a serious affair.
If its bite and sass have diminished for today's new audiences ... consider that a testimony to the attitude, style, and technique it pioneered and infused into American popular movies.
Fox's two-disc MASH: Five Star Collection presents the film in a new high-definition anamorphic transfer (2.35:1) supervised by Altman.... the film has been color-corrected to Altman's specifications.
I just don't get what was so great about M*A*S*H*. Maybe satire was not common at the time, and maybe subverting the army and various wars wasn't either. OK. But for a film to be so directionless - and frankly, unfunny - was disheartening. Pointless escapade after pointless escapade, and no real purpose for them
April 16, 2007Super Reviewer
A classic hilarious example of quality black comedy. M*a*s*h has so many funny quotes and characters that it'll make you laugh more and more upon multiple viewings. Some jokes of which there are very few are however hit and miss.
November 6, 2011
Super Reviewer
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