First broadcast on HBO in June of 1998--shortly before the theatrical release of Steven Spielberg's
Saving Private Ryan--this
World War II drama offers an equally intimate and devastating study of
combat and its tragic aftermath. Set in Germany during the closing days
of the war, the film uses a little-known episode of U.S. military
history--the bloody battle of the Hurtigen Forest--as the backdrop for
the story of a battle-weary private (Ron Eldard) who is the only
surviving member of his platoon. Despite his request for dismissal on
the grounds of mental disability and shell-shock, he is considered a
promising soldier by his superiors, promoted to sergeant, and assigned
to command a fresh platoon of young, inexperienced soldiers. The cycle
of war continues, and the film ends as it began--with one soldier
carrying a mortally wounded comrade from a scene of devastating loss. A
veteran of several war films, director John Irvin emphasizes the
gritty, physically exhausting realities of combat with keen attention
to detail on location in Hungary. This film is decidedly downbeat
(don't look for any Spielbergian uplift here), but its depiction of
warfare is undeniably powerful, earning praise for Irvin and HBO for
tackling such an uncompromising project.