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The Dogs of War

The Dogs of War

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Director: John Irvin
Actors: Christopher Walken, Tom Berenger, Colin Blakely, Hugh Millais, Paul Freeman
Studio: MGM (Video & DVD)
Category: DVD

List Price: $14.98
Buy New: $5.97
You Save: $9.01 (60%)

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New (35) Used (20) from $5.73

Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 32 reviews
Sales Rank: 6840

Format: Anamorphic, Closed-captioned, Color, Dolby, Dvd-video, Subtitled, Widescreen, Ntsc
Languages: English (Original Language), French (Subtitled), Spanish (Subtitled)
Rating: R (Restricted)
Region: 1
Aspect Ratio: 1.85:1
Number Of Discs: 1
Running Time: 119 Minutes
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
Dimensions (in): 7.5 x 5 x 0.6

MPN: D1001826D
ISBN: 0792851323
UPC: 027616860965
EAN: 9780792851325
ASIN: B00005O06P

Theatrical Release Date: February 13, 1981
Publication Date: November 20, 2001
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Shipping: Expedited shipping available
Shipping: International shipping available
Condition: BRAND NEW, Factory Sealed Items! FAST International Airmail!

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Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.com
Back before Christopher Walken became a caricature of himself, when he was still considered a rising actor based on his Oscar for The Deer Hunter, he made this graphic, exciting action film, about a group of professional mercenaries. Walken leads a band of soldiers of fortune, who are hired to overthrow a dictator in West Africa (think Idi Amin). But when their mission is compromised by political and monetary forces, Walken returns to the United States, disillusioned, battered, and not sure the high life of lawyers, guns, and money is really for him. Still, vengeance is sweet, as his partner, Tom Berenger, keeps whispering into his ear. A better film than it's generally given credit for, The Dogs of War features the kind of cool, detached performance Walken used to be capable of, before he began believing both the hype and ridicule about his over-the-top style. --Marshall Fine

Description
Academy AwardA(r) winner* Christopher Walken (Pulp Fiction) is a brutal mercenary who must fight the ultimate battleagainst his own consciencein this powerful action thriller with a "heart-thumping tempo" (The Hollywood Reporter). The Dogs Of War is a spectacular adventure that brilliantly captures the gloryand horrorof war. Jamie Shannon (Walken) is a cynical warrior-for-hire who feels truly alive only in the heat of battle, and now he's aboutto take on the most challenging assignment of his career: to invade a corrupt African dictatorship and shift control to the "puppet" of a powerful British corporation. To prepare, Shannon masterfullytrains and equips a squad of deadly mercenaries with the latest and most destructive tactics and military hardware. But as their explosive assault begins, Shannon finds himself embroiled in an internal conflict of his own: Will this be his greatest triumph or has he sold his soul along with his battle expertise?


Customer Reviews:   Read 27 more reviews...

4 out of 5 stars Damn good picture without any easy answers....   July 6, 2008
Grigory's Girl (NYC)
2 out of 2 found this review helpful

This is a great film, a film that hasn't dated and a film where you can watch Christopher Walken before he became a rather silly parody of himself. Walken plays a mercenary hired by a conglomorate/corporation to check out a 3rd world African country. The person that hires Walken has ties to investors who want to know how stable the country is, and whether they need to instigate a coup de tat to install a more "friendlier" leader. The corporation decides that a new leader is needed, but Walken and his crew have other things on their minds, leading to an unexpected (and believable) ending.

The best thing about this film is that it just shows the events without restorting to simplistic, "this is bad" tones that mar many Hollywood films. The film has no easy answers and poses no easy questions. It just shows you how coups occur, why they occur, and what happens after they're done. It's a neat little picture, perhaps a little cold, but very realistic, exciting, thought provoking, and it leaves an indelible impression.



3 out of 5 stars Cry havoc...   February 16, 2008
Trevor Willsmer (London, England)
1 out of 1 found this review helpful

The Dogs of War is part of that subgenre of war movies that briefly blossomed in the late-sixties and seventies but found little favor in subsequent years, the story about the ageing mercenary who suffers a crisis of conscience (Dark of the Sun, The Wild Geese, Savior etc). It was also the last significant attempt to turn Christopher Walken into a mainstream leading man in the Brando mould on the back of his Deer Hunter Oscar, with the trailer and marketing almost ignoring co-stars Tom Berenger and, despite delivering the film's best performance as a cynical documentary filmmaker, Colin Blakely. Certainly Walken takes a beating as convincingly as Brando, though the public weren't biting in 1981.

