"take the five dollars you almost wasted on IHW and buy/rent John Ford's THEY WERE EXPENDABLE, THE definitive film on the early days of the Pacific War" --
I know I speak heresy but, evenknowing that THEY WERE EXPENDABLE was meant to be a more elegaic view of the Pacific war, I've always found It a deadly dull film with very little real action or even that many interesting character moments. Meanwhile, IN HARM'S WAY remains a satisfying "stick-to-your-ribs" cinematic meal that passes it's almost three hours pretty painlessly, despite the chaos (intended, I hasten to add) that the final sea
battle falls into. (Then, I can't say I've ever found anything written by the great Wendell Mayes uninteresting--well, maybe MONSIGNOR.)
I had the great good fortune to see IN HARM'S WAY in a Chicago promotional premiere in 70mm six track stereo as an impressionable high school senior, and it was quite the movie-going experience, especially the bottom end on Goldsmith's electronically garnished cue for the Japanese fleet's running of the Pala Passage sequence. The only thing that still disappoints is the use of
old stock footage (probably the big reason the film is in black-and-white) and the fact that in the Pearl Harbor attack sequence Preminger found no way to put attacking planes and bombed ships in the same shot.
It also remains, in my opinion, the last film that Wayne did any real acting in, not just trading on his screen persona, and exhibiting some true chemistry with Patricia Neal who holds the screen admirably in her scenes with Wayne.
Goldsmith's score is the icing on the cake, showing a young up-and-comer
putting forth his best "game on" effort.
Last edited by vinylscrubber on Sun Jun 14, 2009 9:58 am, edited 1 time in total.
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