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Category:    Home > Reviews > War > Fighting Sullivans (Ivy)

The Fighting Sullivans (Ivy)

 

Picture: C     Sound: C     Extras: C     Film: B-

 

 

The Fighting Sullivans (1942 aka The Sullivans) is a uniquely dark film, even for Hollywood, that traces the origins of five brothers who grew up and would all fight in World War II, including the acting style of the time for children, which was not always the most convincing.  However, it does work enough for the film to feel more like an authentic product of its time.  As many who saw it knew at the time and the DVD case re-reminds us, all of them died in combat, echoing the loss of thousands of families at the time.

 

What could have been outright melodramatic and sometimes still is becomes something even darker than intended, as the children are always the target of an abusive father, which was considered more normal at the time and has become disturbingly acceptable again now in the ugly new political climate, which extends to the exploitation of children worldwide.  Though the box reminds us that it was part of the inspiration for Steven Spielberg’s Saving Private Ryan (1998), I was more strongly reminded of Michael Cimino’s The Deer Hunter (1978) where the most non-blood brothers in a steel town are sent to even larger doom in Vietnam, the war that never goes away, no matter how much recent Hollywood tries to forget about it with endless WWII films that are mostly forgettable.  This reflects a media that tried to say those who gave from WWII were “the greatest generation” before the events of 9/11/01 occurred, showing such people learned nothing from the fall of the enlightenment.

 

Director Lloyd Bacon takes the material seriously, though there is an odd obliviousness in the screenplay and directing to the true implications of what is going on here.  The known names include Anne Baxter, Thomas Mitchell, Ward Bond, Bobby Driscoll and Edward Ryan (no relation) as one of the kids.  That they live in Waterloo, Iowa is pushing it a bit, but it is a unique War Genre film that is worthy of note.

 

The full frame 1.33 X 1 image is a bit soft and lacks some detail, but is not awful, just average.  Who knows where the original camera materials are at, but I cannot imagine the out of print Roan Group DVD being much better.  The Dolby Digital 2.0 Mono is also average, showing the age and down generations of the material.  Extras include a good but partial commentary by Bonds Of War author Jack Bilello, but it only last about a half-hour, which is unfortunate, because he is very well spoken and I am intrigued enough to want to read his book.  Also included are the fourth chapter of the Buster Crabbe Buck Rogers (reviewed in its entirety elsewhere on this site), a lame live action short about flying trouble with monkeys, and a flat travelogue called Midway & Wake Islands that is part of a series whose installments are surfacing on other Ivy DVDs.  At least the film is in print again for those interested.

 

 

-   Nicholas Sheffo


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