"Pearl Harbor" Movie Review
Pearl Harbor is an Oscar-winning war film released in the summer of 2001 by Touchstone Pictures. It stars Ben Affleck, Alec Baldwin, Jon Voight, Josh Hartnett, Kate Beckinsale, Cuba Gooding Jr., Dan Aykroyd, Jaime King, and Jennifer Garner. It was a dramatic re-imagining of theattack on Pearl Harbor, produced by the team of Jerry Bruckheimer and Michael Bay, who had previously directed summer mega-blockbusters such as Armageddon and The Rock. The final section of the movie relates the Doolittle Raid, the first American attack on the
Japanese home islands in World War II.

Jerry Bruckheimer and Michael Bay launched a full out attack on moviegoers on May 25th. "Pearl Harbor" exploded onto the big screen with an impressive publicity campaign that had fans, websites, and other media outlets, counting down the days until its Memorial Day Weekend release. "Pearl Harbor's" approved budget of $145 million made it the biggest movie budget ever to get greenlit. The approved $145 million had to be knocked down to $135 after Joe Roth left Disney to run Revolution Studios. Bay and Bruckheimer waived their front-end salaries to squeeze in under the new budget, and Ben Affleck agreed to work for the low upfront salary of $250,000, and a share of the profits - if there ends up being any. Moviegoers will ultimately determine whether the $135+ million budget was spent wisely, and whether the film is a rip-off of America's history or a fitting tribute to the men and women who served our country during wartime.
While most of the publicity has centered around the battle scenes and the reenactment of Japan's attack on Pearl Harbor, the movie itself is more of a love story in which there just happens to be a war breaking out. Ben Affleck stars as Rafe, a cocky fighter pilot who lives to fly. Josh Hartnett is his lifelong buddy, Danny, an equally talented flyer, and Rafe's polar opposite in the personality department. He's mild-mannered, humble, even a bit of an introvert. Their friendship has endured since their youth, growing up together on a farm, dreaming of becoming pilots. Both end up as pilots stationed together in the U.S. Air Force, honing their talents and chomping at the bit to put their fighter pilot skills to the test in actual combat.
Kate Beckinsale, looking beautiful and straight out of a 1940's glamour magazine, is Evelyn, the nurse who wins the hearts of both Rafe and Danny. Rafe meets her first during an examination to determine fitness for duty. He charms and clowns his way into a date, and the two fall quickly in love. Rafe leaves Evelyn and Danny behind when he volunteers for a tour of duty with the British Royal Air Force. As a member of the highly respected "Eagle Squadron," Rafe battles the Nazis while America remains uninvolved in combat. Word reaches Danny in Pearl Harbor that Rafe has been shot down and is presumed dead. Danny and Evelyn eventually turn to each other for comfort, and wind up in each other's arms.
The love story consumes a good two-thirds of the film with military maneuverings and the attack on Pearl Harbor taking a backseat to the romance. True, the love story is a bit clichéd and the history lesson included in the film is oversimplified. However, as "Saving Private Ryan" proved so stunningly able to do, this film brings the war and the honorable men and women who lived through it or died fighting it, back to the collective forefront of the minds of audiences who, prior to the film, may not recall much about the battle. Chances are good an overwhelming percentage of filmgoers who pay to see this romantic drama based on the devastatingly real event, weren't even alive on December 7, 1941.
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