During the Vietnam War, a soldier finds himself the outsider of his own squad when they unnecessarily kidnap a female villager.
Michael J. Fox
Private Eriksson
Sean Penn
Sgt. Tony Meserve
Don Harvey
Cpl. Thomas E. Clark
John C. Reilly
Private Herbert Hatcher
John Leguizamo
Private Antonio Diaz
Ving Rhames
Lt. Reilly
Thuy Thu Le
Oanh
Erik King
Brown
Jack Gwaltney
Rowan
Dan Martin
Sgt. Hawthorne
Dale Dye
Capt. Hill
Steve Larson
Agent #1
John Linton
Agent #2
Vyto Ruginis
Prosecutor
Al Shannon
Wilkins
Wendell Pierce
MacIntire
Sam Robards
Chaplain Kirk
Maris Valainis
Streibig
Darren E. Burrows
Cherry
Sherman Howard
Court Martial President
John Marshall Jones
M.P.
Holt McCallany
Lt. Kramer
Kady Tran
Yen (Oahn's Sister)
Scott Gregory
Soldier Charlie 1
Ennalls Berl
Soldier Charlie 2
Vinh Tran
V.C. Interpreter
Somsak
ARVN Interpreter
Hataya Sarmount
Girl Villager
Ba Thuan T. Le
Oahn's Mother
Nootch
Child Villager
Kwan
Child Villager
J. Chalerm
Villager Old Man Farmer
Sigma
Villager Woman
Po Powpi
Villager Old Man
Shaun Shea
Soldier
Kristopher Dunn
Soldier
Donal Gibson
Soldier
Shane Kerwin
Soldier
Niran
V.C. in Tunnel
Stephen Baldwin
Soldier (uncredited)
Gregg Henry
Prosecutor (uncredited)
Amy Irving
Girl on the Train (voice) (uncredited)
Michael D. Jones
Passenger on Train (uncredited)
Espérance Pham Thai Lan
Etudiante, soeur (uncredited)
Director
Brian De Palma
Book
Daniel Lang
Screenplay
David Rabe
September 18, 2020
8
_**Beautiful and brutal, artistic and ugly**_
Based on a true story, the arrogant sergeant (Sean Penn) of a 5-man squad on a reconnaissance mission in Vietnam in November, 1966, decides to kidnap a Vietnamese farm girl for some “portable R&R” because it would be "good for the morale of the squad." But PFC Eriksson (Michael J. Fox) refuses to participate and fears being “killed In Action” for dissenting.
“Casualties of War” (1989) separates itself from other Vietnam War movies by focusing on the incident at hand, including the build-up and aftermath. Its uniqueness is augmented by Brian De Palma’s slightly off-kilter style. The picture balances the beauty of the location and the artistry of Brian De Palma's filmmaking with the horror and ugliness of war & rape.
It's also realistic and compelling while simultaneously being mundane, which is why some viewers might find it boring. In other words, this is more of a gut-wrenching war drama with some action than a typical war flick with explosions and action thrills galore. It fairly closely follows the real story; Google Incident on Hill 192 for details.
The movie runs 1 hour, 59 minutes, with the original Theatrical Cut being 6 minutes shorter. It was shot in Phang Nga, Kanchanaburi & Phuket, Thailand, and Dolores Park, San Francisco, California.
GRADE: A-/B+
Status:
Released
Original Language:
English
Budget:
$22,500,000.00
Revenue:
$18,671,317.00