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Tigerland

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Director
  
Initial DVD release
  
June 25, 2001 (Iceland)

Duration
  

Country
  
United States

7/10
IMDb

Genre
  
Drama, War

Music director
  
Nathan Larson

Language
  
English

Tigerland movie poster
Writer
  
Ross Klavan
,
Michael McGruther

Release date
  
June 15, 2000 (2000-06-15)

Initial release
  
October 6, 2000 (Los Angeles)

Cast
  
(Pvt. Roland Bozz), (Pvt. Jim Paxton),
Clifton Collins, Jr.
(Pvt. Miter), (Pvt. Cantwell), (Pvt. Wilson),
James MacDonald
(Staff Sgt. Thomas)

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,
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,
Priest
,
Parting Glances
,
Shortbus
,
Please Give

Tagline
  
The system wanted them to become soldiers. One soldier just wanted to be human.

Movielands tigerland trailer hd


1971. A nation stands divided over the escalating war in Vietnam. Thousands of young Americans lie dead on foreign soil. And at Fort Polk, Louisiana, thousands more prepare to join them. The specter of combat hangs over the men of A-Company, Second Platoon, as they enter the final stage of infantry training. They will be sent to the war. But each man deals with this prospect in his own way. One mans defiance, however, galvanizes every member of the platoon.

Contents

Tigerland movie scenes

Tigerland is a 2000 war drama film directed by Joel Schumacher starring Colin Farrell in the role of Private Roland Bozz, and takes place in a training camp for soldiers to be sent to the Vietnam War.

Tigerland movie scenes

Tigerland was the name of a U.S. Army training camp during the mid-60s to early 70s located at Fort Polk, Louisiana as part of the U.S. Army Advanced Infantry Training Center. As often the last stop for new infantrymen on their way to Vietnam, Tigerland was established in humid and muggy Fort Polk in order to closely mimic the environmental conditions of South Vietnam. The films setting is loosely based on this training camp.

Tigerland movie scenes

A group of recruits go through Advanced Infantry Training at Fort Polk, Louisiana's infamous Tigerland, last stop before Vietnam for tens of thousands of young men in 1971

Plot

Tigerland movie scenes

It is September 1971 and it is clear that the US is losing the Vietnam War. In the opinion of the average American soldier who came of age during the Peace movement of the 1960s, Vietnam was "lost a long time ago". Roland Bozz (Colin Farrell), a draftee who is opposed to the war, is shown to be an unruly soldier with no respect for authority; he disobeys orders and talks back to his superiors. He quickly befriends another recruit, Jim Paxton (Matthew Davis), an aspiring writer who records his experiences in a personal journal. Unlike Bozz, Paxton volunteered for the Army. Upon reaching their post, the company commanding officer Captain Saunders makes it clear that every soldier who passes through Fort Polk and Tigerland will be sent to Vietnam. He also states that any political views on the war are irrelevant at this point.

As the film progresses, another side of Bozz is shown. Having "x-ray vision for loopholes," Bozz finds ways for soldiers to get out of the army — one because he not only has children but also a handicapped wife; another soldier, Miter (Clifton Collins Jr.), who joined to prove his manhood but finds himself way over his head. At one point, another soldier approaches Bozz while on leave and asks for help getting out, saying "I was told if you dont wanna go to Nam, you either pray to Jesus, or go see Roland Bozz." Bozz also shows his reasoning behind being opposed to the war: his human compassion. Eventually Bozzs natural leadership and ability earns him the title of squad leader (sometimes called acting Jack). Another private, Wilson (Shea Whigham), a racial bigot and instigator, continuously demeans Miter and Bozz. Bozz is the only one that retaliates, which results in a fight between the two. Paxton helps break up the fight and also earns the hatred of Wilson.

Tigerland movie scenes 01 23

Later, while doing live fire exercises, Wilson threatens Bozz with a pistol. Bozz tries to disarm Wilson, and the two wrestle each other to the ground, Wilson getting the upper hand and putting the gun to the back of Bozzs head and pulling the trigger. Miraculously, the gun misfires, saving Bozzs life. The Commanding Officer lets Bozz choose the punishment: have Wilson court-martialed or "let me deal with him," strongly suggesting the latter. Despite the commanding officer strongly pressing to let him deal with it, Bozz says he wants Wilson "out of the army" because he recognizes Wilson has taken an emotional beating ever since his inability to command became obvious. Bozz leaves the office saying he wants Wilson out.

