Wednesday, 22 May 2024

A Few Good men review

 Number 682 on the top 1000 films of all time is Rob Reiner's 1992 legal drama 'A Few Good Men.'

At the Guantanamo Bay naval base in Cuba, Private William Santiago, a US marine, dies in mysterious circumstances. Soon afterwards, Lance Corporal Harold Dawson (Wolfgang Bodison) and Private Louden Downey (James Marshall) are charged with his murder. Upstart lawyer Lieutenant Daniel Kaffee (Tom Cruise) and Lieutenant Commander Joanne Galloway (Demi Moore) are assigned as their defence. But Galloway soon suspects a cover-up that goes all the way up to Colonel Nathan Jessop (Jack Nicholson.)

Before Tom Cruise became a larger-than-life character better known for his action-hero roles and dodgy connections to scientology, he wasn't a bad actor. It's something you wouldn't think of now, but it's true.

Daniel Kaffee is a great example of this. Cruise took him from an arrogant, obnoxious jerk into a likeable lawyer with a lot to prove. It was a good story-arc and Cruise played the different elements of Kaffee's character well. He was such an arsehole before that I didn't think I would ever come to like him, but I did.

But the true arsehole was Colonel Jessop played brilliantly by Jack Nicholson. Jessop is a man who takes his job seriously. So seriously that he is willing to bend or even break the rules to get the job done. His final speech where he argues that men like him are needed to do everybody else's dirty work struck home, thanks to Nicholson's excellent performance. 

In some ways, it is difficult to believe this is the same Rob Reiner who also directed the Princess Bride or the the Bucket List. While 'a Few Good Men' had a few funny parts, it was mostly a serious affair, but also very entertaining. Considering the film's explosive conclusion occurs in a courtroom, Reiner kept the tension and suspense high. Courtroom dramas can get bogged-down in an overly-dramatised, legalese affair, but that wasn't the case here. Of course, it helped you had Tom Cruise and Jack Nicholson giving great performances.

But there's more to this film than its men. I also enjoyed Demi Moore acting as the strait-laced Galloway - very much the complete opposite of Keffler. I was also relieved to see that their relationship was kept platonic. Both Reiner and screenwriter Aaron Sorkin were under pressure from studio executives to have Keffler and Galloway hook up, they refused saying it would have been little else but a cheap thriller. I couldn't have agreed more.

A Few Good Men had the potential to be a boring courtroom drama, but it was a thoroughly entertaining affair. 

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