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Pearl Harbor |
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Rafe and Danny are childhood
friends who have always wanted to be pilots.
The film opens in 1923 with the boys playing
in a broken-down biplane on Rafe’s family
farm. Danny comes from a less-than-loving
home. And Rafe takes on the role of protective
big brother. Flash forward to 1941. The two
are now P-40 pilots in the U.S. Army Air Corps,
and Europe is already at war.
But love is in the air too. Rafe meets the
smart and beautiful Evelyn, a Navy nurse,
when he and Danny take a physical exam in
order to be granted flight status. Afraid he'll fail
the vision test, Rafe hides a cheat-sheet that
lists all the letters in the bottom row of the eye
chart. Nurse Evelyn catches him, but gives
him a passing grade anyway. Romance
quickly blooms.
Rafe is eager to fight, and because the
United States is not yet at war, he volunteers
for the Eagle Squadron, a group of Americans
who are set to help the British Royal Air Force
fight the Nazi blitz. When Evelyn asks him why
he’s risking his life, Rafe says, "I’m not
anxious to die. I’m anxious to matter."
All too soon, Rafe is shot down over the
English Channel and presumed dead. But
when Danny’s consoling of Evelyn turns into
attraction, audiences wonder if Rafe will make
a comeback.
So what does all this have to do with Pearl
Harbor? Nothing except to set the stage for
two more hours of cinematic fireworks. Forrest
Gump-like, Rafe, Danny and Evelyn manage
to be participants in a bevy of major historical
events as Pearl Harbor’s soap opera
plot is overlaid on the story of the impending
Japanese attack.
• positive
elements: Rafe and Danny are loyal
friends willing to die for one another. Both
display a strong sense of duty and a
willingness to risk danger to fight evil. A group
of pilots, when given the opportunity to back
out of what is most probably a suicide
mission, all volunteer to remain. Rafe
respects Evelyn and refuses to participate in
premarital sex. Soldiers and airmen risk death
to fight the enemy and to save each other. A
Navy captain goes out of his way to
compliment an African-American cook who
suffers under the racism of the day. A soldier
lets the woman he loves stay in a relationship
with another man because he knows it’s best
for her. One pilot gives his life to save another.
Doolittle says, "There's nothing stronger than
the heart of a volunteer." Also, in 1941, most
Americans still believed in the institution of
marriage, and Pearl Harbor reflects
that.
• spiritual
content: A Navy chaplain urges a badly
wounded man, "Hold on to your faith, son." He
reminds another of Jesus’ words, "Today you
will be with me in paradise." When the man
dies, the chaplain says, "Go with God, my
son." A priest gives last rites to dead sailors.
An American pilot crosses himself before
taking off. His mission commander asks,
"When did you find religion?" "When you
assigned me to this mission," he responds.
"Then pray for both of us," the mission
commander says. A pilot who is shot down
relates how, when he thought he was going to
die, he made a deal with God to be allowed to
live. "I kept my end of the bargain," he says. A
flirtatious and irreverent nurse quips after a
church service, "I just had my slate wiped
clean. Now I can think about how I can dirty it
up again." A soldier, looking around at the
utter destruction, asks, "Where is God in all
this?" President Roosevelt, speaking of his
being confined to a wheelchair because of
polio, says God brought him down to that level
so that he could better understand God’s will.
On the other hand, Japanese pilots pray to
their ancestors before a Shinto shrine.
• sexual
content: A soldier gives advice on how to
seduce nurses. The nurses joke among
themselves about seeing men in their
underwear, and one comments on a soldier’s
"cute butt" after she gave him an inoculation
(audiences also see a couple of "cute butts"
along the way). A nurse looks forward to
"making out." Another nurse says to a soldier,
"Tonight you’re mine!" Rafe, when tempted to
take Evelyn up to a hotel room, decides not to.
