HBO Special "Taking Chance" - Page 3
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  1. #31
    Hey Kim, Five Dolla!!! I recorded on video, DVD broke. I have someone burning me a copy so if you haven't recieved one I'll get 2


  2. #32
    Well done! Outstanding movie.


  3. #33
    Where can I buy it? I really want to see it.
    Semper Fi,
    Eric


  4. #34

    Exclamation Mortuary affairs Soldiers say HBO film realistic

    Thursday, February 26, 2009
    Mortuary affairs Soldiers say HBO film realistic

    About 150 mortuary affairs specialists from the Army Casualty and Mortuary Affairs Operation Center attended the premier of Taking Chance, a Home Box Office movie starring Kevin Bacon.

    The movie, which made its television debut Saturday evening, chronicles one of the silent, virtually unseen journeys that take place when military escorts bring the fallen from the war zone to home.

    This is a unique opportunity for the American public to see the dignity, honor and respect that we treat our fallen with… to see that we do that whether we are in the public eye or not, said Col. Carl Johnson, director of CMAOC. This was a great portrayal. It was really pretty accurate portrayal of what goes on behind the scenes.
    Based on the real-life experiences of retired Marine Lt. Col. Michael Strobl, the movie pays tribute to the men and women who make the ultimate sacrifice, as well as to the uniformed servicemembers who literally and figuratively carry the fallen home.

    Although the film is about a Marines journey home, officials said it is a testimony to the daily work of the CMAOC and everyone who has helped a fallen Soldier find his or her way home.

    I actually worked overseas. I did the dignified transfers in Germany and at Dover and it captured exactly what we did over there and it was a very moving film, said
    Sgt.Crystal Seymores really an honor to actually do this; and, now everyone can see what we do on a daily basis.

    (Information compiled from an Army News Service release.)

    Posted on 02/26 at 02:08 PM

    Ellie


  5. #35
    Corpsman Free Member
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    Watched it for third time. "Honor, Respect, and Dignity", always received by Marines in uniform, from the public. ALL KIA, and WIA Marines, and Corpsmen, deserve this nations thanks, for their service, and personal sacrifice. "Marines die, The Marine Corps will go on forever, so YOU will go on forever!" GSGT Lee Ermey Hartman, in "Full Metal Jacket"......SEMPER FIDELIS.....DOC


  6. #36
    Bacon has solemn duty in 'Taking Chance'
    By David Germain, The Associated Press

    PARK CITY, Utah - First comes the bearer of the bad news, that a loved one has died in combat. Then comes the bearer of the loved one -- the military escort who brings the fallen warrior home.

    Kevin Bacon's HBO drama "Taking Chance" chronicles a home front saga unknown to most Americans: the procedures and protocols followed in tending to our battle casualties and the honors paid them on their last journey.

    Based on a true story, the film stars Bacon as Marine Lt. Col. Michael Strobl, a career officer who volunteered to escort the body of 19-year-old Lance Cpl. Chance Phelps back to his family in Wyoming after Phelps was killed in Iraq in April 2004.

    Then based in Quantico, Va., Strobl traveled to the military mortuary at Dover Air Force Base in Delaware, where Phelps' body was prepared.

    The film depicts the agonizing attention devoted to slain troops. Blood and grime are scrubbed from dog tags, watches and other personal effects. Hands are carefully cleaned, though they will be concealed by white gloves. Uniforms and medals are meticulously arranged, even in cases of closed-casket funerals.

    And that's just the beginning.

    Salutes and honors

    Along the way, escorts and other military personnel must solemnly salute the dead each time their bodies are taken off a hearse or loaded onto a plane.

    "It never occurred to me, the painstaking detail," Bacon said in an interview alongside Strobl at January's Sundance Film Festival, where "Taking Chance" premiered.

    "The fact that the honors are rendered when the remains are moved from one place to another. I was really stunned, and then I think that's in a way what the essence of the movie is. You tell this very, very simple, specific story about this guy and this kid and this one journey, then hopefully, people start to think about the bigger picture of the families and the loss of life and the sacrifice."

    Along the way, Bacon's Strobl encounters little moments of compassion and communal grief with strangers who never catch a glimpse of Phelps.

    A civilian hearse driver explains he took the job partly in honor of friends wounded or killed in Iraq. An airline clerk upgrades Strobl to first class with a somber thank you for his escort duty. A flight attendant gives him a gold crucifix. An airline pilot who, like Strobl, served in Desert Storm joins in saluting Phelps.

    "People you can presume represented the whole spectrum of views on our policies, they all, without exception, were grateful for Chance and saddened by the loss," said Strobl, who retired from the Marines in 2007 and now works a civilian job at the Pentagon.

    Record became personal

    Strobl shared it with colleagues, and the story eventually made its way to executive producer Brad Krevoy, who brought the project to HBO.

    Ross Katz, a producer on such films as "Lost in Translation" and "In the Bedroom," collaborated with Strobl to write the screenplay and also made his directing debut on "Taking Chance."

    Like Bacon, Katz initially hesitated, uncertain that he wanted to take on an Iraq film.

    Then Katz caught a TV news item one night about the latest casualties from a roadside bomb in Iraq.

    Normally very engaged with international news, Katz said he felt nothing.

    "I remember going outside, walking down the street … and everybody was running off to dinner, living their lives in busy Manhattan," Katz said. "I thought, a parent right now is getting a knock on the door, and some Marine or airman or soldier is informing that parent their child has died. Why is everything normal outside? Shouldn't the world stop for a second?"

    'All pretend, and yet …'

    While filming, Bacon found even his movie world stopped for a moment as the filmmakers re-created Strobl's journey with the box containing Phelps' coffin.

