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The Dogs Of War (1980)
Released By: Twentieth Century Fox Home Entertainment   Rating: R   In Theaters: N/A
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Studio: Twentieth Century Fox Home Entertainment
Genre: Action-Adventure
MPAA Rating: R
Director: John Irvin
Language: English
Official Website: N/A
Theatrical Release: N/A
Home Video Release: N/A
Cast: Christopher Walken, Colin Blakely, Tom Berenger
Published ID: 2138
UPC: 027616860965,
Plot: Christopher Walken stars in John Irvin's graphic adaptation of Frederick Forsythe's novel about a mercenary sent to overthrow the government of an African country. Walken is Shannon, an American soldier of fortune who has staged incidents in Central America and Africa that helped topple governments. Shannon decides to take on one more mission when American businessman Endean (Hugh Millais), working for a large mining company wanting to move into an African country, hires Shannon to scout out the terrain of the country and see if the government is weak enough to be overthrown. Shannon assumes the guise of a photographer for a nature magazine and travels through the country, meeting a wide-array of people. But the government becomes suspicious of Shannon and throws him in jail, where, between torture sessions, he meets an imprisoned dissident leader. Through his imprisonment, Shannon comes to understand more fully the struggles of the African country. ~ Paul Brenner, All Movie Guide
IDDateTimeTitleReviewHelpfulVotesTotalVotes
Very Engaging, Great Cast
Added 4/18/2009

Wow Christopher Walken is so young and so amazing in this engaging war movie. I always enjoy him but I think here more than anything else I've seen him in. You've probably seen this plot portrayed in other films: mercenaries hired to do the bidding of multi-national corporate villians who of course view their hirelings as expendable...I won't give the rest away. Suffice it to say that the acting carries this and the filming and directing is also a class act. Get this if this kind of thing is your cup of tea. You won't be bored!
1 out of 1 people found this helpful.
Great film...but what happened to the book???
Added 3/22/2009

I liked this movie, I really did. Christopher Walken was great in one of his earlier roles as was Tom Berenger. Also the supporting cast was well placed and the special effects of 1981 still hold up today. Unfortunately like all other Frederick Forsythe novels that are made into films, it just doesnt quite measure up to the book pound for pound. Walken's character gains an ex-wife in the film version while in the novelization he romances the daughter of the greedy Mining executive he was hired by. Also the film's ending is alot different than the book but despite this zinger I found it refreshing.

Despite the overall differences, I still enjoyed the movie and the acting was superb. If you've read the book and want to compare it with the film, by all means, this is 2 hours well-vested. However dramatic, be prepared to watch an alternate version of the novelization.

1 out of 1 people found this helpful.
The Dogs of War
Added 1/20/2009

This movie is about a group of mercenaries hired to overthrow a fictional mineral-laden African nation. The plot twists when the group's leader, played by the quintessential bad guy character actor Christopher Walken, decides to place his own hero in the president's chair of this nation. This doctor had aided Walken's character when he had been beaten during his scouting mission to this country. Walken's character must have been impressed because after the shoot 'em up scene, the movie ends with this doctor in charge of the country.

The movie is well written and well acted. Walken has that aura of cold-bloodedness about him that makes him a perfect choice for the lead role. I compare this movie to another mercenary flick called "The Wild Geese" which has some similarities. The Dogs of War is entertaining and action packed. If these kinds of movoes are your thing, I recommend it.

0 out of 0 people found this helpful.
Damn good picture without any easy answers....
Added 7/6/2008

This is a great film, a film that hasn't dated and a film where you can watch Christopher Walken before he became a rather silly parody of himself. Walken plays a mercenary hired by a conglomorate/corporation to check out a 3rd world African country. The person that hires Walken has ties to investors who want to know how stable the country is, and whether they need to instigate a coup de tat to install a more "friendlier" leader. The corporation decides that a new leader is needed, but Walken and his crew have other things on their minds, leading to an unexpected (and believable) ending.

The best thing about this film is that it just shows the events without restorting to simplistic, "this is bad" tones that mar many Hollywood films. The film has no easy answers and poses no easy questions. It just shows you how coups occur, why they occur, and what happens after they're done. It's a neat little picture, perhaps a little cold, but very realistic, exciting, thought provoking, and it leaves an indelible impression.

