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SummarySet in a Nazi prisoner of war camp, Lt. Tommy Hart (Farrell), a Harvard law student before enlisting, is assigned by top ranking Colonel William McNamara (Willis) to defend an African-American airman (Howard) accused of murder in a camp trial held by his fellow American prisoners.

Hart's War

Metascore
49
User score
Mixed or Average
5.4
My Score
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Metascore
49
34% Positive
11 Reviews
56% Mixed
18 Reviews
9% Negative
3 Reviews
  • All Reviews
  • Positive Reviews
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  • Negative Reviews
75
Chicago Sun-Times
The movie worked for me right up to the final scene, and then it caved in.
75
ReelViews
Works uncommonly well because of the effective manner in which it blends together its various elements: the WW2 prison camp setting, the courtroom aspects, and the issues of honor, racism, and redemption.
User score
Mixed or Average
5.4
28% Positive
8 Ratings
59% Mixed
17 Ratings
14% Negative
4 Ratings
  • All Reviews
  • Positive Reviews
  • Mixed Reviews
  • Negative Reviews
Jan 21, 2017
10
SickTwizted89
Under Rated film.. Just goes to show some Americans are just as bad as the **** wer like when the black liutenent get quart marshalled for the american who planted the spike under the bed.. Having said that this was a powerful fim
Oct 29, 2015
8
FilmQueen
I have not read the book and I didn't know what to expect, but I liked this movie. I think it took a somewhat different approach than what we usually see in war films.
63
Baltimore Sun
Could have been a contender, but it lacks the courage of its own ambivalence.
50
San Francisco Chronicle
Takes some admirable risks.
50
New York Daily News
Hart's War has its priorities clear, but delivers them with insulting simplicity.
40
New York Magazine (Vulture)
A movie like Hart's War, for all its realistic trappings, is essentially escapism. And yet it inadvertently pushes the 9/11 button. The real world is going to intrude a lot this year at the movies. Better get used to it.
30
Wall Street Journal
If glum were good and bleak were best, Hart's War would be a standout.
See All 32 Critic Reviews
Sep 5, 2016
5
MeritCoba
What is a man's life worth? Hart's War is wrongly titled as this gives the impression that this is a war movie. In fact, it is a courtroom movie with the war providing a unique setting: it is held in Germany in a prisoner of war camp filled with allied **** central theme is akin to Saving Private Ryan: what is a man's life worth? Do we sacrifice the many to save the one and in reverse: do we sacrifice the one to save the many? how unfair that might be. The case gets complicated by the fact that the final (and deadly) authority is held by the Germans and that the accused is a black man, with all the racial entanglements that this creates. Next to that is that the main protagonist comes from the wealthier class from the us. This provides yet another source of tension. It is up to Colin Farrell to defend the reluctant black Lieutenant, while the others make his life difficult, notably the camp commandant. It would have made for a great story if the script hadn't been so bad. An example: the Germans are yet again of the stereotypical kind: they have no problem to summarily shoot prisoners of war or hang them without a proper trial. A severe breach of the Geneva convention and totally ridiculous at that point of time in the war as the Germans could have guessed that the shoe would soon be on the other foot. But even more: why would the camp commandant even bother with a courtroom case anyway if he is such a bad dude? Well, the movie provides the flimsiest of excuses: 'that might be interesting', the commandant says. The American prisoners are your usual set of suspects with a few bad dudes with a racial bias, the nondescript filler cast and the exemplary good guy Colin Farell. Those who expect the fireworks of Twelve Angry Men or the cat and mouse play of A Few Good Men shall not find it here. Key moments are not intense and played out with passion. It is all bland, flat almost emotionless. Like eating sawdust. No Jack Nicolson who blows his top as In A few good men, no Humphrey Bogart who falls apart in the courtroom in The Caine Mutiny and no Lee J. Cobb who collapses in a heap of misery after his tirade and gives in in Twelve Angry Men. These key moments is what makes these people go, no such moments are in this movie. The movie is just not right. The camera doesn't intensify the scene(close ups for key moments), the scenery is not use right(cramped environments to make you feel locked in and with no place to go), strange angles to create a fearful mood, ties undone when the scenes get heated. **** tarts out with a totally pointless first part in which Farrell is captured. It ends with a long after explanation that doesn't matter. It is not rightly cast with the camp commandant, a key figure, played by a nobody and Bruce Willes, taking the role of Jack Nicolson had in A Few Good Men, is just not being the right guy for that job. Willes is the kind of guy who stays cool and collected even under pressure and makes wisecracks, while Nicolson can explode, rant and spittle.. That is the passion you need when you become undone. And finally on top of all that is the breast beating. Yeah, you such an honest band of freedom-loving good guys. All in all, a mediocre movie that will sink into oblivion. I read the book was okay, let's hope someone in due time will make a better movie with it so we can forget about this one.
Jul 4, 2018
4
The3AcademySins
This movie is goofy, fanciful, borderline insulting fiction that really dumbs down a lot of the experiences of being a POW in WWII. There's a reason not a lot of people are watching "Hart's War" in 2018. The plot of the Tuskegee Airmen and the trial are the best parts of the film, and shine very brightly. If you want a good POW film, go watch "The Great Escape."
See All 29 User Reviews
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  • Cheyenne Enterprises
  • David Foster Productions
  • David Ladd Films
  • Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM)
Feb 15, 2002
2 h 5 m
R
Heroes Are Measured By What They Do.
Shanghai International Film Festival
• 1 Win & 2 Nominations
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