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DramaHistoryWar

The Thin Red Line

- Every man fights his own war.

The story of a group of men, an Army Rifle company called C-for-Charlie, who change, suffer, and ultimately make essential discoveries about themselves during the fierce World War II battle of Guadalcanal. It follows their journey, from the surprise of an unopposed landing, through the bloody and exhausting battles that follow, to the ultimate departure of those who survived.

Release Date : 1998-12-23

Language :EnglishJapaneseGreek

Adult : false

Status : Released

Production Company : Fox 2000 PicturesPhoenix PicturesPioneer FilmsGeorge Stevens Jr. ProductionsGeisler-Roberdeau Productions

Production Country : United States of America

Alternative Titles :

Cast

Jim Caviezel

Character Name : Pvt. Robert Witt

Original Name : Jim Caviezel

Gender : Male

Ben Chaplin

Character Name : Pvt. Jack Bell

Original Name : Ben Chaplin

Gender : Male

Dash Mihok

Character Name : Pfc. Don Doll

Original Name : Dash Mihok

Gender : Male

Woody Harrelson

Character Name : Sgt. William Keck

Original Name : Woody Harrelson

Gender : Male

Nick Nolte

Character Name : Lt. Col. Gordon Tall

Original Name : Nick Nolte

Gender : Male

Sean Penn

Character Name : 1st Sgt. Edward Welsh

Original Name : Sean Penn

Gender : Male

John Cusack

Character Name : Capt. John Gaff

Original Name : John Cusack

Gender : Male

Adrien Brody

Character Name : Cpl. Geoffrey Fife

Original Name : Adrien Brody

Gender : Male

John Travolta

Character Name : Brig. Gen. David Quintard

Original Name : John Travolta

Gender : Male

Jared Leto

Character Name : 2nd Lt. William Whyte

Original Name : Jared Leto

Gender : Male

George Clooney

Character Name : Capt. Charles Bosche

Original Name : George Clooney

Gender : Male

Elias Koteas

Character Name : Capt. James Staros

Original Name : Elias Koteas

Gender : Male

John C. Reilly

Character Name : Sgt. Maynard Storm

Original Name : John C. Reilly

Gender : Male

John Dee Smith

Character Name : Pvt. Edward Train

Original Name : John Dee Smith

Gender : Male

Kirk Acevedo

Character Name : Pvt. Alfredo Tella

Original Name : Kirk Acevedo

Gender : Male

Mark Boone Junior

Character Name : Pvt. Christopher Peale

Original Name : Mark Boone Junior

Gender : Male

Matt Doran

Character Name : Pvt. Howard Coombs

Original Name : Matt Doran

Gender : Male

Paul Gleeson

Character Name : 1st Lt. George "Brass" Band

Original Name : Paul Gleeson

Gender : Male

Don Harvey

Character Name : Sgt. Paul Becker

Original Name : Don Harvey

Gender : Male

Arie Verveen

Character Name : Pfc. Charlie Dale

Original Name : Arie Verveen

Gender : Male

Thomas Jane

Character Name : Pvt. Ash

Original Name : Thomas Jane

Gender : Male

Donal Logue

Character Name : Marl (uncredited)

Original Name : Donal Logue

Gender : Male

John Savage

Character Name : Sgt. Jack McCron

Original Name : John Savage

Gender : Male

Nick Stahl

Character Name : Pfc. Edward Bead

Original Name : Nick Stahl

Gender : Male

Miranda Otto

Character Name : Marty Bell

Original Name : Miranda Otto

Gender : Female

Tim Blake Nelson

Character Name : Pvt. Brian Tills

Original Name : Tim Blake Nelson

Gender : Male

Larry Romano

Character Name : Pvt. Frank Mazzi

Original Name : Larry Romano

Gender : Male

Penelope Allen

Character Name : Witt's Mother

Original Name : Penelope Allen

Gender : Female

Danny Hoch

Character Name : Pvt. Leonardo Carni

Original Name : Danny Hoch

Gender : Male

Benjamin Green

Character Name : Melanesian Villager

Original Name : Benjamin Green

Gender : Male

Simon Billig

Character Name : Lt. Col. Billig

Original Name : Simon Billig

Gender : Male

Jarrod Dean

Character Name : Cpl. Thorne

Original Name : Jarrod Dean

Gender : Male

Travis Fine

Character Name : Pvt. Weld

Original Name : Travis Fine

Gender : Male

David Harrod

Character Name : Cpl. Queen

Original Name : David Harrod

Gender : Male

Don Harvey

Character Name : Sgt. Becker

Original Name : Don Harvey

Gender : Male

Michael McGrady

Character Name : Pvt. Floyd

Original Name : Michael McGrady

Gender : Male

Stephen Spacek

Character Name : Cpl. Jenks

Original Name : Stephen Spacek

Gender : Male

Steven Vidler

Character Name : 2nd Lt. Gore

Original Name : Steven Vidler

Gender : Male

Will Wallace

Character Name : Pvt. Hoke

Original Name : Will Wallace

Gender : Male

Todd Wallace

Character Name : Pilot

Original Name : Todd Wallace

Gender : Male

Simon Westaway

Character Name : First Scout

Original Name : Simon Westaway

Gender : Male

Dan Wyllie

Character Name : Medic #1

Original Name : Dan Wyllie

Gender : Male

Randall Craig

Character Name : Navy Gunner (uncredited)

