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Black Hawk Down Black Hawk Down is based upon the Mark
Bowden book of the same name. Ridley Scott is the director in
this true story of U.S. special forces mission gone bad in
Somalia in 1993. Not
for the faint of heart, this is one of the most intense combat
movies ever made.
In 1993, the U.S. sent troops to Somalia on a "humanitarian
mission" to aid the U.N. with food distribution to a nation that
had seen 300,000 people starve to death. Somalia was under
control of the warlord Mohamed Farrah Aidid who was more
interested in using food and starvation to increase his power.
In October the U.S. planned a mission to raid a meeting of
Aidid's top lieutenants.
The plan called for the meeting to be stormed by Delta Force and
Ranger troops to be inserted via helicopter backed up by a
ground based convoy. The whole mission was to last less than 30
minutes. The enemy had been drastically underrated however. They
turned out to be very well armed and able to call up huge
numbers of reinforcements very quickly. Two helipcopters went
down and the convoy was blocked off by road blocks and under
heavy fire. The special forces on the ground were left to fight
for their lives until reinforcements could be assembled and sent
in to get them.
The movie avoids getting too political in it's presentation of
these events and instead focuses solely on what it's like to be
a soldier in the middle of intense combat. Indeed the movie
spends maybe 30-40 minutes introducing us to the
characters and setting up the mission and the remainder of the
film is one big fire fight. Ridley Scott does an absolutely
wonderful job of putting us in the middle of it.
Unlike most war movies, we do not really have a single hero
here, but rather a bit of an ensemble that realistically shows
how one soldier is dependent on the man next to him. The cast
includes strong performances by Josh Harnett, Tom Sizemore and
William Fichtner along with Sam Shephard as Major General
Garrison.
The movie includes perhaps the most realistic combat sequences
ever filmed. Imagine the D-Day landing scenes from Saving
Private Ryan stretched out into a 2 hour movie, and you get the
idea. And yes, with realism comes more than a little blood and
intense violence. If you can stand the violence though, this is
a movie that needs to be seen, especially given the events going
on in the world today. |