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Inspired by Oliver Stone's own experiences, the anti-war epic tells the tale of PFC Chris Taylor (Charlie Sheen, Wall Street), a young Army recruit sent to Vietnam, who witnesses the atrocities of war—many of which are carried out by those Chris calls "comrades." Heralded by critics as the best film of 1986, Platoon was nominated* for eight Academy Awards®, including Best Supporting Actor nominations for co-stars Tom Berenger and Willem Defoe and won four Oscars®, including Best Picture and Directing.Bonus Content:4K Restoration In HDR 10 (Dolby Vision Compatible)Audio Commentary by Writer-Director Oliver StoneAudio Commentary by Military Advisor Dale DyeDeleted and Extended Scenes Featuring Optional Commentary with Oliver StoneFlashback to PlatoonDocumentaries: One War, Many Stories and Preparing for 'NamFeaturettes: Caputo & the 7th Fleet, Dye Training Method, and Gordon GekkoTheatrical TrailerTV Spots Review: “I can’t even remember when I was 332…” - The Counterpoint. The realism shines through. I first saw “Platoon” not long after it was released in 1986. The vast majority of Vietnam War movies I thoroughly detest, commencing with “The Deerhunter,” the only movie I have ever rated 0-stars. “Platoon” though is vastly different. And for a good reason. It was the first Hollywood Vietnam war movie that was directed by a veteran of that war. And not just any veteran, who slaps the yellow, red and green tri-color decal on the back of his car. Oliver Stone was 11-Bravo. Infantry. Bizarrely, because he asked to be. For eight months, September 1967 to April 1968 he was with the 25th Infantry Division, based in Tay Ninh province, which is immediately adjacent to a long Cambodian border, including what the press dubbed “the Parrot’s beak.” Stone is also my coeval, with only a month separating our births. There was precisely one year between the commencement of our tours in Vietnam. Race, religion, sexual orientation, age, and now vaccination status, these are some of the ways we slice and dice humanity into different compartments. In Vietnam, there were yet more categories that defined one’s identity: “RA” and “US.” Those who enlisted and those who were drafted. Charlie Sheen plays Chris Taylor, the semi-autobiographical character who represents Oliver Stone himself. One of the great bits of dialogue from the movie is when a black soldier, obviously a draftee, finds out that Taylor VOLUNTEERED for the infantry: “…what we have here is a crusader…” and when Taylor responds meekly about duty et al. the draftee retorts: “you got to be rich in the first place to think like that.” Another slice and dice was the difference between the “short-timers” and the “FNG’s”, the soldiers who recently arrived, captured by the subject line, which was so true. If one had only 20 days left, it truly was impossible to remember back when one was facing the impossible, seemingly infinite “332.” Another scene that strongly resonated was when one soldier with only a few days left was spared going out on one more patrol and allowed to depart by helicopter for the rear. Only 5%, maybe 10% at most, of the American soldiers who are authorized to wear that red, green and yellow tricolor experienced what is depicted in this movie. And Stone depicted it brilliantly: it starts with Taylor arriving and seeing the body bags, and then segues into the heat, humidity, insects, snakes, rain, falling asleep on guard duty, carrying too much stuff, FNG screw-ups, worthless lieutenants circumvented, calling in artillery on one’s own position, the “M” on the forehead, written with the soldiers own blood, meaning morphine had been given, and that awful dread, which would sometimes turn into reality, of having one’s position overrun and in the chaos, not knowing who was who. The essential slice and dice, the very core of this excellent movie that deals with a haunting matter so few others do: the psychopaths and those who tried to retain a shred of human decency. “You just can’t rape her… she is a **** human being.” “What are you, homosexual?” It’s the “332” problem, writ large. It was in all our movies: those (wonderful) French women lining the roads, throwing flowers, as the Americans raced to liberate Paris (and yes, cherie, we had the bubble gum). That was the way it was going to be in Vietnam as we helped the heroic and freedom-loving South Vietnamese… And the reality was, every Vietnamese was the enemy and there were no flowers. Stone captures that terrible conundrum. Days and days of bugs and humidity, a couple buddies blown up by booby traps, a village with a “rice cache,” but more importantly, actual arms