Most Helpful Customer Reviews
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7 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Soldier of Fortune, 13 Jul 2002
I can't recall a film in which Walken gave a bad performance and this film is no exception. The story is simple but ultimately very satisfying (particularly the last sequence), and generally revolves around a band of mercenaries who are hired to carry out a coup in some African state. There is a slightly cliched presentation of African politics although you can't expect Hollywood movies to be intelligent too! Ultimately, it's a good 'war' movie with decent effects and a plot.
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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Cry havoc..., 10 Nov 2007
The Dogs of War is part of that subgenre of war movies that briefly blossomed in the late-sixties and seventies but found little favor in subsequent years, the story about the ageing mercenary who suffers a crisis of conscience (Dark of the Sun, The Wild Geese, Savior etc). It was also the last significant attempt to turn Christopher Walken into a mainstream leading man in the Brando mould on the back of his Deer Hunter Oscar, with the trailer and marketing almost ignoring co-stars Tom Berenger and, despite delivering the film's best performance as a cynical documentary filmmaker, Colin Blakely. Certainly Walken takes a beating as convincingly as Brando, though the public weren't biting in 1981.
Frederick Forsyth's novel gained much notoriety due to the excessive lengths he went to in researching it - few writers would actually invest in a hastily abandoned African coup d'etat to get the inside details right, though it seems Forsyth did just that. As a result, the film goes to great lengths to stress its veracity, with director John Irvin, still hot after the success of Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy, adopting the stripped-down near documentary style that served Fred Zinnemann so well with The Day of the Jackal. Irvin's subsequent work would sadly mark him out as one of the flattest action directors in the business, but here - perhaps leaning on the experience of cinematographer Jack Cardiff, who also directed Dark of the Sun - he delivers the goods surprisingly effectively. Underneath all the gritty pseudo-realism it's a very familiar story (Winston Ntshona practically plays the same role here as an imprisoned deposed president that he did in the more Boys' Own The Wild Geese three years earlier), but it's well told - or at least in the two-hour European cut of the film which, perversely, is only available on DVD in the US, and there in a version with dodgy synchronisation in the early scenes: Europe has to make do with the cut US version shorn of 16 minutes. Geoffrey Burgon's score makes good use of A.E. Housman's Epitaph On An Army of Mercenaries while among the familiar faces in the supporting cast can be spotted Paul Freeman, Ed O'Neill, Jim Broadbent (as one of Blakely's film crew), Victoria Tennant and an unbilled Helen Shaver, though aside from Blakely, the standout performance probably comes from Hugh Millais' cold-fish middle man.
Once again, bear in mind that the US NTSC DVD is the uncut European version of the film, while the UK PAL DVD is the cut US version!
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2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Welcome to Zangaro, 25 May 2008
Christopher Walken plays the sentimental but tough mercenary in this film of Fredrick Forsyth's novel. Forsyth, who coverered Biafra, knows whereof he speaks on mercenary warfare especially of this era before the large corporates got involved. The Republic of Zangaro is a mixture of a number of African states under a Big Man before the era of Hobbesian chaos that you'll find in Blood Diamond. Although this is not a film with a message it nevertheless demonstrates how unpleasant such places are, especially as our hero falls into the hands of the Army and gets a spell in jail. Backed up by a number of excellent character actors this film stays firmly rooted in a ruthless but pre-Rambo realism.
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