Dom Robinson reviews
Tigerland
Distributed by
Cert:
Cat.no: 21708 DVD
Running time: 96 minutes
Year: 2000
Pressing: 2002
Region(s): 2, PAL
Chapters: 15 plus extras
Sound: Dolby Digital 5.1
Languages: English
Subtitles: 14 languages available
Widescreen: 1.85:1
16:9-Enhanced: Yes
Macrovision: Yes
Disc Format: DVD 9
Price: £19.99
Extras: Trailer, TV Spots, Colin Farrell's Screen Tests, Featurette,
Director's Commentary
Director:
(8MM, Bad Company, Batman And Robin, Batman Forever, Chasing the Dragon, The Client, Cousins, Dying Young, Falling Down, Flawless, The Lost Boys, Phone Booth, St. Elmo's Fire, Tigerland, A Time To Kill )
Producer:
Arnon Milchan, Steven Haft and Beau Flynn
Screenplay:
Ross Klavan and Michael McGruther
Music:
Cast:
Private Roland Bozz: Colin Farrell
Private Jim "Pax" Paxton: Matthew Davis
Miter: Clifton Collins Jr.
Cantwell: Thomas Guiry
Private Wilson: Shea Whigham
Private Johnson: Russell Richardson
Captain Saunders: Nick Searcy
Sergeant Erza Landers: Aferno Omilami
Sergeant Thomas: James MacDonald
Tigerland
is the place the army deems the second worst place on Earth. The film follows
a group of army recruits as they go through Advanced Infantry Training at Fort
Polk, Louisiana, of which the film title is the ground's nickname. Set in
September 1971, it is the last stop the men will face before they reach before
Vietnam.
Despite the occasionally interesting direction with a hand-held camera, often
shot slightly shaky on purpose, by Joel Schumacher , the film isn't half
as enticing as I thought it would be. Perhaps I've seen enough war movies and
Hollywood has made enough Vietnam films, but continuing to centralise on
individual sections of the war no matter how small?
Either way, it gets very samey very quickly with the same stories played out
that we've seen before: over-zealous sergeants (James MacDonald as
Sergeant Thomas), their snotty superior (Nick Searcy as Captain Saunders),
a weedy recruit who gets picked on (Clifton Collins Jr. as Miter),
a boisterous leader (Colin Farrell as Bozz) and his cocky best friend
Matthew Davis as Paxton) as well as the old favourites thrown in for
good measure such as weekend passes and shagging loose women.
The Tigerland team.
The film is presented in the original 1.85:1 anamorphic widescreen ratio
and has an intentionally-gritty look, but despite that I can still tell
print flecks when I see them and parts of this one have more drop-outs than
they should.
The sound is reasonable, but apart from a couple of shoot-outs that might
use the Dolby Digital 5.1 soundstage, most of the time it's only for ambience.
The extras consist of a 2½-minute 4:3 trailer, two 30-second TV spots with a deep voice
announcer, a standard 4-minute featurette which mixes 4:3 film clips with chat from
cast and crew members, Colin Farrell's casting sessions - totalling around
six minutes and a director's commentary.
The menus are static and silent, there are just 15 chapters to the film,
but the subtitles come in 14 flavours: English for the hard of hearing as well as
Czech, Danish, Finnish, Hebrew, Hungarian, Icelandic, Norwegian, Polish,
Portuguese, Swedish, French, Dutch and Greek.
FILM CONTENT
PICTURE QUALITY
SOUND QUALITY
EXTRAS
OVERALL
Review copyright © Dominic Robinson, 2002.
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