"I can’t do this," he says. "It’s not right. I don’t
want anything to regret later. That’s what I
want to come home to." A mechanic berates a
pilot who is painting the figure of a barely clad
woman on the nose of a bomber: "I don’t want
anyone painting [breasts] on my airplane." A
woman wears a low-cut nightgown. Others
wear bikinis. A soldier comments, "Don’t you
think if your best friend was doing your girl that
you wouldn’t come back and beat the crap out
of him?" There’s one scene of implied sex
between a soldier and nurse, although
nothing about the depiction is explicit. The next
day, when the soldier says to her, "I’m not
sorry," she replies, "I don’t know. It’s too fast."
The results of that liaison are portrayed
neutrally.
• violent
content: While the film features intense
battle scenes, the violence is not nearly as
explicit or gruesome as in the film it is likely to
be compared with, Saving Private Ryan.
Men are blown up by torpedoes and bombs.
Others are engulfed in flames. Japanese
planes strafe sailors in the water and men
running across a runway. Japanese and
American planes are shot down and crash
into buildings or ships. Sailors drown in a
flooding engine room. Badly burned and
wounded men stagger toward a hospital.
Blood spurts across a nurse’s white uniform.
And a jumble of dead bodies is lifted out of the
water in a cargo net. Survivors of the Doolittle
bombing raid on Tokyo engage in a close
firefight with Japanese troops. A pilot is
assigned a plane whose pilot was killed and
whose blood is still splattered across the
canopy. Elsewhere, soldiers engage in a bar
fight and participate in a dirty boxing match. At
the beginning of the movie Danny's abusive
dad slaps him around. Rafe comes to the
rescue by whacking the dad across the head
with a plank.
• crude or
profane language: The Lord’s name is
abused more than 20 times. Other profanities,
including the s-word, are used at least that
often. American soldiers call the Japanese
"Japs." And during a boxing match a sailor
utters an racial epithet aimed at an African
American.
• drug and
alcohol content: Alcohol and tobacco get
a lot of screen time. Soldiers and their girls
drink beer in bar and clubs. Sailors salute
each other with shots of whiskey. Men drink
martinis. Some soldiers smoke, and one
hands out victory cigars. Japanese soldiers
toast their upcoming raid.
• other
negative elements: Both Rafe and Danny
are willing to break the rules, starting with
Rafe’s use of a cheat-sheet during the eye
exam. He later tells a nurse, "I know I’m a bad
influence" as he steals a boat to take her on a
harbor cruise. Danny disobeys regs by taking
Evelyn for a spin in his fighter. Sailors play
dice and wager on a boxing match. The
Americans are understandably enraged by the
Japanese sneak attack, but talk of fighting
back often turns to crude talk of revenge.
•
conclusion: As a military history
buff, I was pleased to see a mostly-accurate
account of the attack on Pearl Harbor with only
a few liberties taken for the sake of the story.
But I was upset that the Japanese admirals
and generals are portrayed as having had no
choice but to attack the American fleet. History
disagrees. Besides, many of their comments
and actions are far removed from the context
of the day. In the movie, a Japanese gunner,
seeing children near the area where the attack
is to begin, tries to motion the kids to safety. In
reality, American soldiers were keenly aware
of the glee exhibited by some of the attacking
pilots. "The bombing [in the movie] was the
way it happened," remembers Pearl Harbor
veteran Daniel S. Fruchter. But it seems the
way the pilots were portrayed left a bit to be
desired. "They came down to 40 to 50 feet.
You could see the mustaches on their faces.
Not only that, but the grins as well."
I was expecting 21st-century morality to be
grafted onto 1941 (think Titanic), but for
the most part the men and women in this
movie behave as they do in movies from that
era. Still, Pearl Harbor is without
question intense, and the soap opera
subplot is problematic more than once. Not to
mention the profane language. So do the
overall historical messages of courage, loyalty
and sacrifice fully compensate? No. Swim
carefully in this harbor. Entertainment Zeros
are lurking.
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