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| DVD - Wide Screen | $9.99 |
1080p HD Resolution provides dazzling, unparalleled picture quality.; Lossless Audio delivers the purest digital sound available.; Smart Menu Technology floats on-screen during palyback so you never leave the film.
Full Product DetailsDisc #1 -- Windtalkers
1. Main Title/Credits
2. "Solomon Islands - 1943"'
3. U.S. Naval Hospital
4. "Protect the Code"
5. Chitchat & Chow
6. Gambling Away Time
7. Marine Pep Talk
8. "To War"
9. Saipan - June 16, 1944
10. Battle Crazy
11. Decoding Coordinates
12. "Windtalkers"
13. Savage Prejudice
14. Ghostly Duo
15. "Dear Joe"
16. Under Friendly Fire
17. Disguised As the Enemy
18. Medal of Honor
19. Out of Balance
20. Pain Killers
21. "A Soldier of Christ"
22. "I Want Out"
23. Sudden Ambush
24. Senseless Death
25. Mourning a Loss
26. Caught in a Minefield
27. Some Don't Make It
28. Calling for Flyboys
29. "No One Else Is Dying"
30. A Hero in Battle
31. Remembering a Warrior
32. End Credits
Director John Woo and leading man Nicolas Cage, who previously collaborated on 1997’s Face/Off, reunite for this unusually tense, engrossing, character-driven World War II drama. It revolves around a little-known facet of WWII history: the use of Native American radio operators known as "code talkers," whose Navajo language was indecipherable to Japanese soldiers listening to the transmissions. Cage portrays Joe Enders, a shell-shocked officer detailed to protect Ben Yahzee (Adam Beach), his unit's code talker. If the enemy captures Yahzee, he could be forced to decode American radio messages and thereby impede the entire Pacific campaign. Christian Slater delivers a fine, understated performance as a fellow officer with a similar assignment, and character actors Peter Stormare, Noah Emmerich, and Mark Ruffalo lend able support. Woo’s elaborate battle scenes are graphic, much in the manner of Saving Private Ryan, but the violence isn’t gratuitous; war is definitely not glorified, and the inescapable jingoism is held to a minimum. Instead, the director emphasizes the uneasy relationship between the self-assured, friendly Navaho and the war-weary officer who realizes he might be forced to kill his charge to prevent his capture by the Japanese. The key to Windtalkers’ success is Cage, who keeps his flamboyant urges in check and imbues his tormented character with dignity. Ed Hulse, Barnes & Noble
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