Saving Private Ryan Movie Review
Saving Private Ryan Review

"Saving Private Ryan" Overview

Rating: R
1998
Cast and Crew
Director : Steven SpielbergProducer : Ian Bryce,Mark Gordon,Gary Levinsohn,Steven Spielberg
Screenwiter : Robert Rodat
Starring : Tom Hanks,Tom Sizemore,Edward Burns,Matt Damon,Jeremy Davies
At this point, I don’t know what I’d say about Saving Private Ryan, even if I
hadn’t liked it.
Undoubtedly this year’s hype leader among “quality” pictures, Ryan hasn’t
garnered a word of bad buzz aside from the stern and dire warnings about its
overwhelming violence content. It’s no lie: Ryan may be one of the goriest
films ever made – it will certainly be the goriest to ever win an Oscar (which
will come in droves: I predict seven).
An excellent companion piece to Schindler's List, Spielberg has obviously
poured his heart into this movie. The well-known story of a small group’s
search for James Ryan (Damon), whose three brothers were killed nearly
simultaneously, is as simple and as powerful as they come.
The battle scenes, which encompass probably 100 minutes of the circa 160-minute
running time, are epic in proportion. The idle moments in between are also
worth your attention, although, in the end and in retrospect, they can seem a
bit pithy on occasion, especially the bookend scenes of the elderly Ryan
returning to Normandy to pay his respects. For Speilberg, there’s no such
thing as going too far to get you to cry.
Still, Ryan’s easily a top contender for best film of the year, thanks to the
gut-wrenching realism that pervades every scene of the picture. I only hope
Spielberg can come to grips with the remnants of Jurassic Park that still must
linger in his blood, making him take the easy-cheesy way out (eg. the planes
from above that save the day) when working through the actual story gets a bit
too hairy.
A dirty half-dozen.
Reviewer: Christopher Null





