IMDb-BEWERTUNG
7,4/10
3601
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Bagdad, 4. April 2004: US-Lieutenant Shane Aguero (E.J. Bonilla) und sein Platoon gehen im Armenviertel Sadr City auf Patrouille.Bagdad, 4. April 2004: US-Lieutenant Shane Aguero (E.J. Bonilla) und sein Platoon gehen im Armenviertel Sadr City auf Patrouille.Bagdad, 4. April 2004: US-Lieutenant Shane Aguero (E.J. Bonilla) und sein Platoon gehen im Armenviertel Sadr City auf Patrouille.
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April 2004. The US 1st Cavalry Division has recently relieved the 1st Armored Division in its occupation of Sadr City, Baghdad. Everything seems peaceful until one day a platoon is ambushed in the city while on patrol. The platoon holes up in a house and reinforcements are sent to extract them. However, the relief column is itself ambushed, the main aim of the initial ambush. What follows is a life-and-death struggle against overwhelming odds. Based on actual events.
Pretty good, but requires some patience to get there. I was initially expecting a Generation Kill-like series, i.e. based on a true military story, follow a unit and are engaged by the camaraderie, gritty action scenes. However, the series immediately failed on the engagement front. Scenes showing soldiers with their family seemed token, padded and superficially sentimental. The unit brotherhood also seemed quite artificial, with forced, unnatural-feeling dialogue and interactions.
The first 2-3 episodes were all like this, to the point where I was thinking of giving up on the series. Comparing it with Generation Kill is obviously a very high standard to emulate, as Generation Kill is one of the best military mini-series of all time (only Band of Brothers is better), so maybe disappointment was inevitable.
However, from a point, the series clicked into gear. The soldiers' backstories went from mundane meet-the-family stuff to interesting series of events, linking in with their current situation and revealing their characters. The dialogue and interactions became more plausible. These all lifted the engagement level significantly. In addition. the action got grittier, more intense and more compelling.
The final episode is very poignant, with a great emotionally-manipulative twist. Makes the effects of war very realistic and stark.
Overall, a good series, just don't give up in the first few episodes - it gets a whole lot better.
Pretty good, but requires some patience to get there. I was initially expecting a Generation Kill-like series, i.e. based on a true military story, follow a unit and are engaged by the camaraderie, gritty action scenes. However, the series immediately failed on the engagement front. Scenes showing soldiers with their family seemed token, padded and superficially sentimental. The unit brotherhood also seemed quite artificial, with forced, unnatural-feeling dialogue and interactions.
The first 2-3 episodes were all like this, to the point where I was thinking of giving up on the series. Comparing it with Generation Kill is obviously a very high standard to emulate, as Generation Kill is one of the best military mini-series of all time (only Band of Brothers is better), so maybe disappointment was inevitable.
However, from a point, the series clicked into gear. The soldiers' backstories went from mundane meet-the-family stuff to interesting series of events, linking in with their current situation and revealing their characters. The dialogue and interactions became more plausible. These all lifted the engagement level significantly. In addition. the action got grittier, more intense and more compelling.
The final episode is very poignant, with a great emotionally-manipulative twist. Makes the effects of war very realistic and stark.
Overall, a good series, just don't give up in the first few episodes - it gets a whole lot better.
Several things just make no sense:
1. US Army basically looks dumb and incompetent in this movie
2. They attempt rescue at night but nobody is using night vision and there is no air support.
3. They can't figure out where the 1st squad is located? really? with interpreter and another guy who speaks Arabic they can't ask or figure out their exact address/location? that is dumb.
4. They wave their arms like idiots while rescue drives by instead of shooting enemy who can clearly be seen?
5. Where are all the female soldiers?
6. Why did they need an an unarmored truck with infantry, they were a liability not an asset not once but twice.
7. why so much melodrama? Why focus on backstory of only some random soldiers, why not just do every single one?
1. US Army basically looks dumb and incompetent in this movie
2. They attempt rescue at night but nobody is using night vision and there is no air support.
3. They can't figure out where the 1st squad is located? really? with interpreter and another guy who speaks Arabic they can't ask or figure out their exact address/location? that is dumb.
4. They wave their arms like idiots while rescue drives by instead of shooting enemy who can clearly be seen?
5. Where are all the female soldiers?
6. Why did they need an an unarmored truck with infantry, they were a liability not an asset not once but twice.
7. why so much melodrama? Why focus on backstory of only some random soldiers, why not just do every single one?
8 soldiers dead n 65 injured just to shovel shit..... wonders of the western rich elite never seize to amaze me anymore.... rip
I really can't understand all the negative reviews this series has garnered as I really enjoyed it. It's not the best acted but it depicts a true series of events and does an excellent job of showing how badly the American forces had prepared for urban warfare at that time.
Sending an open truck, without a radio and full of troops into streets of multi-storey buildings packed with well armed insurgents is obviously, in hindsight, just madness but that was what the American military did. In a similar fashion the UK sent out unarmoured Land Rover Defenders before finding out that they tended to get blown up by unscrupulous terrorists. Lessons were learned the hard way back then and the series does a good job of showing that.
Yes the "homeland" stuff is occasionally a bit cheesy but people "Get over yourselves!" and see the entire series for, overall, a relatively inexpensive good bit of TV entertainment.
Sending an open truck, without a radio and full of troops into streets of multi-storey buildings packed with well armed insurgents is obviously, in hindsight, just madness but that was what the American military did. In a similar fashion the UK sent out unarmoured Land Rover Defenders before finding out that they tended to get blown up by unscrupulous terrorists. Lessons were learned the hard way back then and the series does a good job of showing that.
Yes the "homeland" stuff is occasionally a bit cheesy but people "Get over yourselves!" and see the entire series for, overall, a relatively inexpensive good bit of TV entertainment.
Sure the acting isn't great but take it for what it is. It's a series depicting a true event that happened to US soldiers. As a veteran myself and living just down the road from Fort Hood, I think it's crazy the nerve that these keyboard warriors on the internet have. It tells the story well. It shows the front line battles and the battles that happen back home that some shows don't touch.
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- WissenswertesThe mini-series actually filmed at Fort Hood, Texas, in the spring of 2017. Fort Hood is the headquarters for the 1st Cavalry Division. The series filmed at various locations on the installation, including in the Patton Park neighborhood. The Iraqi scenes were also filmed on Fort Hood, on a set built on Elijah Military Operation in Urban Terrain training site. Many of the actual Soldiers portrayed in the mini-series were on site during some of the filming, including now-Lt. Gen. Gary Volesky and now-Gen. Robert "Abe" Abrams. Many of the series extras are Army spouses and children, along with actual Fort Hood soldiers
- VerbindungenFeatured in First Look: The Long Road Home (2017)
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- 1 Std.(60 min)
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- 16:9 HD
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