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Apocalypse Now (1979)
Starring
Marlon Brando and Martin Sheen
Director
Francis Ford Coppola
Film Notes
"In the tradition of such obsessively driven directors as
Erich von Stroheim and Werner Herzog, Francis Ford Coppola approached the production of Apocalypse
Now as if it were his own epic mission into the heart of darkness. On location in the
storm-ravaged Philippines, he quite literally went mad as the project threatened to devour
him in a vortex of creative despair, but from this insanity came one of the greatest films
ever made. It began as a John Milius screenplay, transposing Joseph Conrad's classic story
Heart of
Darkness into the horrors of the Vietnam War, following a battle-weary Captain
Willard (Martin Sheen) on a secret upriver mission to find and execute the renegade
Colonel Kurtz (Marlon Brando), who has reverted to a state of murderous and mystical
insanity. The journey is fraught with danger involving wartime action on epic and intimate
scales. One measure of the film's awesome visceral impact is the number of sequences,
images, and lines of dialogue that have literally burned themselves into our cinematic
consciousness, from the Wagnerian strike of helicopter gunships on a Vietnamese village to
the brutal murder of stowaways on a peasant sampan and the unflinching fearlessness of the
surfing warrior Lieutenant Colonel Kilgore (Robert Duvall), who speaks lovingly of
"the smell of napalm in the morning." Like Herzog's Aguirre: The Wrath of God,
this film is the product of genius cast into a pit of hell and emerging, phoenix-like, in
triumph. Coppola's obsession (effectively detailed in the riveting documentary Hearts of Darkness:
A Filmmaker's Apocalypse, directed by Coppola's wife, Eleanor) informs every
scene and every frame, and the result is a film for the ages." (Jeff Shannon,
Amazon.com) |
Rated: 
Edition Details: 1979
NTSC format
Color, Closed-captioned, HiFi Sound
Number of tapes: 1
Apocalypse Now $18.91
Apocalypse
Now (widescreen) $20.99 |
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