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Jarhead (2005) Movie Information:
Jarhead (2005) Directed by:
Sam Mendes
Jarhead (2005) Written by:
William Broyles
Jarhead (2005) Cast:
Jake Gyllenhaal, Jamie Foxx, Peter Sarsgaard, Lucas Black, Chris Cooper, Dennis Haysbert, Rini Bell
Jarhead (2005) U.S. Distributor:
Universal Pictures
Jarhead (2005) U.K. Distributor:
UIP
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Jarhead (2005) Synopsis:

"Jarhead" (the self-imposed moniker of the Marines) follows "Swoff" (Gyllenhaal), a third-generation enlistee, from a sobering stint in boot camp to active duty, sporting a sniper's rifle and a hundred-pound ruck on his back through Middle East deserts with no cover from intolerable heat or from Iraqi soldiers, always potentially just over the next horizon. Swoff and his fellow Marines sustain themselves with sardonic humanity and wicked comedy on blazing desert fields in a country they don't understand against an enemy they can't see for a cause they don't fully fathom.

Jarhead (2005) Movie Review:



Mendes (American Beauty) and Broyles (Cast Away) clearly use Kubrick's Full Metal Jacket as a template to adapt Anthony Swofford's Gulf War I memoir for the big screen. The result is strikingly visual and thematically stirring examination, but it doesn't say anything terribly revealing.

Swoff (Gyllenhaal) is a gung-ho 20-year-old Marine, a highly trained sharp-shooter who's thrilled to finally see action after Saddam Hussein invades Kuwait in 1990. But "action" isn't exactly the word for what's happening along the Saudi border, where an increasing number of pumped-up soldiers have little to do besides wait. And play football in blistering heat while wearing gas masks. And wait for their girlfriends back home to cheat on them. And cheer along with classic war movies.

This is an antiwar film without a war, which makes it thoroughly intriguing, although it struggles to make a point. There are some terrific sequences--from the brutal boot camp to the raucous Christmas party to the otherworldly burning oilfields. But the main problem is that there's nothing terribly involving about the plot; we're left to identify with characters who seem to exist in isolated limbo from each other.

Fortunately, the cast is excellent. This is Gyllenhaal's best-yet work, beautifully balancing Swoff's eager energy and inner confusion--his lust for life is unquenchable in such a pointless place. There's superb support from the amazing Sarsgaard as Swoff's likeable-but-dangerous sniper partner and Foxx as his mercurial commander. While Cooper and Haysbert add terrific texture as colourfully rah-rah officers, and the sprawling cast of marines nicely avoid stereotypes.

Mendes directs this with a stark visual sensibility that inventively captures life in the desert, where over-trained young men have little to do besides, ahem, play with themselves. He also maintains a sharply singular perspective that's focussed and illuminating. The hijinks are aptly mean-spirited, and the superior "Let's kick Iraqi ass!" culture is brought to sobering reality by the real world out there. This is sharply observed and strikingly strong stuff, especially since the actual war only lasted four days. But it never manages to transcend the specific, small story to say something important.

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Jarhead (2005) review written by: Rich Cline

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