0 out of 1 people found this helpful.
Cry havoc...
Added 2/16/2008

The Dogs of War is part of that subgenre of war movies that briefly blossomed in the late-sixties and seventies but found little favor in subsequent years, the story about the ageing mercenary who suffers a crisis of conscience (Dark of the Sun, The Wild Geese, Savior etc). It was also the last significant attempt to turn Christopher Walken into a mainstream leading man in the Brando mould on the back of his Deer Hunter Oscar, with the trailer and marketing almost ignoring co-stars Tom Berenger and, despite delivering the film's best performance as a cynical documentary filmmaker, Colin Blakely. Certainly Walken takes a beating as convincingly as Brando, though the public weren't biting in 1981.

Frederick Forsyth's novel gained much notoriety due to the excessive lengths he went to in researching it - few writers would actually invest in a hastily abandoned African coup d'etat to get the inside details right, though it seems Forsyth did just that. As a result, the film goes to great lengths to stress its veracity, with director John Irvin, still hot after the success of Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy, adopting the stripped-down near documentary style that served Fred Zinnemann so well with The Day of the Jackal. Irvin's subsequent work would sadly mark him out as one of the flattest action directors in the business, but here - perhaps leaning on the experience of cinematographer Jack Cardiff, who also directed Dark of the Sun - he delivers the goods surprisingly effectively. Underneath all the gritty pseudo-realism it's a very familiar story (Winston Ntshona practically plays the same role here as an imprisoned deposed president that he did in the more Boys' Own The Wild Geese three years earlier), but it's well told - or at least in the two-hour European cut of the film which, perversely, is only available on DVD in the US, and there in a version with dodgy synchronisation in the early scenes: Europe has to make do with the cut US version shorn of 16 minutes. Geoffrey Burgon's score makes good use of A.E. Housman's Epitaph On An Army of Mercenaries while among the familiar faces in the supporting cast can be spotted Paul Freeman, Ed O'Neill, Jim Broadbent (as one of Blakely's film crew), Victoria Tennant and an unbilled Helen Shaver, though aside from Blakely, the standout performance probably comes from Hugh Millais' cold-fish middle man.

Once again, bear in mind that the US NTSC DVD is the uncut European version of the film, while the UK PAL DVD is the cut US version!

1 out of 2 people found this helpful.
Very Engaging, Great Cast
Added 4/18/2009

Wow Christopher Walken is so young and so amazing in this engaging war movie. I always enjoy him but I think here more than anything else I've seen him in. You've probably seen this plot portrayed in other films: mercenaries hired to do the bidding of multi-national corporate villians who of course view their hirelings as expendable...I won't give the rest away. Suffice it to say that the acting carries this and the filming and directing is also a class act. Get this if this kind of thing is your cup of tea. You won't be bored!
1 out of 1 people found this helpful.
Great film...but what happened to the book???
Added 3/22/2009

I liked this movie, I really did. Christopher Walken was great in one of his earlier roles as was Tom Berenger. Also the supporting cast was well placed and the special effects of 1981 still hold up today. Unfortunately like all other Frederick Forsythe novels that are made into films, it just doesnt quite measure up to the book pound for pound. Walken's character gains an ex-wife in the film version while in the novelization he romances the daughter of the greedy Mining executive he was hired by. Also the film's ending is alot different than the book but despite this zinger I found it refreshing.

Despite the overall differences, I still enjoyed the movie and the acting was superb. If you've read the book and want to compare it with the film, by all means, this is 2 hours well-vested. However dramatic, be prepared to watch an alternate version of the novelization.

1 out of 1 people found this helpful.
The Dogs of War
Added 1/20/2009

This movie is about a group of mercenaries hired to overthrow a fictional mineral-laden African nation. The plot twists when the group's leader, played by the quintessential bad guy character actor Christopher Walken, decides to place his own hero in the president's chair of this nation. This doctor had aided Walken's character when he had been beaten during his scouting mission to this country. Walken's character must have been impressed because after the shoot 'em up scene, the movie ends with this doctor in charge of the country.

The movie is well written and well acted. Walken has that aura of cold-bloodedness about him that makes him a perfect choice for the lead role. I compare this movie to another mercenary flick called "The Wild Geese" which has some similarities. The Dogs of War is entertaining and action packed. If these kinds of movoes are your thing, I recommend it.

0 out of 0 people found this helpful.
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