hidden. Only women, children and old men. “Waste it.” For the Vietnamese never to say: “no bic” to a GI, because it is infuriating. After enough rain and mosquitoes, it was understood that ALL the Vietnamese understood English, if you just spoke it loud enough. Tom Berenger does such an excellent job of playing Sergeant Barnes, the psychopath and William Defoe does an equal job playing Sergeant Elias, hardly a bleeding-heart liberal, just someone who somehow has retain an internal moral gyroscope. The platoon is split in two, between the factions. The two sergeants literally get into a fistfight and later, despite (or because of?) Elias’ gyroscope, he and his faction talk of killing Barnes. More than half a century later, that civil war between the two factions of that particular slice and dice continues, not (fortunately) with violence but by refusing to recognize the validity and honor of those who served and said NO when their time came. Père Lachaise, France’s most famous cemetery. There are so many threads and themes to this movie, and one involved that cemetery. Stone originally offered the role that Sheen would play to Jim Morrison, of the Doors, who is buried in that cemetery, a site of pilgrimage for many a young woman who was not even alive when Morrison O.D.ed In 2018 actor Paul Sanchez, who played Doc in the movie, made a documentary about the making of film, entitled “Platoon: Brothers in Arms.” I definitely intend to watch it, having found the movie on the making of “The Battle of Algiers” utterly fascinating. Finally, there is: “Happy men don’t enlist.” So proclaimed Alec Guinness, who played the character of Yevgraf, in Dr. Zhivago, as he saw the euphoria and the hats tossed in the air when the Great War commenced. So, why did Stone do it? Maybe the first “mistake” was understandable: a sense of duty, or more likely, to be where the big story was, and like Norman Mailer, already having decided to depict it. But having survived 8 months in the infantry, wounded twice (which the rules said were enough to get you permanently out of the field and perhaps home)… why, oh why, (somehow) transferring to the First Air Cav to be a LRRP? Again, why, oh why, extend beyond the required 365 days? There is still more to this story; hopefully it will be told. But for what Stone has done in “Platoon,” a perfect antidote to John Wayne’s “The Green Berets,” as Stone intended, 5-stars, plus. Review: A Masterpiece - Send me your youngsters know nothing about this film and that's sad. Maybe the greatest war movie ever made aside from Full Metal Jacket and Saving Private Ryan.
| ASIN | B0CZ4DGYCK |
| Actors | Various |
| Best Sellers Rank | #7,133 in Movies & TV ( See Top 100 in Movies & TV ) #68 in Military & War (Movies & TV) #952 in Drama Blu-ray Discs #1,162 in Action & Adventure Blu-ray Discs |
| Customer Reviews | 4.7 4.7 out of 5 stars (7,277) |
| Language | English (DTS-HD Master Audio 2.0), English (DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1) |
| MPAA rating | R (Restricted) |
| Media Format | 4K, Subtitled |
| Number of discs | 2 |
| Product Dimensions | 0.61 x 6.73 x 5.3 inches; 5.93 ounces |
| Release date | June 4, 2024 |
| Run time | 2 hours |
| Studio | SHOUT! FACTORY |
J**I
“I can’t even remember when I was 332…”
The Counterpoint. The realism shines through. I first saw “Platoon” not long after it was released in 1986. The vast majority of Vietnam War movies I thoroughly detest, commencing with “The Deerhunter,” the only movie I have ever rated 0-stars. “Platoon” though is vastly different. And for a good reason. It was the first Hollywood Vietnam war movie that was directed by a veteran of that war. And not just any veteran, who slaps the yellow, red and green tri-color decal on the back of his car. Oliver Stone was 11-Bravo. Infantry. Bizarrely, because he asked to be. For eight months, September 1967 to April 1968 he was with the 25th Infantry Division, based in Tay Ninh province, which is immediately adjacent to a long Cambodian border, including what the press dubbed “the Parrot’s beak.” Stone is also my coeval, with only a month separating our births. There was precisely one year between the commencement of our tours in Vietnam. Race, religion, sexual orientation, age, and now vaccination status, these are some of the ways we slice and dice humanity into different compartments. In Vietnam, there were yet more categories that defined one’s identity: “RA” and “US.” Those who enlisted and those who were drafted. Charlie Sheen plays Chris Taylor, the semi-autobiographical character who represents Oliver Stone himself. One of the great bits of dialogue from the movie is when a black soldier, obviously