Extras:
Swoff's Fantasies, News Interviews, Deleted Scenes, Two Audio Commentaries
Director:
Sam Mendes
(American Beauty, Jarhead, Road To Perdition, TV: Cabaret, Company)
Producers:
Douglas Wick and Lucy Fisher
Screenplay:
William Broyles Jr
(based on the book by Anthony Swofford)
Music:
Thomas Newman
Cast:
Anthony Swofford: Jake Gyllenhaal
Troy: Peter Sarsgaard
Staff Sgt. Sykes: Jamie Foxx
Kruger: Lucas Black
Fergus: Brian Geraghty
Kristina: Brianne Davis
Cortez: Jacob Vargas
Escobar: Laz Alonso
Pinko: Iván Fenyö
Lt. Col. Kazinski: Chris Cooper
Major Lincoln: Dennis Haysbert
D.I. Fitch: Scott MacDonald
Dettman: Marty Papazian
Jarhead
is, as we learn at the start of the film, a slang term for 'Marine'. This is due to the resemblance
to a jar of the regulation high-and-tight haircut. The Marine's head, by implication, therefore also
a jar. An empty vessel. And, oh, how Swoff (Jake Gyllenhaal) is about to find this out...
The movie starts in early 1989 and Anthony Swofford, aka Swoff, enlists in the US Marine Corps,
unsure of how things might turn out but he's only 20 and it feels like the only option available to him.
Sadly, it means leaving behind his beautiful girlfriend Kristina (Brianne Davis) but as long as
he's not away from her too long she'll remain faithful to him, right?
Alas, since this is based on true events, it's not long following their introduction to boot camp with
Drill Instructor Fitch (Scott MacDonald) that they get word that Saddam Hussein has invaded
Kuwait and it's their task to go out into the desert as Operation Desert Storm is looming. The more
headstrong of their number see it as their chance to see some action - and that such a thing will qualify
them as a real Marine. However, on arrival they learn that all they'll be doing is guarding the oil
from the Iraqis and nothing whatsoever to help Kuwait get back on its feet.
As we follow their progress, or lack of it, the media come out to see the boys at play, which leads to
an American Football match in their chemical suits courtesy of Staff Sgt Sykes (Jamie Foxx) and
he also intructs them that they're not allowed to divulge what they really think about the war when
interviewed. Their equipment doesn't always work properly, the boys hold a scorpion fight for money,
and as day follows night follows day, we learn how they stop themselves from going mad as time takes
its toll and a hopeful two-weeks-only out in the desert turns into many months as the film rolls on.
The queston is begged: Will they ever engage the enemy? That's a question that can only be answered by
watching the entire piece, but it's something they desperately need to know since they've been trained
as 'scout snipers', paired up such that when the time comes one of them will seek out the target and
ensure that what the other is about to strike out at will be the perfect shot they've both been
waiting for, which gives the 'pink mist' Swoff craves as bullet meets head.
Of the cast featured, Jake Gyllenhaal is a far better choice for the lead role than the others
in the frame for it according to the IMDB, Tobey Maguire and Leonardo Di Caprio. Peter Sarsgaard
takes second position in the actor's trademark laid-back style as Swoff's sniper partner Troy, while
Oscar-winner Jamie Foxx plays Staff Sgt Sykes as, not a complete bastard, just a bit of one but enough
to get the job done.
All of the actors playing Swoff's fellow marines play their part well, with one not really standing out
from any other and further established support as more commanding officers with 24's David Palmer,
Dennis Haysbert as Major Lincoln and Chris Cooper as Lt. Col. Kazinski, although the
latter only gets two brief scenes and while Cooper is a worthy actor it does seem odd putting his name
above the title on the front of the box.