Original Name : Randall Craig

Gender : Male

Kick Gurry

Character Name : (uncredited)

Original Name : Kick Gurry

Gender : Male

Randall Duk Kim

Character Name : Nisei Interpreter (uncredited)

Original Name : Randall Duk Kim

Gender : Male

Darrin Klimek

Character Name : (uncredited)

Original Name : Darrin Klimek

Gender : Male

Dane Moreton

Character Name : Pvt. Alexander (uncredited)

Original Name : Dane Moreton

Gender : Male

Ray Samuelson

Character Name : Navy Soldier (uncredited)

Original Name : Ray Samuelson

Gender : Male

Justin Ward

Character Name : Navy Soldier (uncredited)

Original Name : Justin Ward

Gender : Male

Felix Williamson

Character Name : Private Drake (uncredited)

Original Name : Felix Williamson

Gender : Male

Norman Patrick Brown

Character Name : Pvt. Henry

Original Name : Norman Patrick Brown

Gender : Male

Sam Arnold

Character Name : Sgt Mitchell (uncredited)

Original Name : Sam Arnold

Gender : Male

Reviews

C

CRCulver

@CRCulver

2021-06-23

The circumstances around Terence Malick's The Thin Red Line are sometimes more talked about than the film itself. The reclusive director had made a big splash in the Seventies, but there followed two decades of silence. When he finally reappeared in 1998 to direct this adaptation of James Jones's novel about the Battle of Guadalcanal in World War II, many actors were desperate to work with him and he was able to gather a large ensemble cast. He shot over five hours of footage but had to cut it down to three, leaving out many actors entirely from the finished version. The Thin Red Line tells of the American battle against Japanese forces on the island from the landing on its beach to the time the initial troops are relieved and sail off for some new, unknown deployment. But it actually begins shortly before this when Private Witt (Jim Caviezel), who has been AWOL and living with the local Melanesian people on a nearby island, is discovered by a patrol and brought in before his sargeant. The battle itself involves the men of C Company, 1st Battalion, 27th Infantry Regiment, 25th Infantry Division: besides Caviezel as Witt, major roles are played by Sean Penn, Woody Harrelson, Adrien Brody and Ben Chaplin. Elias Koteas is Capt. Staros, who tries to look out for his men, while a hyperbolic Nick Nolte plays their commander who sees the infantry as nothing but cannon fodder to wrecklessly throw at the Japanese. For most of its 3-hour length, the men are torn apart by Japanese machine gun fire as they try to take a hill, but the enemy is never directly seen. Between scenes of great violence, there are portentous voiceovers by various characters as they meditate on what war says about the larger human drama. Eventually US forces are able to overcome Japanese positions, and the Japanese side of the offensive is depicted with more fairness and equanimity than in most American films on the Pacific Theatre of the war. While the realistic depiction of battle might touch viewers -- and its hard to knock any World War II film since they spur one to read more about this crucial event in history, this is not a great film. It has obviously been cut heavily from its original length. John C. Reilly appears several times at the centre of shots, clearly meant to be a major character, but most of his scenes and all of his back story were cut. The philosophic voiceovers come across as pretentious instead of insightful. Furthermore, I find this a very "Hollywood" film, with the acting often exaggerated. Woody Harrelson doesn't play a WWII grunt, he plays Woody Harrelson. George Clooney appears at the end and all realism goes out the window: there's no way this suave, handsome leading man has been fighting a war for some time now. Hans Zimmer's musical score too obviously pulls the audience towards prescribed emotions.

B

badelf

@badelf

2022-09-17

As war movies go, this one sucks. I'm pretty sure (although I didn't read it, that the novel (and maybe original screenplay) must have been fantastic, but Terrence Malick really bungled this: no clear vision, no character investment, a ridiculous amount of stupid jump cuts. I was willing to quit 40% into the film but my wife wanted to see the rest (as almost kind of a challenge to see if she could spot another of the many famous that wanted to work with him (and probably regretted it later).

