Courage Under Fire (1996)
A US Army officer, who made a "friendly fire" mistake that was covered up, has been reassigned to a desk job. He is tasked to investigate a female chopper commander's worthiness to be awarded the Medal of Honor. At first all seems in order. But then he begins to notice inconsistencies between the testimonies of the witnesses...
- Edward Zwick
- Skip Cosper
- Jane Goldsmith
- Patrick Sheane Duncan
Rating: 6.505/10 by 910 users
Alternative Title:
Valor bajo fuego - AR
Mut zur Wahrheit - AT
Кураж под огъня - BG
Coragem Sob Fogo - BR
Le courage à l'épreuve - CA
Mut zur Wahrheit - DE
Det afgørende bevis - DK
Vaprus tule all - EE
En honor a la verdad - ES
Tulikokeessa - FI
À l'épreuve du feu - FR
To timima tou tharrous - GR
A bátrak igazsága - HU
Ometz Tahat Esh - IL
Il coraggio della verità - IT
Abejotina drasa - LT
Tapperhet i strid - NO
Valor bajo fuego - PE
Szalona odwaga - PL
Coragem Debaixo de Fogo - PT
Curaj în linia întâi - RO
Hrabrost u borbi - RS
Мужество в бою - RU
I sanningens namn - SE
Pravi pogum - SI
Ates altinda cesaret - TR
À l’épreuve du feu - FR
Country:
United States of America
Language:
English
Runtime: 01 hour 56 minutes
Budget: $46,000,000
Revenue: $100,900,000
Plot Keyword: gulf war, war veteran, politics, praise, pilot, rescue mission, dead soldier, tank, us army, medal, battlefield, behind enemy lines, military, army life
What makes this film stand out (a little) is the intimate style of photography. The POV camerawork gives us a proximity to the story and characters that we rarely see. Sadly, though, the story itself is a little bit thin. Denzel Washington is tasked with investigating the worthiness of a deceased helicopter pilot during the Gulf war to receive the medal of honor. Assuming it would be a routine ratification, he interviews her crew only to find discrepancies and inconstancies that cast a shadow over the whole procedure. Had this just been a routine wartime tale, then it might have been ok - but the fact that it is based around a real wartime scenario, and married together with that sickly trumpet-based pseudo-military score and an annoyingly "Semper Fi" sort of mentality, the whole thing just sinks down into a mire of absurdity and sentimentality. Neither Denzel Washington nor Meg Ryan really have the weight to give this film any bite, oomph - or, for that matter, plausibility. Matt Damon makes some impact but I couldn't quite decide whether that was because he was good, or because it was interesting to see him before stardom set it in - but either way, this is pretty much devoid of action, and the dialogue could have been written by the US Army recruitment office. They all look great in their uniforms, though!