Clearly director Sam Mendes, who triumphed with American Beauty, but whose
Road To Perdition
I found very lacking, has an issue with the 2003 invasion into Iraq and the ensuing chaos and this shows,
such as with the comment from one marine that it was the West who provided Saddam with his weapons to use
against us. Personally, yes, Saddam was a bad sort and needed removing, but it's been proved that there's no
viable alternative given the mess that has been put in situ by George W Bush and Tony Blair, a couple of
complete fuck-ups who haven't got a clue from the start of the day to its end. Shame on them.
I've seen films based around the Vietnam war before now, such as Full Metal Jacket and
Platoon,
but that one played out before my time. Seeing one about the Gulf War from 1989 onwards really does
start to hit home. That said, while Jarhead makes for a very entertaining film, the impact of
war films has been lessened by seeing the aforementioned movies put rookie recruits through their paces
prior to going on to the job in hand. Also, it's almost like a road movie as you follow events in
a linear way - moving from one location to another, and once it's over you aren't left with anything
lasting to think about; It just tells you that war is hell and once you're out of it, the Army don't
really give a shit about you.
At the time of writing, just a few months after release, this one's down to costing around a third of the
RRP, so if you like the actors in this film it's definitely worth a purchase. That said, anyone with money
to burn might like to know that as Christmas approaches Universal are releasing this in the new HD-DVD
format, more info on which can be accessed at the link above.
There are no problems with the picture or the sound. The former is flawless in a 2.35:1 anamorphic
widescreen frame, really bringing out the atmosphere of the hot desert and the other environments they
find themselves in, as well as when oil rears its head. The audio is in Dolby Digital 5.1 only, packs
a punch when required but there are long scenes within where it just fulfils basic atmosphere.
The extras on this DVD are not great in number and all contain optional commentary from director Sam
Mendes and editor Walter Murch:
Swoff's Fantasies (6:13):
Presented in anamorphic 2.35:1, these are four brief segments of how Gyllenhaal's character felt in
certain situations, all of which were cut out from the final edit so they're more like alternate scenes.
I would've kept in the TV interview one, but I don't want to give any spoilers about them.
News Interviews in Full (16:38):
The media part of the film includes off-the-cuff interviews with the soldiers, cut together and chopping
about between them. Here are the interviews in full with each marine, sadly done all as one chapter
rather than one per marine.
Deleted Scenes (19:08):
11 here and, without giving any spoilers, the only one I'd really consider putting back in is The Build
Up To War although most of them are worth a look as an additional companion piece.
Audio commentaries:
Two on this disc. One from Sam Mendes, and a second from screenwriter William Broyles Jr and author
Anthony Swofford.
Basic subtitles come in English, Arabic and Icelandic, there are 20 chapters to the film which is okay
but not outstanding and the main menu features some incidental music from the movie mixed in with
some images from it. Alas, before you get to that you're presented with one of those stupid 'anti
piracy' trailers which, thankfully, can be skipped through but do you really need that once you've
bought the damn DVD? Then, you STILL don't get to the film as you get a 2.35:1 letterboxed 3-minute
trailer for King Kong.
DVDs reviewed by the editor are watched on a Panasonic TXW32R4 32" widescreen TV
connected to either a Creative Dxr2 DVD-ROM player or Microsoft Xbox and
played through a Sony STR-DB930 amplifier.
PC games reviewed by the editor are on:
Since Nov 2005: Intel Pentium D 830 3.0Ghz, 1Gb RAM, 128Mb nVidia GeForce 6700XL, Windows XP
Since Aug 2003: Intel Pentium 4 2.66Ghz, 512Mb RAM, 128Mb GeForce4 MX440 graphics, Windows XP
Since May 2003: Intel Pentium 4 2.6Ghz, 512Mb RAM, 128Mb ATI Radeon 9600TX graphics, Windows XP
Since Jun 2002: Intel Pentium III 600Mhz, 384Mb RAM, Windows 98 SE, 64Mb ATI Radeon 8500LE
Since May 2000: Intel Pentium III 600Mhz, 384Mb RAM, Windows 98 SE, Voodoo 3 3000 AGP