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  • Review count
    13
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    3
  • First review
    September 21, 2007
  • Last review
    May 1, 2008
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    4.5
 
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Bassett's Reviews
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A quickly forgotten chapter in United States military history is relived in this harrowing war drama from director Ridley Scott, based on a series of Philadelphia Inquirer articles and subsequent book by reporter Mark Bowden. On October 3rd, 1993, an elite team of more than 100 Delta Force soldiers and Army Rangers, part of a larger United Nations peacekeeping force, are dropped into civil war-torn Mogadishu, Somalia, in an effort to kidnap two of local crime lord Mohamed Farah Aidid's top lieutenants. Among the team: Staff Sgt. Matt Eversmann (Josh Hartnett), Ranger Lt. Col. Danny McKnight (Tom Sizemore), the resourceful Delta Sgt. First Class Jeff Sanderson (William Fichtner), and Ranger Spec. Grimes (Ewan McGregor), a desk-bound clerk getting his first taste of live combat. When two of the mission's Black Hawk helicopters are shot down by enemy forces, the Americans -- committed to recovering every man, dead or alive -- stay in the area too long and are quickly surrounded. The ensuing firefight is a merciless 15-hour ordeal and the longest ground battle involving American soldiers since the Vietnam War. In the end, 70 soldiers are injured and 18 are dead, along with hundreds of Somalians. Black Hawk Down was voted one of the top ten films of the year by the National Board of Review prior to its limited Oscar-qualifying release. On the basis of his work in this film, co-star Eric Bana, a relatively unknown Australian actor playing Delta Sgt. First Class "Hoot" Gibson, won the lead in director Ang Lee's version of The Hulk (2003).
 
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Customer Rating
5 out of 5
5
3-Disc Film School in a Box
on February 15, 2008
Posted by: Bassett
Film School in a Box in that this 3 disc version has a massive amount of background information, and many commentaries that provide film students with critical perspective on how or why decisions were made in the production of this film.
Notable for the historical documentary information on Disc 3 that, if you are an aspiring filmmaker, allows you to see both the research and historical perspectives that influenced Ridley Scott as a Director. Scott's commentaries, on all his films, are always artistically detailed and inspiring, although sometimes lacking in storytelling originality.
What's great about it: 3 Disc Deluxe Edtion is like a Film School in a Box
I would recommend this to a friend!
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2of 2voted this as helpful.
 
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4 out of 5
4
Give me one more...Laugh
on September 22, 2007
Posted by: Bassett
from Florida
The final episode produced for this TV series. Although the
first season had the funniest lines ever written for a wolf in the history of TV, this last episode had the funniest lines ever written by a wolf ;<).
This struggling series had been dropped by the networks and resumed production with the help of Canadian funding. Maybe the humor is strictly Canadian (law enforcement on horses parachuting from planes), but Leslie Neilsen should leaving you rolling in laughs. In this day and time it's a very funny look at the thwarting of a terrorist plot.
I would recommend this to a friend!
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5 out of 5
5
Laugh 'til I die!
on September 21, 2007
Posted by: Bassett
from Florida
As an animal lover I commend the creator of this show. The 1st season of Due South had the funniest lines ever written for a wolf in the history of television!
Although the creator, as a writer of comedy, went on anonymity as a comedian, he did maintain his serious side as this production foreshadowed.
The truly contentious relationship between Canucks and Americans has never been portrayed with as much
lethargy.
As a fact, the Canadian ownership of everything from a national Airline to a home grown conveyance for law enforcement, a horse, is exploited fully. An archetypal example of the use of the "comic foil".
If you like sarcasm, you'll enjoy this as one of the best first Seasons ever produced for TV. Too bad about the creator, eh?
I would recommend this to a friend!
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