    "There was this odd thing where the process of making the film, it's all pretend, and yet I sort of felt a similar kind of thing to what Mike has expressed going through," Bacon said. "Because we'd shoot these scenes, even though there was nothing in our box, just people watching it were really profoundly affected by it."

    Strobl said he wants the film to affect audiences the same way.

    "Understandably but also regrettably, we all kind of get desensitized to the numbers," Strobl said. "If nothing else, I hope people walk away from this movie and kind of pause to remember the 4,000 names that they may have glanced at in the paper or seen on the news or even worse, may have just ignored because they've seen so many of them.

    "If they just take a minute and think about those service members and their families, that would be gratifying."




    Tune In

    Today 2:30 p.m., midnight Wednesday noon, 8 p.m.

    Saturday 8 a.m., 4:30 p.m.

    Ellie


  7. #37
    What's with their slow saluting?


  8. #38
    Marine Free Member davblay's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Katzman View Post
    What's with their slow saluting?

    Isn't that protocol and respect, from the manual?

    Dave


  9. #39
    I will have to look, but I've never heard of that before.


  10. #40
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    Finally caught this movie on HBO and it was great, very sad. I just want to thank all you Marines for your service and all branches for that matter and all who gave the ultimate sacrifice for our freedom. I hope to earn the title of Marine and join your ranks soon enough.


  11. #41
    TAKING A CHANCE

    By KYLE SMITH


    March 1, 2009 --

    For two and a half minutes near the end of "Taking Chance," the new HBO movie about the body of a young Marine returned home for burial, there is no sound except for the salute of the riflemen and the Wyoming wind battering the flags that stand at half mast as the shattered remains of PFC Chance Phelps are placed at rest. The silence amounts to perhaps the most eloquent statement Hollywood has yet made about the Iraq War.

    Its main competition is an earlier scene in the same movie. Driving along a country road behind an SUV carrying the casket, Lt. Col. Michael Strobl finds other motorists forming an impromptu funeral cortege out of respect for the departed.

    "Taking Chance," which is the only Iraq movie to show the troops in a wholly positive way, is also the only one people are watching. The film industry has reduced our troops to dupes, dopes, deserters and losers in an insane clown posse of laughably bad films like "Stop-Loss," "In the Valley of Elah," "Lions for Lambs," "Home of the Brave" and "The Lucky Ones." To say that these relentlessly skewed movies, made by people innocent of any knowledge of the military, are flops would be an understatement: "The Lucky Ones," for instance, which starred Tim Robbins and Rachel McAdams as desperate and moronic vets on leave, last fall grossed $267,000, a figure that wouldn't even cover the cost of advertising. It was yanked from screens after a single week.

    "Taking Chance," though, a work of transcendent sorrow and infinite dignity, was watched by two million viewers on its first HBO showing last Saturday, the best figure for an HBO original movie in five years. Though the violent death of a serviceman informs every frame, it is also a powerful statement about duty and honor as embodied in the stark face of USMC Lt. Col. Michael Strobl, nobly portrayed by Kevin Bacon with a chesty military bearing and a hidden well of resolve. The film is based on Strobl's experience escorting the remains of Phelps, who was killed in action in 2004 and who inspired Strobl to keep a journal blogs such as Blackfive.net.

    To show the fallen as heroes is too much for some to bear. "There is surely an edge of propaganda to the unfailing grace and dignity of the process showcased in 'Taking Chance,' " snarked Ray Richmond in The Hollywood Reporter. " 'Taking Chance' is saved from patriotic sentimentality by its attention to detail and Bacon's performance," said Mary McNamara in the Los Angeles Times. Saved! Whew. That was a close call.

    In the New York Times, Ginia Bellafante ruled that "Taking Chance" contained "a flatness that made me feel unpatriotic for being bored." She needn't worry. Finding this stately but cathartic film boring isn't unpatriotic. It's merely cloddish.

    Taking the Silver Star for snark was Jeffrey Wells of the popular movie blog Hollywood Elsewhere. If you have ever served in the military, I advise you to skip the next paragraph. Especially if you are armed.

    Wells says that "Taking Chance" "sells the honor and glory of combat death in a 'sensitive' way that is not only cloying but borders on the hucksterish. Which I feel is a kind of obscenity . . . It may be one of the most inspired con jobs of all time in the way it walks, talks and acts apolitical . . . and yet deep down, it's a film that will warm the cockles of Dick Cheney's heart. 'Taking Chance' is about simple sadness and dignity in the same way that Scientologists offering free stress tests are just trying to make your day go a little smoother."

    Since Wells apparently scorns all "combat death," not just those in Iraq, I wonder whether he is a local pacifist as well. Maybe if there were no ceremonies to honor fallen police officers, the force would be unable to recruit new talent and disband. Then criminals, unprovoked by the presence of law enforcement, would simply disappear?

    "Taking Chance" makes no case for the Iraq War. It asks merely for understanding and respect of those who sacrifice. The pain etched in Bacon's face is so profound that by the end of the film, you feel why he says, "I should have been over there. I was trained to fight. If I'm not over there, what am I?" Then he delivers his highest praise: "Those guys - guys like Chance - they're Marines."

    Kyle.Smith@nypost.com

    Ellie


  12. #42
    Quote Originally Posted by Katzman View Post
    What's with their slow saluting?

    Not sure where or even if that is written anywhere. However, thats the way I have seen it done many times. It's like paying respects to our fallen.


  13. #43
    I missed it, caught it towards the end but didn't want to see just the ending...Will have to snatch it up. Semper Fi.

    Sgt "A"


  14. #44

  15. #45
    Found by a poolee...

    Here is a link for the movie for all to view.....

    click on the "I am human let me watch" button and it will redirect and load movie.

    http://www.supernovatube.com/play.ph...key=1211433010


    Ellie


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