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poster of M*A*S*H
Rating: 6.961/10 by 1021 users

M*A*S*H (1970)

The staff of a Korean War field hospital use humor and hijinks to keep their sanity in the face of the horror of war. Preserved by the Academy Film Archive in partnership with Twentieth Century Fox Film Corporation in 2000.

Directing:
  • Robert Altman
  • Ray Taylor Jr.
  • Lester Hoyle
Writing:
  • Ring Lardner, Jr.
  • Richard Hooker
Stars:
Release Date: Wed, Feb 18, 1970

Rating: 6.961/10 by 1021 users

Alternative Title:
风流军医俏护士 - CN
MASH - Mobile Army Surgical Hospital - DE
매시 - KR
야전 병원 MASH - KR
Військово-польовий шпиталь - UA
M-A-S-H - US
MASH - US

Country:
United States of America
Language:
English
日本語
한국어/조선말
Runtime: 01 hour 56 minutes
Budget: $3,500,000
Revenue: $81,600,000

Plot Keyword: american football, dark comedy, surgeon, american way of life, korean war (1950-53), military spoof, doctor, surgery, anti war, 1950s, korea, preserved film
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Donald Sutherland
Hawkeye Pierce
Elliott Gould
Trapper John McIntyre
Tom Skerritt
Duke Forrest
Sally Kellerman
Maj. Margaret 'Hot Lips' O'Houlihan
Robert Duvall
Maj. Frank Burns
Roger Bowen
Lt. Col. Henry Blake
René Auberjonois
Father John Mulcahy
David Arkin
St. Major Wade Vollmer
Jo Ann Pflug
Lt. 'Dish' Schneider
Gary Burghoff
Cpl. 'Radar' O'Reilly
Fred Williamson
Dr. Oliver 'Spearchucker' Jones
Michael Murphy
'Me Lai' Marston
Indus Arthur
Lt. Leslie
Ken Prymus
PFC. Seidman
Bobby Troup
Sgt. Gorman
Timothy Brown
Cpl. Judson
John Schuck
Capt. 'Painless' Waldowski
Dawne Damon
Capt. Storch
Carl Gottlieb
'Ugly John'
G. Wood
Brig. Gen. Charles Hammond
Bud Cort
Pvt. Warren Boone
Danny Goldman
Capt. Murrhardt
Corey Fischer
Capt. Bandini
Sylvester Stallone
Soldier (uncredited)
Stephen Altman
Duke's 5-Year-Old Son (uncredited)
Jerry Jones
Motor Pool Sergeant (uncredited)
James B. Douglas
Col. Wallace C. Merril (uncredited)
Gerry Okuneff
Football Player (uncredited)
Cathleen Cordell
Capt. Peterson - Nurse Corps (uncredited)
Ben Davidson
Football Player #88 - 325th Evac. (uncredited)
Joe Amsler
Undetermined Role (uncredited)
Stanford Blum
Football Player (uncredited)
Craig Chudy
Football Player (uncredited)
Jack Concannon
Football Player - 325th Evac. (uncredited)
Michael Consoldane
Football Player - 325th Evac. (uncredited)
Ray Didsbury
Ad Lib Doctor (uncredited)
Tom Falk
Corporal (uncredited)
John Fujioka
Japanese Golf Pro (uncredited)
Lynn Grate
Undetermined Role (uncredited)
Joanne Hahn
Ward Nurse (uncredited)
Sumi Haru
Japanese Nurse (uncredited)
Buck Holland
Helicopter Pilot (uncredited)
Susan Ikeda
Japanese Caddie (uncredited)
Dale Ishimoto
Korean Doctor (uncredited)
Joe Kapp
Football Player - 325th Evac. (uncredited)
Weaver Levy
Korean Doctor (uncredited)
Harvey Levine
2nd Lieutenant (uncredited)
Sam A. Mides
Football Player (uncredited)
Monica Peterson
Pretty W.A.C. Receptionist (uncredited)
David Sachs
Surgeon #1 (uncredited)
Ron Stein
Football Player (uncredited)
Fran Tarkenton
Football Player - 325th Evac. (uncredited)
Johnny Unitas
Football Player - 325th Evac. (uncredited)
Greg Walker
Undetermined Role (uncredited)
Hiroko Watanabe
Japanese Prostitute (uncredited)
Don Watters
Football Player (uncredited)
Ron Way
Football Player (uncredited)

Filipe Manuel Neto

**Without ever becoming a classic, this is a film that had its own space and time.** There are certain films that, despite being forty or fifty years old, seem to maintain all their relevance and pertinence. These films generally surpass the test of time and continue to win new audiences, generation after generation. On the other hand, there are films that are a portrait of the time in which they were made, and belong to that specific time and need to be understood in the light of that particular moment. The plot unfolds during the Korean War, which occurred shortly after the Second World War and divided two countries that are still at war, although it is a frozen conflict. The action focuses on a mobile medical unit near the front line, where a group of doctors and nurses seek, through humor and sarcasm, to lighten the tense environment and forget the surrounding danger, ignoring and mocking their superiors. As you can see, we cannot understand the film without delving into the mentality of the 70s. At a time when American youth were shouting for peace and against the war in Vietnam, what film would make more sense than a comic parody of the army? Korea had been recent and did not have the almost sacred nature of participation in the Second World War, it was acceptable to play with that and have bearded doctors, 100% hippie style, drunk or semi-drugged, doing antics that, in real circumstances, would lead them to court-martial. If this film had been released just ten years earlier, we would have had something totally different, but this is the decade of Flower Power, of peace and love. Robert Altman provides reasonably effective direction. The recreation of the time, and the environments of the military field, is done with technical care. There was a lot of authentic war material that could be used in the design of sets and costumes, and it is quite likely that some witness told what those mobile health units were like, and what was done there. However, the script lacks unity and cohesion, and resembles a collage of comic or sarcastic episodes without much relationship between them. It was a bad script, and I can't understand how it won an Oscar for Best Adapted Screenplay. The type of humor is another additional problem: our sense of humor has changed a lot in just a few decades and our sensitivity does not let jokes in such bad taste escape like those that occasionally happen here, particularly those aimed at female characters. What saves the film ends up being the enormous capacity for improvisation and creativity that the cast used in the project. With less than competent screenwriters and insufficient material to build characters, the director seems to have had the intelligence to give the actors enough margin to fill in the gaps, molding the characters in their own way. This is what Donald Sutherland did, ensuring a very strong and charismatic lead. It's not even close to the actor's best, but he managed to pull it off with flying colors. Elliott Gould and Tom Skerritt follow him closely, and form a consistent core cast, with characters good enough to sustain the action. Robert Duvall, Sally Kellerman and Roger Bowen provide indispensable support. At the time, the film was a success, as expected, and even led to a TV series. And today? Almost no one remembers anything, and to say that this is a classic seems to be a huge exaggeration. At that time, the film had a guaranteed audience. Today, with world peace declining at the expense of growing conflict between the USA, Iran, China, Russia and other powers, we can no longer call for peace without calling for the rearmament of our countries and their allies. At a time when we already live in a “pre-world war” environment, a film that ridicules the army has no room to flourish.


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