Christian Bale Movie:

Rescue Dawn




Click here for more detailed information about the
Christian Bale movie:

'Rescue Dawn
'




   Christian Bale

   Posters
   Movies
   News
   Bio
   Wallpapers

   Celebrity Movies


Christian Bale Movie:
Rescue Dawn



Movie
Rescue Dawn
Rescue Dawn
List Price: $19.98Label: MGM Home Entertainment

Salesrank: 285

Released: November 20, 2007
Our Price: $9.25
Used Price: $2.39
MPAA Rating: PG-13 (Parental Guidance Suggested)
Media: DVD

Features:

  • AC-3
  • Closed-captioned
  • Color
  • Dolby
  • Dubbed
  • DVD-Video
  • Subtitled
  • Widescreen
  • NTSC
  • Starring:

  • Christian Bale
  • Steve Zahn
  • Jeremy Davies
  • Editorial Review:
    Real-life story of a US fighter pilot Dengler shot down and captured during the Vietnam War. Christian Bale as Dengler plans a death-defying escape.System Requirements:Run time: 126 MinutesFormat: DVD MOVIE Genre: ACTION/ADVENTURE/MILITARY & WAR Rating: PG-13 UPC: 027616093578 Manufacturer No: M109357

    Description of Rescue Dawn:
    In the tradition of The Great Escape and The Deer Hunter, Rescue Dawn is Werner Herzog's take on the pulse-pounding POW genre. Unlike most such efforts, however, his isn't just based on a true story, it's a remake of his 1997 documentary Little Dieter Needs to Fly. German-born Dieter Dengler (Christian Bale, who first made his mark in Steven Spielberg’s prison camp drama Empire of the Sun) has longed to pilot a plane since he was a boy. When he joins the Navy during the Vietnam War, he gets his wish. Then he's shot down over Laos. Though he survives, Dengler is captured by the Pathet Lao. Through his internment, he meets Duane Martin (Steve Zahn in his finest performance), with whom he becomes fast friends. While Dengler is arrogant and resourceful, Martin is patient and humble. With Dengler's assistance, the prisoners escape, but the untamed wilderness turns out to be just as dangerous (cinematographer Peter Zeitlinger ably captures its cruel beauty). Those who've seen Little Dieter know how this tale ends. Suffice to say, Herzog's reenactment makes for rousing entertainment. If the film has a flaw, it's that the rah-rah finale plays like something from out of a mainstream sports movie. That quibble aside, the actors, including Jeremy Davies as a delusional campmate and Toby Huss as a fellow flyer, are aces. And Herzog, who's been concentrating on nonfiction, like Grizzly Man, proves he can direct a Hollywood-style action epic with the best of 'em. --Kathleen C. Fennessy

    Beyond Rescue Dawn

    Little Dieter Needs to Fly

    Christian Bale Films

    More from MGM



    Stills from Rescue Dawn







    Rescue Dawn Reviews:
    Excellent 4 Star Review
    2008-09-17 - It's been quite a few years since Werner Herzog did a major fictive film. The last couple of decades has seen an increasing veer into documentaries and more experimental cinema. However, with 2007 film, Rescue Dawn, Herzog shows that the years have not taken their all too inexorable toll on the visionary mind. While the film is not an inarguably great masterpiece along the lines of some of his classic fictive films from the 1970s, it is a terrific war film, but, more so, a terrific prison escape and action film, even as it wholly subverts many of those subgenre's worst banalities.
    The film is sometimes an expansion, condensation, and retelling of the same basic tale Herzog told in his classic 1997 documentary Little Dieter Needs To Fly. That film chronicled the life and capture, over Laos, of a German born U.S. Navy Pilot named Dieter Dengler, who spent six months as a prisoner of war in Laos, before escaping with six other men into the jungle. Only Dengler was known to have survived. Rescue Dawn details and condenses many aspects of the earlier film, and is well acted by a stellar cast, well directed by Herzog, and brilliantly cinematographed by Peter Zeitlinger, who melds the stunning visuals of Thailand with Herzog's own classic `eye level realism' to evoke some of the same sorts of jungle imagery that made films like Aguirre: The Wrath Of God and Fitzcarraldo so impressive. On top of that is the wonderful film scoring by Klaus Bedelt, which is very minimal yet effective when employed; mixing the high and low forms of music Herzog is known for.
    The plot is rather simple, and greatly condenses the tale the real Dengler tells within the earlier film.... The acting, especially on Bale's part, is outstanding. In each of his roles, Bale creates characters wildly different from each other. Comic actor Steve Zahn also shines as the timid Duane Martin, and Jeremy Davies makes for an excellent counterpoint to Dengler's exuberance, whether true or not. And the film also benefits by its fast pace. Despite being 125 minutes in length, the film never has `dead air'. It moves relentlessly from scene to scene, often being cut just before a typical Hollywood moment would arise in an action film. Thus, Herzog gives the viewer their Hollywood steak while not clogging their arteries with the mindless fat.
    Yet, despite all its excellent points, at its heart, this film, unlike the documentary version of Dengler's life, is simply a deeper action film (a sort of leaner, meaner The Bridge On The River Kwai); it lacks the overall intellectual depth, probing, and agon that defines great art and suffuses Herzog's fictive classics from earlier in his career, even as it is a significantly better work of art than such a similarly themed and lauded film as The Deer Hunter. Rescue Dawn, however, and despite its near miss at greatness, is certainly a must see for those people who want to get a richer perspective on the Vietnam War, and deserves its place alongside Apocalypse Now and Full Metal Jacket as unique visions of that war. But, to get an even fuller sense of what the war and Dieter Dengler were all about, watch Little Dieter Needs To Fly right afterwards. It's called eating the cake whilst having it, too; but, more than that, one will find that the cake is also surprisingly healthy and enlivening. Keep cooking, Werner!


