U-571
Director: Jonathan Mostow
Actors: Matthew McConaughey (as Lieutenant Andrew Tyler, Executive Officer), Bill Paxton (as Lieutenant Commander Mike Dahlgren), Harvey Keitel (as Chief Petty Officer Henry Klough), Jon Bon Jovi (as Lieutenant Pete Emmett, Chief Engineer), David Keith (as Marine Major Matthew Coonan, Office of Naval Intelligence), Thomas Kretschmann (as Kapitanlieutenant Gunther Wassner), Jake Weber (as Naval Reserve Lieutenant Hirsch), Jack Noseworthy (as Seaman Bill Wentz, Radioman), Tom Guiry (as Seaman Ted 'Trigger' Fitzgerald, Radioman), Will Estes (I) (as Seaman Ronald 'Rabbit' Parker, Torpedoman), Terrence 'T.C.' Carson (as Steward Eddie Carson), Erik Palladino (as Seaman Anthony Mazzola, Planesman), Dave Power (as Seaman Charles 'Tank' Clemens, Machinist Mate), Derk Cheetwood (as Seaman Herb Griggs, Helmsman), Matthew Settle (as Ensign Keith Larson, Chief Torpedoman)
Country: USA
Category: Action
Year: 2000

Description: A German submarine is boarded by disguised American submariners trying to capture their Enigma cipher machine.
Comments: I saw U-571 last Friday.

I loved every second of it. Throughout the movie, I don't know who's knuckles were whiter; mine clutching the theatre seat, or the actors who grabbed whatever they could while being depth-charged.

This movie was pure non-stop action, from beginning to end. You are there, really there, experiencing the gripping fear of submarine warfare.

I believe that was the intention of the movie and if so, accomplished that superbly. I think the acting, camera work, and sound was excellent.

Now, regarding other issues.

The movie is NOT historical; it is fictional. It is based (loosely) on history (history being that there once were German and Allied submarines that fought in a war known as World War II, and that there was a German code machine the Allies called the "enigma").

Not only is it not historical regarding the event (the capturing of U-571 and the enigma code machine by Americans) but in many other areas such as what submarines of that era and their weapons could and could not do (such as dogfighting underwater with torpedo's).

Don't look for character development either. There isn't much. It's more like the first 1/2 hour of "Saving Private Ryan" (the landing on the beach episode ) throughout the length of the movie.

Thankfully, in my opinion of what a "war" movie should be, it was not muddled up with "love" scenes or anything stupid and mushy like most are. And also, thankfully, there wasn't "angel music" playing all the time. The second "trailer" was misleading in that it showed a ball-room dance, leading the viewer to believe there was some "love" interests, and played angel music, of which there was neither in the movie. It was just man-to-man combat and basic survival.

I hope everyone who sees it will enjoy it for what it is and not concentrate on, or blame it for what it isn't.

Enough analyzing -- Go see it! I suggest choosing a modern theatre with a big-screen and digital sound system.

Salut!

JG2"FireCat!

Languages: English
Subtitles:
Length: 116
Video format:
Audio format:
Resolution:
Files sizes: 1159