Jeri
Jacquin
Coming
to Bluray, DVD and Digital from director Roland Emmerich and Lionsgate Home
Entertainment comes the story of one of the biggest battles against Japan on
MIDWAY.
On
December 7, 1942, Japan surprise attacked Pearl Harbor and the one person not
surprised is Lt. Commander Edwin Layton (Patrick Wilson) who had been trying to
tell anyone who would listen of an impending attack. Lt. Dick Best (Ed Skrein)
returns home to learn of the death of his friends with wife Anne (Mandy Moore)
helping him to grieve.
On
ship is Vice Admiral Bull Halsey (Dennis Quaid) waiting for orders to stop the
Japanese. His aviation crew include Lt. Commander Wade McClusky (Luke Evans).
Put in charge of a plan along with Lt. Cmdr. Layton is Admiral Chester Nimitz
(Woody Harrelson) who looks to a group of code breakers led by Commander
Rochefort (Brennan Brown).
The
first strike is for Lt. Col. Jimmy Doolittle (Aaron Eckhart) and his men to fly
to Tokyo and carpet bomb the city. The Japanese are caught by surprise not ever
believing it was possible for the United States military to strike back so
quickly.
Leading
the Japanese fleet is Rear Admiral Tamon Yamaguchi (Tadanobu Asano), Vice
Admiral Chuichi Nagumo (Jun Kunimura) and Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto (Etsushi
Toyokawa). Pearl Harbor isn’t their only target as the plan now includes
Midway. Gathering all their forces, they are confident that no one sees them
coming and victory is sure.
With
so much ship loss at Pearl Harbor, the ships that are left have to come
together as well as planes and pilots to make the plan work. Lt. Best and Lt.
Cmdr. McClusky go to their men with confidence to let them know that they must
give it their all and remember their fallen friends. As the battle for Midway
approaches, Nimitz and Layton trust the information given to them by the code
breakers to stay ahead of the plan, Best and McClusky fly for their lives as
everyone does their part.
It
is the history of taking one step at a time to win.
Skrein
as Best is a man who is a little dangerous in the sky, but he wants to be
prepared for any eventuality. With each battle, he only wants to go home to his
wife and daughter. Using every bit of his flying experience and a little bit of
his grit, Skrein gives his character bravery and the will to fight. Moore as
wife Anne is a lady, I’d call a spitfire. She knows that what her husband does
is dangerous and holds her breath with each bit of news that all the wives can know.
Harrelson
as Nimitz is brought into the fight at the time of Pearl Harbor. He has to
trust those around him for the information knowing that more American soldiers
will die and that’s a hard job to have. Wilson as Layton tried to warn his
superiors about what Japan was capable of and they didn’t listen. When given
the opportunity to show what he knows and how he knows it, Wilson gives his
character strength and determination to stand by Rochefort.
Quaid
as Halsey shows his character as a gritty leader who, like everyone else, wants
to stop the Japanese fleet from destroying anything else or getting to the west
coast of the United States. He may be gruff, but he knows what is necessary to
win. Evans as McClusky thinks Best is a reckless pilot but since Pearl Harbor
realizes that perhaps reckless, in this case, is a brave thing that is needed
in the fight.
Kunimura,
Toyokawa and Asano have the difficult roles of the Admirals (Rear and Vice) who
feel strong that they can win. Pearl Harbor gives these characters a feeling of
invincibility and feel Midway is the next reasonable step in their plan. What
they do not expect is that the United States military forces have banned
together with a plan of their own and they will stop at nothing to punish the
Japanese fleet.
Other
cast include Alexander Ludwig as Lt. Roy Pearce, Keean Johnson as Chief
Aviation Radioman James Murray, Luke Kleintank as Lt. Clarence Earle Dickinson,
Brandon Sklenar as Ensign George Gay, Jake Manley as Ensign Willie West, Darren
Criss as Lt. Commander Eugene Lindsey, Jake Weber as Rear Admiral Raymond
Spruance, James Carpinello as Captain Brockman, Geoffrey Blake as John Ford,
Greg Hovanessian as Lieutenant Arizona, David Hewlett as Admiral Kimmel, Mark
Rolston as Admiral King and Nick Jonas as Aviation Machinist Mate Bruno Gaido.
Lionsgate
is a global leader in motion picture production and distribution for theatres,
television, home entertainment and more. Theatre franchises include THE HUNGER
GAMES, and DIVERGENT along with JOHN WICK. Now, adding this film to its 16,000
motion picture and television titles you can see everything coming soon as well
as available now at http://www.lionsgate.com.
The
Bonus Materials of MIDWAY are Audio Commentary by Roland Emmerich, “Getting
It Right: The Making of Midway, The Men of Midway, Roland Emmerich: Man on a
Mission, Turning Point: The Legacy of Midway, Joe Rochefort: Breaking the
Japanese Code, We Met at Midway: Two Survivors Remember, Optional English SDH
and Spanish Subtitles for the Main Feature and Theatrical Trailer.
MIDWAY
is exactly, first, what you’d expect from director Roland Emmerich coming in at
127 minutes long. A Master of Special Effect
and the big bangs, the battle scenes on the screen are epic (as I suspect they
were in real life). Beginning with the Pearl Harbor attack until the final
battle for Midway, the film gives the feeling of all the films Hollywood put
out in the 50’s and 60’s that I watched growing up. My father was a Gunner’s
Mate on many of Navy ships from aircraft carriers to destroyers like the
Hornet, Boxer, Constellation and Kitty Hawk.
So,
I watched many, many films IN HARMS WAY (1965), THE LONGEST DAY (1962), SANDS
OF IWO JIMA (1949), FROM HERE TO ETERNITY (1953), TORA! TORA! TORA! (1973) and
the list is endless. I am well versed in war films, so I expect a lot. Emmerich
spends very little time depicting the attack on Pearl Harbor because it has
been done so many times before. He gets in, makes it clear and moves on because
the goal in the storytelling is what happened next and next and next.
The
actors themselves did well with what they were given. There were a few moments
where I felt nostalgic with lines being delivered in such a way that I felt I
was watching a 50’s/60’s war film instead of 2019. The characters were
righteously angry because, let’s face it, no one who saw, was part of and
survived Pearl Harbor could ever be the same again.
Skrein,
Evans and the rest of the actors portraying the pilots were amazing to my way
of thinking. The pilots job back then was to focus on a target and get the job
done, that’s how Skrein and Evans made it look and feel which is totally successful
in my eyes. Harrelson and Wilson together made a dynamic duo doing something
totally different than their predecessors in the job. Harrelson gave his Nimitz
portrayal an opportunity to trust when there was really nothing else left and
Wilson’s portrayal of Layton jumps in as if to say, ‘we can’t do it the old
ways anymore’.
What
the film lacks in dialogue it makes up for in Emmerich battles and constant
action. He proves over and over again with such films as INDEPENDENCE DAY,
STARGATE (both personal favorites of mine), THE DAY AFTER TOMORROW, and
INDEPENDENCE DAY: Resurgence, and the best disaster film that is a guilty
pleasure with the film 2012. He knows what is epic and MIDWAY falls into that
category with ease.
Prepare
to revisit MIDWAY!
In
the end – they awoke a sleeping giant!
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