Movie Description After being denied the chance to go to a nearby village to visit a prostitute before starting a a reconnaissance mission, a tough, embittered American sergeant (Sean Penn) involves the four men of his patrol in the kidnapping of a young Vietnamese woman. The impending gang rape and murder of the woman splits the patrol into two factions, those for it, and those against it--with young Eriksson (Michael J. Fox) leading the dissension. But before long, the sergeant has convinced everyone but Eriksson to go along with the plan, making an already difficult mission unbearable for the morally conscious young soldier. Penn gives a powerful performance in this brutal, thoughtful war film from a script by playwright David Rabe (HURLYBURLY).
| Credits | | Cast: | Dale Dye, Jack Gwaltney, John C. Reilly, Sean Penn, Thuy Thy Le |
| Details | | Sound: | Stereo Sound |
Notes DVD Features:
Region 1 Keep Case Widescreen - 2.35 Audio: Dolby Digital 5.1 - English Dolby Digital 2.0 - French Dolby Digital 2.0 - Spanish Dolby Digital 2.0 - Portuguese Additional Release Material: Trailers - 1. Original Theatrical 2. BIRDY 3. THE BRIDGE ON THE RIVER KWAI Featurette - 1. ERIKSSON'S WAR - A CONVERSATION WITH MICHAEL J. FOX 2. Making Of Deleted Scenes (5) Interactive Features: Interactive Menus Scene Selections Text/Photo Galleries: Filmographies, Journalist Daniel Lang's story on which the film was based ran in "The New Yorker" magazine in 1969. The actual events depicted in the article and film took place in 1966. Lang's story was later released as a book.
Shot on location in Phuket, Phang-Nga, and Kanchanaburi, Thailand. It was also shot in Canada and San Francisco. Filming took place over a four and a half month period from April to August 1989.
Film was screened at many festivals, among them The Deauville Film Festival, the Tokyo International Film Festival, and the London Film Festival.
The film is a prequel to the 1972 film "The Visitors" by Elia Kazan.
Budget approximately $22 million.
First film directed by DePalma since his 1987 "The Untouchables" which launched Kevin Costner's international stardom, and won the Best Supporting Actor Academy Award for Sean Connery.
Editorial Reviews "...A portrait of hell so harrowing it's impossible to shake....De Palma's merciless vision is unblinking..." Rolling Stone - Peter Travers (09/07/1989)
"...CASUALTIES OF WAR is the strongest, the simplest and the most painful of all the Vietnam movies....It's about the agony of seeing terrible things too clearly..." Sight and Sound - Terrence Rafferty (12/01/1989)
"...A superb film. DePalma may have found here the perfect arena for his darkly voluptuous expertise..." Los Angeles Times - Michael Wilmington (08/18/1989)
"[The film] manages to churn out an effective moral conflict..." Total Film - Ceri Thomas (04/01/2004)
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