    Just Missed 5 Stars 4 Star Review
    2008-09-15 - This is a great movie. The story is amazing, the movie is very realistic and it puts you right in place. The only problem I had with the movie which made it miss 5-stars was that the directing is a little different. Not bad, but different. Didn't really care for the directing...

    Great 5 Star Review
    2008-09-04 - i was very happy with the product and the quick, fast shipping, I will use this seller again and again.

    I never received my item! 1 Star Review
    2008-09-01 - I have never received the video Rescue Dawn that I ordered. It has been almost two months. I am not very happy with my service!
    Margaret Chappell

    A story of courage 4 Star Review
    2008-08-04 - Inspired by the true story of Dieter Dengler's (Christian Bale) ordeals during the Vietnam war, Rescue Dawn follows Lt. Dengler on his very first combat mission. Prior to the primary ground battles, U.S. troops flew bombing raids missions into Laos, and it is during one such excursion in 1965 that Dengler's plane took ground-fire that caused a crash.

    While jungle survival videos produced by the military were supposed to keep a downed pilot safe in Dengler's situation, they did no such thing. Woefully unprepared for the jungle, he's captured in a matter of days and soon faces months of sadistic torture at the hands of both the Laotians and the Vietnamese. Beatings, being bound and tied to a moving oxen, and nearly drowned, he's eventually moved to a P.O.W. camp where other soldiers are being held. It is in this prison camp that a daring rescue attempt is devised by the shared contributions of the prisoners, as Dengler and other prisoners fight through the jungles of Laos towards Thailand and eventual freedom.

    Convincing as Dengler, Christian Bale really sells out for this role. Throughout the movie his physical condition noticeably worsens, his weight takes a dramatic drop, and he truly looks like he may have been tortured as a POW.

    Troubling, however, is what I have read since watching the movie. Evidently, several other prisoners and their families take umbrage with the manner in which the movie portrays certain events. Werner Herzog takes liberties with certain facts, giving credit to Dengler when others were responsible, and painting other prisoners in a negative light when, in fact, they were courageous and patriotic throughout the entire ordeal.

    Not knowing the contested history, this movie is a solid contribution to Hollywood's Vietnam oeuvre. It's a tense, harrowing drama, and I'm upset that this is based in even the remotest sense on reality. Knowing that certain portrayals within the movie inaccurately tarnish the legacy of good men who gave their lives upsets me even more.



      Don't forget to check out other celebrity movies:  
    Dolly Parton Movies
    Ashley Tisdale Movies
    Teri Hatcher Movies
    Steven Seagal Movies
    Rhona Mitra Movies
    Brittany Murphy Movies
    Don Johnson Movies
    Emma Watson Movies
    Matt Damon Movies
    Andrea Bowen Movies
    Hilary Duff Movies
    Jack Nicholson Movies
    Laura Linney Movies
    Rachael Leigh Cook Movies
    Evan Rachel Wood Movies
    Dakota Fanning Movies
    Mary Elizabeth Winstead Movies
    Brittany Snow Movies
    Audrey Tautou Movies
    Dirk Benedict Movies
    Kate Beckinsale Movies
    Hayden Panettiere Movies
    Jake Gyllenhaal Movies
    Natalie Portman Movies
    Sienna Miller Movies
    Chazz Palminteri Movies
    Portia De Rossi Movies
    Andy Garcia Movies
    Adam Sandler Movies
    James Caan Movies
    Emilie de Ravin Movies
    Dominique Swain Movies
    Julianna Margulies Movies
    Christina Applegate Movies
    Brooke Burke Movies
    Drew Carey Movies
    Ellen Pompeo Movies
    Hilary Swank Movies
    Leonardo DiCaprio Movies
    Warwick Davis Movies