Tigerland movie scenes 59 02

The platoon is sent to "Tigerland", a forested training area designed as the best possible replica of Vietnam. During an exercise, Bozzs squad acts as villagers in a mock Vietnamese village, with one squad member designated as a "VC sympathizer". They compete with another squad charged with rooting out the sympathizer. This other squad is led by Wilson, who was not kicked out of the army after all. As the exercise ends with Bozzs squad "winning," Wilson tells Bozz he will kill him no matter what it takes. Soon thereafter, Bozz is about ready to make an escape to Mexico with the aid of some civilians he has paid. Platoon member Johnson (Russell Richardson) sees him and tells him to stop; Johnson tells him if he runs away, Wilson will go after Paxton instead of Bozz and he will be responsible for his friends death. The scene ends with Bozz apparently climbing into the van, but the next morning as the platoon falls in, Bozz comes back, acting as if he had merely gone off to urinate.

Tigerland movie scenes Tigerland 2000

During the last training exercise, Bozzs squad and Wilsons squad are pitted against each other on patrolling missions. As Wilsons squad prepares for an attack, he replaces his blank cartridges with live ammunition and removes his blank-firing adaptor. As Bozzs squad nears, he opens fire. Though he does not hit anyone, it is obvious he is using live ammunition, and the trainer for the exercise tries to intervene. As he does, Bozz is standing above Paxton and deliberately fires a blank round with his rifle muzzle near Paxtons face, the flash wounding Paxtons eye. The trainer aims a pistol at Wilsons head to get him to hold his weapon up and surrender, telling him he will be court-martialed.

Tigerland movie scenes Obviously if it s a choice between Tigerland or Platoon the two Vietnam era movies coming out on Blu ray this week Platoon is the far superior film

At the end of the film, the entire platoon gets ready to head to Vietnam, except Paxton whose eye injury, though not permanent, has earned him a medical discharge. Bozz and the others board a bus, and he and Paxton exchange farewells through a window. Paxton tells Bozz he is going to write about him, but Bozz says he wont. He has stolen Paxtons journal and rips out pages as the platoons bus drives off, leaving Paxton scrambling to recover them. Bozz tosses the journal as the bus speeds away.

Tigerland movie scenes Judging Tigerland s picture quality is a bit tricky given how the film was shot In order to obtain a more documentary like look Schumacher and

Paxton then is told that Bozz died in Vietnam but he was never listed, others say he just disappeared, but another soldier calls Paxton and says that he thinks he saw Bozz three years ago in Mexico with a beautiful woman.

Cast

  • Colin Farrell as Private Roland Bozz
  • Matthew Davis as Private Jim Paxton
  • Clifton Collins, Jr. as Private Miter
  • Shea Whigham as Private Wilson
  • Cole Hauser as Staff Sergeant Cota
  • Tom Guiry as Private Cantwell
  • Neil Brown, Jr. as Private Jamoa Kearns
  • Tory Kittles as Private Ryan
  • Nick Searcy as Captain Saunders
  • Afemo Omilami as Sergeant First Class Ezra Landers
  • Matt Gerald as Sergeant Eveland
  • Michael Shannon as Sergeant Filmore
  • Similar Movies

    Platoon (1986). Colin Farrell and Cole Hauser appear in Tigerland and Harts War. The War at Home (1996). Clifton Collins - Jr appears in both. Streamers (1983).

    Reception

    Tigerland received positive reviews from critics and has a "certified fresh" rating of 76% on Rotten Tomatoes based on 46 reviews with an average score of 7 out of 10. The consensus states "A great cast and the gritty feel of the film help elevate Tigerland above the familiarity of the subject matter." The film also has a score of 55 out of 100 on Metacritic based on 14 reviews. Despite the positive critical reception and its US$10 million budget, the film hardly appeared at the box office, making only $148,701 worldwide.

    References

    Tigerland Wikipedia
    Tigerland IMDb Tigerland themoviedb.org