G

GenerationofSwine

@GenerationofSwine

2023-01-12

Yeah, this is pretentious. And what makes it worse is that in all of it's art house pomp, it doesn't come across so much as anti-war as it does anti- stopping the Japanese and Germans from their genocidal bid for world domination. It was like they were saying that they are devoutly on the left... so much so that they support the axis powers if only because the alternative is the United States and Democracy and that is somehow more... fascist(?). I don't know, the film suffers from schizophrenia and the message gets lost when you realize that it's a World War II story and not a Vietnam story and that it is kind of taking the wrong side of WWII in it's effort to call America a fascist nation. But, you get pointless meandering diatribes and A-list actors in a horrible movie. The good news is that it looks pretty... but I don't think the final product is what the writer of this and From Here to Eternity had in mind.

C

CinemaSerf

@Geronimo1967

2023-08-28

This is a captivating and stunningly photographed depiction of the horrors of jungle warfare. Jim Caviezel is "Witt" - apprehended from some unofficial leave by his Sergeant "Welsh" (Sean Penn) and is interned aboard a troop ship pending court-martial. All of that due process is soon abandoned as their squad is assigned to take an important hill position from an entrenched Japanese force on Guadalcanal. It is a very untypical film, this - whilst there is certainly plenty of action, pyrotechnics, bullets (and limbs) flying all round, this is a much more cerebral look at the impact of war. The claustrophobia - even in the open air - of people who neither lived nor slept in peace or safety for weeks on end; their weariness and exhaustion, their dedication, bravery and - it has to be said, moments of fear and doubt is presented to us using some strong and potent characterisations. Even the moments of victory are tempered with sorrow and reality - the opposing forces are humanised to an extent that makes this whole thought-provoking story more poignant. Penn is good, as is their overbearing CO "Col. Tail" (Nick Nolte) and a strong ensemble cast of faces - famous and less so - sustain this well for much of the almost three hours it is on screen. What struck me most about the settings were just how inherently hostile they were to human beings at the best of times, and yet there we were fighting over them - palm tress and beautifully coloured birds!

B

BornKnight

@BornKnight

2023-12-21

Terrence Mallick is just making movies, and probably my favorite director among all, and he is responsible for the direction and screenplay. One characteristic of Mallicks movie is the dream-like essence on his way to approach the direction and cinematography and here were are not far from this: many of the acne narrations are like phrases resonating inside the (many) characters minds, and the paradisiac movie beginning sequence with a soldier AWOL into a melanesian tribe, played by Jim Caviezel (Pvt. Robert E. Lee Witt) in a scene that correlates with one of the final scenes of the movie. With a Budget of $52 million and Box office of $98.1 million, it has been nominated for 8 Academy Awards, winning none. One factor maybe is the bad decision of the year for the release: the same year that “Saving Private Ryan” by Steven Spielberg was going on the big screen (it had 11 nominations and 5 wins). An incredible assemble of actors, many in minor roles, the movie doesn’t have only one protagonist, although it revolves by the character based on the author of the books played by Adrien Brody (as Cpl. Geoffrey Fife). The cinematography by John Toll (Braveheart, Vanilla Sky, The Last Samurai, Cloud Atlas) is just suburb it is a beautiful yet haunting movie to see, the way it focused on the wildlife and vegetation while carnage rolls on the background - it was shoot 100 days in Australia Daintree Rainforest and Bramston Beach, 24 days in Solomon Islands and 3 in US. The edition work is by Billy Weber, Leslie Jones, Saar Klein (team that had previous works with Mallicks and knows of his habit of lining up the right movie in the edition room). The music is by Hans Zimmer (Lion King, Dune, Gladiator). The use of the Malaysian chorus in some scenes is just awesome. Story-wise it is the soulful version of the 1962 book “The Thin Red Line” by James Jones (already made into a movie in 1964) , based on his real experiences in the Battle of Guadalcanal in WWII, when he was around 20yo. I watched the 2:50h version and then the Criterion restored version, the one that has the 18 min of cut out scenes that didn't make it on the final theatrical cut version, with some actors parts completely out. I wish someday those scenes could be seen in any way. The story tells about the men of C Company, 1st Battalion, 27th Infantry Regiment, 25th Infantry Division, who have been brought to the island of Guadalcanal as reinforcements in the campaign to secure Henderson Field, seize the island from the Japanese, and block off their route to Australia. As they wait in the hold of a Navy transport ship, they contemplate their lives and the upcoming invasion. This may be one of the few times I disagree with Roger Ebert's vision of a dissociative movie between what the director wants and what the actor plays. I totally understand the version for a realistic action / drama movie but understand what the director made - on how many such dramatic moments in our lives snes pass like a dream or flow of thoughts? But on one aspect I agree the phrases are totally disconnected from what the characters are, too educated and less worldly. Still with this defect I can say that I enjoyed the movie a lot, but it isn’t just for everyone. One of the few movies that I gave a 9.6 score out of 10.0 / A+.