Thursday, August 25, 2011

Movie Review: Patton

Patton (1970, PG): *** ½


In my initial star-rating of Patton, I awarded the film a perfect **** star rating.  Satisfied, I slept on that decision, and when I woke up the next morning, I didn’t feel comfortable about that decision.  I lowered my score of Patton to a *** ½ star rating because of a few issues I have with the film.  I am a history buff, so I felt disappointed that a few things in the movie were left out.  To start this off, Patton is a three hour long epic movie, and yet, bits and pieces of it feel rushed, particularly towards the end, as the film excludes Patton smashing through the Siegfried Line and crossing the Rhine River, his liberating of POW Camps, and, tragically, his death.  The film is already three hours long, why not extend it to three and a half hours and include all of these necessary events?  Otherwise, Patton is an excellent film; an onscreen biography that has probably only been surpassed by Lawrence of Arabia.  The opening famous scene with Patton giving a speech in front of the American flag is memorable.  The scene depicting the Battle of El Guettar is masterfully recreated.  What’s more, this film goes deep into the man of the title role, an eccentric and yet brilliant military tactician, and tackles ideas that other mainstream films would most likely avoid.  Patton is a very, very well made World War II film completed in epic formation, and never loses its grip on the fascinating history it’s portraying.  Directed by Franklin J. Schaffner. 

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