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Miracle at St Anna [Blu-ray] Reviews
July 14, 2009 at 1:57 pm
Pros: well staged combat sequences; notable story
Cons: overlong; messy plot construction; inconsistent acting
Cons: overlong; messy plot construction; inconsistent acting
In 1983, postal worker Hector Negron shoots someone who appears to be an innocent customer buying stamps. As he awaits trial, we go back to 1944 as the Army’s 92nd Division, codenamed Buffalo Soldiers, is on maneuvers in Italy with Germans all around. Four soldiers get separated from their division: Negron (Laz Alonso), Cummings (Michael Ealy), Stamps (Derek Luke), and slow-witted giant Train (Omar Benson Miller), and these men carrying an injured child (Matteo Sciabordi) with them hold up in the village of St. Anna with only a handful of loyal patricians to help them against the slowly advancing Germans. There’s also a traitor in their midst, the infamous “Great Butterfly” (Pierfrancesco Favino), but they’re unaware of his potentially lethal presence. Over the course of the two-and-a-half hours, we get to know them all, some of the villagers, all of which helps explain the opening prologue shooting.
James McBride, who wrote the original novel, has also contributed the screenplay, but he seems unwilling to let many secondary scenes and characters go thus contributing to the film’s overloaded feel and unnecessarily jerky construction. Several scenes showing the white commanders with unfeeling attitudes toward their black brothers fighting and dying on the front lines make their point without the need for constant repetition, while the scenes showing the black soldiers enjoying the acceptance of the Italian villagers who don’t judge them by their skin color are also a trifle overdone. The points are undoubtedly true but don’t require sledgehammer techniques for the themes to be fully presented. Director Lee stages all of the combat scenes very well with the expected graphic violence right in-your-face. Tender scenes between the lumbering Train and the young boy he comes to think of as his son are lovely but slow the film’s pace to a crawl.
Performances are a bit erratic. Top-billed Derek Luke and Laz Alonso make the strongest impressions as the commander and the inevitable hero. Omar Benson Miller gives a less accomplished but still ingratiating portrayal as the soulfully simple Train. Michael Ealy’s womanizing Cummings is the least impressive of the four main characters, his smirking demeanor and hot temper not always realistically conveyed. Valentina Cerri makes the sympathetic villager Renata a memorable supporting character. Alexandra Maria Lara has one of the film’s most tantalizing scenes as Axis Sally, the propaganda-spouting German radio artist who used specially prepared material to undermine the Buffalo Soldiers’ morale.
Video Quality
Audio Quality
Special Features
“The Buffalo Soldier Experience” is a 21 ½-minute documentary narrated by historian Chad Williams and featuring interviews with World War II Buffalo Soldier veterans discussing their unique bond with the people of Italy who took them in during their 1944-45 campaign there. It is presented in 1080i.
There are nine deleted/extended scenes which may be watched individually or in one 5 ½-minute group. They are presented in 1080i.
There are 1080p previews of Lost - Season 4, Confessions of a Shopaholic, Doubt, and Blindness. The trailer for Miracle at St. Anna is not present here but can be found on other Disney Blu-ray discs.
In Conclusion
Matt Hough
Charlotte, NC
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