a draftee, finds out that Taylor VOLUNTEERED for the infantry: “…what we have here is a crusader…” and when Taylor responds meekly about duty et al. the draftee retorts: “you got to be rich in the first place to think like that.” Another slice and dice was the difference between the “short-timers” and the “FNG’s”, the soldiers who recently arrived, captured by the subject line, which was so true. If one had only 20 days left, it truly was impossible to remember back when one was facing the impossible, seemingly infinite “332.” Another scene that strongly resonated was when one soldier with only a few days left was spared going out on one more patrol and allowed to depart by helicopter for the rear. Only 5%, maybe 10% at most, of the American soldiers who are authorized to wear that red, green and yellow tricolor experienced what is depicted in this movie. And Stone depicted it brilliantly: it starts with Taylor arriving and seeing the body bags, and then segues into the heat, humidity, insects, snakes, rain, falling asleep on guard duty, carrying too much stuff, FNG screw-ups, worthless lieutenants circumvented, calling in artillery on one’s own position, the “M” on the forehead, written with the soldiers own blood, meaning morphine had been given, and that awful dread, which would sometimes turn into reality, of having one’s position overrun and in the chaos, not knowing who was who. The essential slice and dice, the very core of this excellent movie that deals with a haunting matter so few others do: the psychopaths and those who tried to retain a shred of human decency. “You just can’t rape her… she is a **** human being.” “What are you, homosexual?” It’s the “332” problem, writ large. It was in all our movies: those (wonderful) French women lining the roads, throwing flowers, as the Americans raced to liberate Paris (and yes, cherie, we had the bubble gum). That was the way it was going to be in Vietnam as we helped the heroic and freedom-loving South Vietnamese… And the reality was, every Vietnamese was the enemy and there were no flowers. Stone captures that terrible conundrum. Days and days of bugs and humidity, a couple buddies blown up by booby traps, a village with a “rice cache,” but more importantly, actual arms hidden. Only women, children and old men. “Waste it.” For the Vietnamese never to say: “no bic” to a GI, because it is infuriating. After enough rain and mosquitoes, it was understood that ALL the Vietnamese understood English, if you just spoke it loud enough. Tom Berenger does such an excellent job of playing Sergeant Barnes, the psychopath and William Defoe does an equal job playing Sergeant Elias, hardly a bleeding-heart liberal, just someone who somehow has retain an internal moral gyroscope. The platoon is split in two, between the factions. The two sergeants literally get into a fistfight and later, despite (or because of?) Elias’ gyroscope, he and his faction talk of killing Barnes. More than half a century later, that civil war between the two factions of that particular slice and dice continues, not (fortunately) with violence but by refusing to recognize the validity and honor of those who served and said NO when their time came. Père Lachaise, France’s most famous cemetery. There are so many threads and themes to this movie, and one involved that cemetery. Stone originally offered the role that Sheen would play to Jim Morrison, of the Doors, who is buried in that cemetery, a site of pilgrimage for many a young woman who was not even alive when Morrison O.D.ed In 2018 actor Paul Sanchez, who played Doc in the movie, made a documentary about the making of film, entitled “Platoon: Brothers in Arms.” I definitely intend to watch it, having found the movie on the making of “The Battle of Algiers” utterly fascinating. Finally, there is: “Happy men don’t enlist.” So proclaimed Alec Guinness, who played the character of Yevgraf, in Dr. Zhivago, as he saw the euphoria and the hats tossed in the air when the Great War commenced. So, why did Stone do it? Maybe the first “mistake” was understandable: a sense of duty, or more likely, to be where the big story was, and like Norman Mailer, already having decided to depict it. But having survived 8 months in the infantry, wounded twice (which the rules said were enough to get you permanently out of the field and perhaps home)… why, oh why, (somehow) transferring to the First Air Cav to be a LRRP? Again, why, oh why, extend beyond the required 365 days? There is still more to this story; hopefully it will be told. But for what Stone has done in “Platoon,” a perfect antidote to John Wayne’s “The Green Berets,” as Stone intended, 5-stars, plus.
