Hollywood really should have went for it all . . . have the Duke on the quarterdeck of the Constitution defeating the Franco-Spanish fleet at Trafalger, Errol Flynn and the 7th cavalry at Balaclava, 3rd Army at El Alamein, the possibilities are endless. It did lead to some great moments in cinematic history, however. Watching the Duke play a mongol in Tamerlane may have been one of the unintentionally funniest films of all time. Either that or River's Edge.
ORIGINAL: niceguy2005
Thin Red Line stunk to high heaven. I dont know if you can even qualify it as a war movie.
Thin Red Line was about war to a degree; it did have battle scenes after all. I just think it was more complex than a let's-go-get-this-paratrooper-home film. It was about the corporate psychology of war, man's role in nature, man's inhumanity to man . . . I'll stop before I hurl. Malik's screenplay/dialogue was the same in Brave New World, that kind of internal monologue where a person is always questioning reality, motivation, etc. So much so that there is never an answer. You either like it or you don't. I don't like it, but at least it's different. Travolta and Nolte as officers wasn't exactly inspired casting either.