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Best War Movie of All Time

Discussion in 'BBS Hangout' started by Svpernaut, Mar 7, 2006.

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Best war movie of all time?

  1. Platoon

    7 vote(s)
    6.9%
  2. Saving Private Ryan

    26 vote(s)
    25.7%
  3. Glory

    10 vote(s)
    9.9%
  4. The Great Escape

    5 vote(s)
    5.0%
  5. Full Metal Jacket

    15 vote(s)
    14.9%
  6. Deer Hunter

    0 vote(s)
    0.0%
  7. Black Hawk Down

    5 vote(s)
    5.0%
  8. Thin Red Line

    3 vote(s)
    3.0%
  9. Apocalypse Now

    19 vote(s)
    18.8%
  10. Other

    11 vote(s)
    10.9%
  1. Summer Song Giver

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  2. Vengeance

    Vengeance Member

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    "Where Eagles Dare" is one of my favorites.
     
  3. mateo

    mateo Member

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    I am 34 years old, and you are wrong. I was 13 when this all went down. My buddy Mark England's mom would not let him go to see Red Dawn because he was only 12. Loews Town and Country had a big sign on the wall warning parents about Red Dawn's new rating. I thought I was so cool bc I could go "legally" while Mark had to "sneak" in.

    From Wikipedia:

    The addition of the PG-13 rating
    In 1984, two films associated with Steven Spielberg triggered calls for yet another addition to the list of ratings. [1] Violent scenes in the PG-rated films Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom (which he directed) and Gremlins (which he produced), were the catalyst. Public outcry about the violence led Spielberg to suggest a new PG-13 rating to Jack Valenti, who conferred with theater owners and then introduced the new rating on July 1. The rating still allowed children under 13 to be admitted without a parent or guardian, but it cautions parents about potentially shocking violence or other offensive content. The first movie to gain widespread theatrical release with a PG-13 rating was 1984's Red Dawn (although the first to receive the classification was The Flamingo Kid). It took a year for the PG-13 logo to shift into its current form. The initial rating, instead of using a line of boldface text followed by explanatory description below, bore the wording:

    Rated PG-13: Parents are strongly cautioned to give special guidance for attendance of children under 13.
    With the PG rating still being used without a change, it was unclear to some parents at first whether PG or PG-13 films were intended for older viewers. Until 1990, some of the same content that prompted the creation of the PG-13 rating was still being observed in some PG films. For example Big, Beetlejuice, and Nothing in Common were three late 1980s widespread PG releases that contained a sexually-derived expletive in their dialogue (Big and Beetlejuice used **** while Nothing in Common used dick). The ratings board reacted quickly to parental protests, and over the next couple of years, the number of PG-13 films finally outnumbered the number of PG releases, as standards were tightened for PG classification. Around the turn of that decade, standards were also tightened for PG-13 films, at least for violence, as the ratings board became more likely to issue an R rating for violence that involved bloodshed and/or the slaying of policemen. Except for a brief reversal in 1994, the number of PG-13 films has outnumbered the number of PG films ever since, and the proportion of R-rated films (starting with the boom of home video product in the late 80s) has generally increased at the expense of unrestricted films.
     
    #83 mateo, Mar 7, 2006
    Last edited: Mar 7, 2006
  4. DaDakota

    DaDakota Balance wins
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    Patton
    Battle of Britain
    Das Boot
    The Longest Day
    The Big red one
    Sands of Iwo Jima
    Schindlers list
    The Dirty Dozen
    The Flying Tigers


    Too many to name.....

    DD
     
  5. Fatty FatBastard

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    No I'm not. I very distinctly remember this. With my own eyes and ears. To say that the PG-13 rating wasn't mentioned prior to Indiana and Gremlins is completely false.
     
  6. pradaxpimp

    pradaxpimp Member

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    Casablanca is my favorite movie of all time, but it's not a war movie at all.
     
  7. arkoe

    arkoe (ง'̀-'́)ง

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    I can't believe that Stripes hasn't come up even once in this thread. :D
     
  8. Rocketman95

    Rocketman95 Hangout Boy

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    Can you at least admit you were wrong about the first PG-13 movie?
     
  9. Fatty FatBastard

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    I guess I have to. Still, the fact that I can find nothing on this, even though I fully remember all of the commotion about this being the first PG-13 movie is still quite disturbing.
     
  10. Sishir Chang

    Sishir Chang Member

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    Here's a few more I would put up for consideration.
    Gone with the Wind and Cold Mountain are both movies not directly about the Civil War but set in it.

    Red Badge of Courage
    Casablanca
    Lawrence of Arabia
     
  11. FranchiseBlade

    Supporting Member

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    The Longest Day might be the quintessential war movie of all times.

    The Charge of the Light Brigade is 1939 I think. It is pretty good.

    To Hell and Back with Audie Murphy is great because the film's subject is also the star.
     
  12. percicles

    percicles Member

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    Your going senile old chap.
     
  13. JunkyardDwg

    JunkyardDwg Member

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    Tie between Glory and Saving Private Ryan


    Don't forget about Enemy at the Gates...it's not quite to the level of some of the others, but really didn't get the play it deserved since it was sandwiched between big hollywood war vehicles. But it's a damn good movie.
     
  14. JunkyardDwg

    JunkyardDwg Member

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    And if we're gonna include movies that aren't necessarily directly related to a war but are set in it, then we should probably include Raiders and Last Crusade too :)

    And how bout the best war movie w/ no war in it: Jarhead :p
     
  15. Deckard

    Deckard Blade Runner
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    Lawrence of Arabia was most assuredly a war film, and a brilliant one. The period of Lawrence's life it covers is completely intertwined with World War One. David Lean was a master of the war movie. His Bridge Over the River Kwai was mentioned earlier, and is a superb flick.
     
  16. JunkyardDwg

    JunkyardDwg Member

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    Eh well I was mainly referring to Casablanca and Gone with the Wind (and shoot even Cold Mountain to an extent) which really love stories set during a wartime period. You could even argue Hunt for Red October as a (Cold) War movie, but that's probably stretching it.
     
  17. Kilgore Trout

    Kilgore Trout Member

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    Das Boot
    Downfall
    Apocalypse Now
     
  18. SwoLy-D

    SwoLy-D Member

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    Kilgore Trout, Summer Song Giver, does Das Boot have a scene where some kid gets a limb or maybe a finger cut off from shooting water from a broken pipe or the escape hatch bursting? I remember seeing this IN SPANISH back when I was 6 or maybe 7 in Mexico with my parents. If it was the one I am thinking about, it was called "El Submarino" (the sub) in Mexico. AWESOME movie. The scenes are now coming back.
     
  19. Svpernaut

    Svpernaut Member

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    I forgot to mention another great one that came out recently. Saints and Soldiers is an independent film shot for under one million dollars... yet looks amazingly like a big studio production. They used war reenactors so the fighting and battles are extremely realistic. If you like war movies and haven't seen this one, you MUST get it.

    http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0373283/
     

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