H**E
A Masterpiece
Send me your youngsters know nothing about this film and that's sad. Maybe the greatest war movie ever made aside from Full Metal Jacket and Saving Private Ryan.
O**R
Very Real
In the first minutes of the movie I knew it was 'real' - the heat, sights, even smells that hit me when I first got off the plane at Tan Son Nhut came flooding back as the movie opened. And everything after that reinforced my initial impression. There are plenty of comments about the story itself, so I'm just going to respond to comments others have made - in particular that it is an unrealistic anti-war propaganda movie, and that it dishonors honorable men and actions. I will only say that, as an infantry trooper, I personally saw and experienced most of what was in the movie, and that which I did not experience first hand was commonly accepted at the time, reinforced by many first hand accounts of witnesses and/or participants. Yes, there are a few 'artistic' moments in the movie, but none that change/alter the fundamental truths. War sucks. While it is sometimes unavoidable, there is no way to glorify it. Young men (and now, also women) are put into impossible situations with death a very likely possibility at any minute. Fear, anger, survival instinct, love of your brother - all of these emotions are intensely present, and too often in conflict with each other. How they play out in any group of people depends a great deal on the individuals in that group and their leadership. A soldier in one company/platoon/squad may have very different experiences from another in a different company/platoon/squad, even in the same unit. Be skeptical of officers who say their men never did some of the things shown in the movie. They may be right, or trying to make themselves look good, or simply been unaware (it takes a very good officer to really know what his troops are doing and thinking when he's not looking). The Vietnam war was fought by honorable and courageous men and women (I think some of the nurses treating combat wounded may have had more difficult jobs than the infantrymen they tried to patch together from the carnage). Courage and heroism, often in the face of desperate odds, were everyday occurrences. There were also murders of unarmed civilians, rape, drug use and fragging of officers. All of that is true, and the positive and negative do not cancel one another - they simply coexist. War - any war - is brutal, and brings out both the best and worst in the people who fight it. That is how it always has been and always will be. This movie shows both sides - the honorable and dishonorable, as well as the ambiguity of honorable men committing dishonorable actions. If the film is considered to be "anti war" - that is well and good. No movie should be "pro war"! Is this film an "anti Vietnam war" in particular? That would be to imply that it was substantially different from other wars. That totally misses the point. If you scratch beneath the shiny patriotic surface of any war you will see the same sorts of things. Platoon is the best movie I have seen about the Vietnam war - it shows both the honorable side as well as the bad - to focus on one or the other is to miss the point. I think an excellent companion book is John Del Vecchio's The 13th Valley . It is another fictional account that is 'true' - often fiction can be used to paint a better and more comprehensive portrait of a war than any individual true life 'there I was' account. The fiction author is not constrained to a single person's experience, and so can provide a wider array of viewpoints, all of which are 'true' in essence.
S**Z
Watch it!! I guarantee you’ll love it.
It’s Platoon. One of the greatest war type movies made. Charlie Sheen does not disappoint.
A**S
The movie is great but the 4k not so much.
This is a great movie but the 4k leaves a lot to be desired. The transfer of the film is not very good and does not look like it is above the blu ray version. There are many grainy shots which leave a lot to be desired. I would have preferred 7.1 but 5.1 audio is ok. Many extra features but if you have the blu ray there really is not much new here. I would say if you own a blu ray version of platoon only get this version if you can get it cheap.
J**.
bought this as an update from blu ray,looks great,happy.
K**A
Great movie. Good service by Amazon.
B**T
Excellent film
A**R
just what i wanted
A**R
It's a great movie
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