When Col. William McNamara is stripped of his freedom in a German POW camp, he's determined to keep on fighting even from behind enemy lines. Enlisting the help of a young lieutenant in a brilliant plot against his captors, McNamara risks everything on a mission to free his men and change the outcome of the war.
Colin Farrell
Lt. Thomas W. Hart
Bruce Willis
Col. William A. McNamara
Terrence Howard
Lt. Lincoln A. Scott
Marcel Iureș
Col. Werner Visser
Cole Hauser
Staff Sgt. Vic W. Bedford
Linus Roache
Capt. Peter A. Ross
Vicellous Shannon
Lt. Lamar T. Archer
Rory Cochrane
Sgt. Carl S. Webb
Joe Spano
Col. J.M. Lange
Michael Weston
Pfc. W. Roy Potts
Adrian Grenier
Pvt. Daniel E. Abrams
Jonathan Brandis
Pvt. Lewis P. Wakely
Maury Sterling
Pfc. Dennis A. Gerber
Sam Jaeger
Capt. R.G. Sisk
Scott Michael Campbell
Cpl. Joe S. Cromin
Rick Ravanello
Maj. Joe Clary
Sebastian Tillinger
Pvt. Bert D. 'Moose' Codman
Brad Hunt
Pvt. G.H. 'Cookie' Bell
Rúaidhrí Conroy
Cpl. D.F. Lisko
Sam Worthington
as Cpl. B.J. 'Depot' Guidry
Radek Kuchař
Guard
Vojtěch Štěpánek
Christian Kahrmann
MP Sergeant
Director
Gregory Hoblit
Author
Terry George
Author
Billy Ray
Author
John Katzenbach
May 31, 2018
8
Like Hogan's Heroes but serious and quasi-realistic
RELEASED IN 2002 and directed by Gregory Hoblit, "Hart's War" is a war flick about a paper-pushing lieutenant with a background in law (Colin Farrell) who is unexpectedly captured in Belgium and taken to a POW camp in southern Germany in the closing months of the European theater of the war. He eventually befriends and defends a Tuskegee Airmen (Terrence Howard). Marcel Iures plays the humane German commandant while Bruce Willis plays the tough-as-nails American colonel of the POWs. Cole Hauser is on hand as a racist soldier.
This is obviously not a conventional WWII flick. Although it starts out with some great war action, it has more in common with films like "Stalag 17" (1953) and "The Great Escape" (1963), albeit with modern filmmaking craft. As my title blurb points out, it's reminiscent of Hogan's Heroes but without the comedy, plus elements of “A Few Good Men” (1992). The film isn't really about survival in the POW camp, but rather the tensions of the prisoners and the criminal drama.
Some have complained that no fascist camp colonel in his right mind would allow such a trial as depicted in the movie. But there are several reasons why the commandant would allow it: (1.) for entertainment, (2.) to witness and understand the American way, (3.) he knew the war would be over soon and wanted to have the Allie's favor, or (4.) a mixture of the above. Keep in mind that the commandant went to school in the US after the first world war so he was enamored by American lifestyle and had a fondness for jazz. I'm sure entertainment was a huge factor since POW camp life is just as boring for the captors as it is for the captives over time.
The climax telegraphs that this is a war MOVIE and not real life, but it's packed with action and gripping drama. It’s also ultimately quite moving. Although it failed at the box office, "Hart's War" is a very good WWII POW camp movie and, in some ways, great.
THE FILM RUNS 125 minutes and was shot in the Czech Republic.
GRADE: B+/A-
Status:
Released
Original Language:
English
Budget:
$70,000,000.00
Revenue:
$32,287,044.00