"There are things
men can do to one another
that are sobering
to the soul.
It is one thing to
reconcile these things with God,
but another to
square it with yourself."
Nearly 10 years after the hugely successful 10 part
mini-series Band Of Brothers, producers Steven Spielberg & Tom Hanks and
HBO reteam for the World War II mini-series companion piece The Pacific. It focuses primarily on three marines from separate
regiments of U.S. Marine Corps in the Pacific Theater of Operations. Based on the tormented memoirs of Eugene
Sledge, Robert Leckie and the life of John Basilone, The Pacific has a bit of a
difficult time narrowing down into a coherent, smooth narrative which hurts the
series a bit. With this baffling
choice, we're never fully involved with the characters to feel as deeply for
them that we did with the men in Easy Company.
Another weakness with the series is it's lack of focus on
someone in charge of the tactical side of the Pacific War seeing as we learn
next to nothing about a lot of the questionable maneuvers they made. It's
one war-torn terrain to the next, without giving us any idea what exactly was
going on with the placements of the marine themselves. Band Of
Brothers educated us with the tactical side of the war, the hands-on violent
side and the hearts & minds of the soldiers, while The Pacific relies a little to heavily on the doom & gloom of
overly long battle sequences that aren't much different from episode to
episode. This might work in a 3 hour film but to drag it out over 10 hours is simply not interesting enough to remain effective.
Where it does excel in, is it's brutal honesty and will to take
risks in horrifying the viewer with questionable actions from the protagonists. Normally, we're led to believe
soldiers and marines are nothing but heroic, where as here these guys do some
pretty terrible things to their enemy, each other and themselves. It's unsettling to think human beings could perform senseless acts like this but something we need to know and never forget.
With some jaw-dropping production values, wonderful
performances from Jurrasic Park's Joseph Mazzello, Rubicon's James Badge Dale
and Treme's John Seda, beautifully frightening music from Hans Zimmer, Geoff
Zanelli & Blake Neely and some unforgettable stark scenes of brutality,
violence and despair, The Pacific is definitely better than most television
today. It's just unfortunately had a
lot to live up to, compared to the near-perfect Band Of Brothers.
10 Episodes. Roughly 60 minutes each.
10 Episodes. Roughly 60 minutes each.
Buyer’s Guide:
Available in both DVD and Blu-Ray sets on it’s own and packaged with it’s companion series Band Of Brothers.
Available in both DVD and Blu-Ray sets on it’s own and packaged with it’s companion series Band Of Brothers.
3½ letters that will never make it home out of 5
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