AcePylut
Posts: 1494
Joined: 3/19/2004 Status: offline
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quote:
ORIGINAL: Swayin As much as i'm enjoying The Pacific, I have to respectfully disagree. It's not even close. The constant thread of BOB - of being with the same guys over all the episodes, from Curahee to the Eagles Nest, sperates the two. Every Sunday we tune into the Pacific and don't know who we're going to be in the foxhole with. Characters come and go. the nature of stitching together a trio of memoirs inot one narrative is very difficult, and they are doign an admirable job -- but there are inherent problems to that concept that show up when you view the series as a whole. Well here's where I'm coming from. When I first watched BoB, every episode was about a different character, if it was about a character at all. The first episode was about no one in particular except Cap'n Sobel- who was gone by the end of the episode. The D-Day jump focused on Winters combat leadership. Caraten episode - focused on Blythe and the "scared blind", the Bastogne episode focused on the Medic, Foy on Spears, Last Patrol on the new lt. Yes, there were the same characters "around the edges" during the entire series (i.e. Winters was always around, Nixon had his moments, Malarky was good comic relief), but when I watched it the first time, I felt it was fairly disjointed as far as following a "main character". We weren't following a "main character" we were following a unit... just as we are doing now. The difference is we're following a Division instead of a company. There's been comments by other's about "BoB had more action. To that, I say bs and stop skipping past all the boring parts on ur DvD's! I have to consider that BoB has been out for ~ten years, which has given us time to watch each episode over and over again, time to study, learn, etc. about the "real lives" of all those that were in Easy Company. We are watching Pacific for the first time. We haven't had a chance to purchase the Boxed DvD set with all the extra bonuses providing the background, details, etc. With Pacific, "we" really know nothing about the characters, haven't had time to research each minor characters "real story" other than what wiki spits out at us. We really aren't comparing the "series" as they first came out. We're comparing a series that is 10 years old and has probably been watched by us 100 times, to a series out for the first time. So I have to go by what I see on screen, and The Pacific is such a chaotic orgy of violence the likes of which I've not seen on screen before. At no time did I ever feel anything other than entertainment when watching BoB, but when I watched the "Peleliu Beach Invasion", from the point they panned away from Sledge and Phillips to the point where sledge jumped out of the Amtrak, all i could think was "holy f*** turn around go back don't go forward what the heck are you doing youre going closer to that mess". Then when I watched the "bunker assault" in the final Peleliu episode... the screenplay for that was magnificant... the way they started the scene with a "hey, I think there's Japs in there" and then slowly escalated the violence until it culminated with a brutal flamethrower torching the Japs... I and the other three guys I watched that with were dead silent with shock. Then they brilliantly concluded that episode with the soldier-taking-a-dump-in-a-cave-but-here's-this-crazy-jap-chasing-him-with-sword. Yeah, the situation was not a laughable situation, but to turn the dread I felt when he walked into that cave into something laugh-out-loud, after that orgy of violence, was great writing. It was one of those laughs that was "all tensed up for a climatic tragedy that turned into a naked butt running thing you expect to see in a slapstick war movie". Brilliant. So I'm trying very hard to compare "The Pacific" with the first showing of "Band of Brothers", and that's why I draw my conclusion that the Pacific is better. but to each his own!!!! (PS - not making this an argument, just a discussion)
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