Frederick Forsyth's novel gained much notoriety due to the excessive lengths he went to in researching it - few writers would actually invest in a hastily abandoned African coup d'etat to get the inside details right, though it seems Forsyth did just that. As a result, the film goes to great lengths to stress its veracity, with director John Irvin, still hot after the success of Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy, adopting the stripped-down near documentary style that served Fred Zinnemann so well with The Day of the Jackal. Irvin's subsequent work would sadly mark him out as one of the flattest action directors in the business, but here - perhaps leaning on the experience of cinematographer Jack Cardiff, who also directed Dark of the Sun - he delivers the goods surprisingly effectively. Underneath all the gritty pseudo-realism it's a very familiar story (Winston Ntshona practically plays the same role here as an imprisoned deposed president that he did in the more Boys' Own The Wild Geese three years earlier), but it's well told - or at least in the two-hour European cut of the film which, perversely, is only available on DVD in the US, and there in a version with dodgy synchronisation in the early scenes: Europe has to make do with the cut US version shorn of 16 minutes. Geoffrey Burgon's score makes good use of A.E. Housman's Epitaph On An Army of Mercenaries while among the familiar faces in the supporting cast can be spotted Paul Freeman, Ed O'Neill, Jim Broadbent (as one of Blakely's film crew), Victoria Tennant and an unbilled Helen Shaver, though aside from Blakely, the standout performance probably comes from Hugh Millais' cold-fish middle man.

Once again, bear in mind that the US NTSC DVD is the uncut European version of the film, while the UK PAL DVD is the cut US version!



5 out of 5 stars Fascinating movie   November 27, 2007
James D. Crabtree (Fayetteville, NC USA)
0 out of 1 found this review helpful

This is a great video. Christopher Walken plays a mercenary who plans to carry out a coup in a an African country on behalf of a multinational corporation, and he plays it very well. Walken plays a convincing psycho in just about anything he's in. The story is believable and the plot moves along very well in this film. Of course, there's much more to the story in the book but overall the movie is faithful to the storyline.

By the way, look for an early appearance by the actor who plays Al Bundy in Married With Children.



5 out of 5 stars Cry Havoc and Buy `The Dogs of War'   July 17, 2007
C. Chow (Leesburg VA)
4 out of 4 found this review helpful

`The Dogs of War' is a cold warrior classic forgotten.

I still remember the frightening sight of the VHS cover, a painting of Walken's frightening face gripping a revolving grenade launcher, greeting me at the video store. I never saw it, always assuming it was merely Vietnam War backwash resulting from `The Deer Hunter.' I was completely wrong, sand deeply regret missing `The Dogs of War' all these years.

Based on Fredrick Forsyth's best selling cold warrior novel of the same title, `The Dogs of War' focus on a single great raid battle with wide reaching elements of drama. Mercenary Shannon (Christopher Walken) is hired by British industrialists to overthrow a stereotypical African dictatorship. 75% percent of the film involves the planning of a single great victory. The planning is filled with excitement as Walken and co mercenaries, including Tom Berenger and Ed O'Neal scavenge Europe of equipment. Their arsenal includes Uzis, rocket launchers, claymores, and new unique on unforgettable revolving grenade launchers. An advanced weapon still only now 27 years later making it to the battlefield.

The climactic battle is one of the most memorable blitzkriegs in movie history.

Christopher Walken's performance takes us back to when his frightening face and demeanor were used for fear, not comedy. Yes, some comedians like Walken and Leslie Nielson started out as action heroes.

`The Dogs of War' effectively combines Walken's acting, cold warrior cloak and dagger, and all out modern action.



3 out of 5 stars The Dogs of War   April 6, 2007
Roy W. Smith
1 out of 5 found this review helpful

I am a big fan of Christopher Walken. However this movie was almost a
verbatim remake of "The Wild Geese" from a few years before. I would
not recommend this movie as a purchase item to anyone else, but it
would be nice to rent "both" DVD's. Then anyone could make an informed
choice as to whether to purchase either,or both movies.


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