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84 Charlie Mopic [VHS] | ![84 Charlie Mopic [VHS]](http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/21T4FYZ926L._SL160_.jpg) | Director: Patrick Sheane Duncan Actors: Jonathan Emerson, Nicholas Cascone, Jason Tomlins, Christopher Burgard, Glenn Morshower Studio: Sony Pictures Category: Video
List Price: $14.95 Buy Used: $4.24 as of 9/4/2010 04:34 CDT details You Save: $10.71 (72%)
New (1) Used (11) from $4.24
Seller: BOOKS-FOR-EVERYBODY Rating: 41 reviews Sales Rank: 2283
Format: Color, NTSC Languages: English (Original Language), Vietnamese (Original Language) Rating: R (Restricted) Media: VHS Tape Number Of Items: 1 Running Time: 95 Minutes Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.4 Dimensions (in): 7.3 x 4.2 x 1.1
ISBN: 6301538196 UPC: 043396099432 EAN: 9786301538190 ASIN: 6301538196
Theatrical Release Date: April 7, 1989 Release Date: May 4, 1995 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Showing reviews 1-5 of 41
Great movie November 14, 2009 J. Signorino (Austin, TX) I wasn't looking at the movie for tactics because I was not there and only know tactics from what I read and common sense. I looked at it for a sense of forgetting it was a film and enjoying the story. A story of a team and how they worked together through so much stress. For that, it really caught me and is one of my favorites. Yes, you can scrutinize it for tactics or would 84 Charlie filming really look like that in a story format, but I didn't want those thoughts in my mind and took it for what it was, a movie trying to convey.
The Big One There WW Nam June 12, 2009 Greenknight01 (Some where in New England) I never served in the "Big One" there WW-Nam, but I did serve in the Active Army and Reserves for 23 Years. Fighting in Viet Nam for the most part was nothing like WW2 or Korea. Some service people engaged in sustained combat but that was the exception. Most of the time in Vietnam was long periods of extreme bordom followed by brief intense violence. There is no question of the toll Vietnam took on vets and they have never been properly honored by our nation!
This movie is a product of Hollyweird so get over it, guys! It is an exceptionally good war story. And yes camera men who were not "Snake-eaters" did go in LRP/SpecOps missions, with Seals in Rung Sat, and the Mekong, with Marine Recon in the highlands, and with LRPs all over. My cousin was one of them. This is a unique film, but it is not tactics, techniques, and procedures for deep recon patroling. The ending is unique, as is the novel primise of the film. War Photojournalists have been telling the story since WW2, and this story honors their contribution.
I also recommend Platoon Leader, Hamberger Hill, The Siege of Firebase Gloria, and Go tell the Spartans. Avoid Platoon, Casualties Of War, Born On The Fourth Of July, Some Kind Of Hero, and simular trash. You dicide on The Deer Hunter, Apocalypse Now, Full Metal Jacket, etc.
Vietnam to Afghanistan January 4, 2009 05/11A (Overseas) The film is one of the best. For those who did not live that era; those that served in the Army usually were draftees or were "forced" to join in lieu of fines or incarceration for minor offenses. That said, from that mix came those who volunteered-many like the men in the film. Those that served in the many recon units to include the 82nd, 173rd, 25th and the 101st.
The men depicted in this film were from the recon unit of the 173rd ABN ("The Herd") and historically the only unit to make a combat jump in Vietnam as a unit.
The battle of Wanat in the northeastern region of Afghanistan several months ago was the worse single death(s) since the Vietnam War-in this case, troopers of the 173rd were in an observation post and overrun, whereas nine (9) were killed. Several were killed attempting to run the ammo re-supply gauntlet under intense AK and RPG fire.
Like the men depicted in 84 Charlie MoPic, the men of the 173rd killed that day at Wanat, Afghanistan were society where college was not a viable option, were from normally small towns throughout American with few real opportunities.
In closing, 1969 in the jungles of Vietnam or the hills of Afghanistan and Pakistan, US American soldiers are "out there" doing what soldiers do under incredible circumstances that the "average' American could not nor cannot comprehend.
And to the producers..thank you!
We will miss them all-
RVN/1969-Afghanistan/2003;Iraq/2006
Overlooked Masterpiece!!! December 6, 2008 Daniel Lisk (Chicago,IL) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
84C Mopic is overlooked and apparently misunderstood to some degree based on some of the less than positive reviews. I would like to address some points which seem to have been lost:
1) This is not a documentary, even though by design it is intended to look and feel like one. It is still a movie, and as such is entitled to some license to tell its story. Yes, there are the somewhat caricatured characters such as the black "OD" & southern white "Cracker" tandem, but they show their love for each other as brothers, and that is a fact for the majority of those who served together at a time when our nation was fighting a class/cultural war back in the US. Much like "there are no atheists in foxholes", there is no place for racism when your life depends on someone else. I thought it showed great depth as Cracker ( a term of affection as it turns out) said in his impromptu interview, when asked about having a problem serving under a man black, said "...why don't you ask me that back in South Carolina? That's a real world question". He relates that he would lay his life on the line for OD, and he would for him.
2) OK, the portrayal of Vietnamese soldiers is limited to fleeting glimpses for the most part, but this is not this movies intention; it's story lies elsewhere.
3) I believe the technical errors were intentional to portray the breakdown in thought and discipline which really occurs in these type of missions. One's nerve and mental state are tested, wonderfully evidenced bt Pretty Boy's comment "Is it paranoid to think people are trying to kill you if people really are trying to kill you?".
These soldiers have experience, they know the right thing to do, they just don't always do it due to the toll that their conditions take.
For instance, noise discipline is mentioned several times, but they just get careless. OD was able to spot trip wires, but the tightly wound Hammer trips one the first time he takes point.
They get sloppy, they make mistakes, hey-they're human beings under pressure. The fact that they have less than seasoned personnel with them is the whole point of the movie, to gain knowledged of experience in the bush by filming it as it happens-that's why Mopic is there, to catch it on film. The LT relates how he wants to fast track his career and pushed hard to be sent on this mission.
Bottom line, think about these things from the point of the story the movie is telling.
And what a story it is. A collection of vastly different characters thrown & drawn together in a deadly survival situation. The charcaters are developed through insightful means, such as the brilliant idea of the interviews done as part of the filming background, as well as their various stories. I could relate to Easy's idea of 'just getting a parking lot' when he gets back home so he can kick back & only have to paint a couple of lines each year for maintenance.
I appreciate this movie and its' story, as well as the performances, which each actor deserve to be very proud of. I think it should be shown as a learning tool to older students, hopefully it will help future generations to learn & figure out how to live without wars.
FIRST TO GO. LAST TO KNOW. July 31, 2008 Fluid Floyd the Aquanoid (Santa Cruz, CA) I served as a mopic during that goddamned war. This flick rings so true. It made me laugh and cry and wish I knew nothing about what happened over there.
Welcome home, brothers!
Showing reviews 1-5 of 41
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