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Tom Hanks and Steven Spielberg Return to WWII for The Pacific
Posted by Kevin Kelly (kevinkelly@filmschoolrejects.com) on January 15, 2010

If you haven't seen HBOs incredible, Tom Hanks and Steve Spielberg-produced miniseries, Band of Brothers,
then I want you to stop reading this right now and go out and buy it.

It's available on DVD, Blu-ray, and probably multiple other formats at this point.
The good news is, this post will still be here when you get back. Okay, seen it? Good.

First of all, it's hard to believe it's been 9 years since BoB came out.
I first saw this on HBO, then on a ginormous VHS set, then on DVD, and I just received it for Christmas on Blu-ray,
and I usually re-watch the thing every year.
Thankfully, they're heading to another theater in the with a new 10 part miniseries about the war: Japan.

The Pacific follow the true story of three different marines: Robert Leckie, Eugene Sledge, and John Basilone as they receive training, fight in their first battles, as they get deeper into the conflict, and what happens when they return home after V-J Day.

It's not exactly the same experience of Band of Brothers, and it looks a lot grittier than that series.

It doesn't have the same background material that series did with Stephen Ambroses impressive books Band of Brothers and Citizen Soldier, but is instead based on Helmet for My Pillow, by Robert Leckie, and With the Old Breed, by Eugene B. Sledge, with additional material from Red Blood, Black Sand, by Chuck Tatum, and China Marine, by Eugene B. Sledge, as well as from John Basilone's private letters.

When asked about the importance of Saving Private Ryan, Spielberg said
"I had a sense in Saving Private Ryan that I was establishing a template based on the experiences of the veterans that were communicated to me, and the very few surviving photographs by the great wartime photographer Robert Capa.

I combined those to make a 24 frames-per-second representation of terror and chaos.
Although we've done the same with The Pacific, it does have a different look to it than Saving Private Ryan or
Band of Brothers."

Hanks went on to explain that, "After that HBO blip at the beginning, this was our story to tell with our own pacing."
They began talking about this project in earnest when they both worked on The Terminal, so this has been six years
in the making.

Actor Jon Seda who plays John Basilone said "We realized how important this was to be the voice for so many men,
the real heroes.

We had to get this right. They had Dr. Sidney Phillips, an actual WWII veteran from the Japanese theater, serving as
an advisor on the show, and he said You were trained and trained and trained endlessly, and the general idea was that
˜If every man does his job with his weapon, to the best of his ability, then everything will be all right."

I think that concept generally proved to be true.
When you finally get through boot camp, youre prepared for the rest of your life.
They showed us a series of scenes from the show, and it looks simply fantastic.
If you enjoyed Band of Brothers, you're going to love this one.

If you need any extra convincing, that cute little redheaded kid Joseph Mazzello,
who played Tim Murphy in Jurassic Park is all grown up, and he plays Eugene Sledge in the series.

Read more at Film School Rejects:

Tom Hanks and Steven Spielberg Return to WWII for The Pacific - Film School Rejects

http://www.filmschoolrejects.com/tv/tom-hanks-and-steven-spielberg-return-to-wwii-for-the-pacific-kelly.php#ixzz0ch6B8toD


Respectfully,

Joseph A. Jennings III
Executive Director

VVA Buckeye State Council

VVA National Service Representative

VVA Economic Opportunities Committee - Member

VVA Minority Affairs Committee - Member