Tears of the Sun
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| Tears of the Sun | |
Film poster |
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| Directed by | Antoine Fuqua |
|---|---|
| Produced by | Ian Bryce Mike Lobell Arnold Rifkin |
| Written by | Alex Lasker Patrick Cirillo |
| Starring | Bruce Willis Monica Bellucci Cole Hauser Eamonn Walker |
| Music by | Hans Zimmer |
| Cinematography | Mauro Fiore |
| Editing by | Conrad Buff |
| Distributed by | Columbia Pictures |
| Release date(s) | March 3, 2003 |
| Running time | 121 min. (theatrical cut) 142 min. (director's cut) |
| Country | |
| Language | English |
| Budget | $70,000,000[1] |
| Gross revenue | $86,468,162[1] |
Tears of the Sun is a 2003 war film, depicting a U.S. Navy SEALs rescue mission amidst a civil war in the West African country of Nigeria. Lt. A.K. Waters (Bruce Willis) commands the team sent to rescue U.S. citizen Dr. Lena Fiore Kendricks (Monica Bellucci) from the civil war en route to her jungle hospital. The film was directed by Antoine Fuqua.
Willis produced Tears of the Sun through Cheyenne Enterprises, his production company, and took the title from an early sub–title for Live Free or Die Hard, the fourth Die Hard sequel; he filmed the sequel on condition he could use its sub-title for his SEALs war film.
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[edit] Plot
A news montage shows a coup d'état occurring in Nigeria, violently overthrowing the Presidential family, and establishing the dictatorship of rebel general Yakubu. The Fulani rebels then execute a very violent ethnic cleansing, done by the tribe from the northern side of the country, against the Ibo (ee•bow) tribes in the southern region.
Elsewhere, a squadron of SH-60B Seahawk helicopters approach the USS Harry S. Truman aircraft carrier off the West African coast; a television reporter on the flight deck reports the occurring coup — he is interrupted by breaking news of the presidential family's assassination by the rebel military.
Lieutenant A.K. Waters and his SEAL team disembark from a helicopter, returned from extracting U.S. citizens from the embassy in Nigeria. Captain Bill Rhodes greets them on the deck, and immediately tells him they must return to extract a "critical personality" — immediately. After re-fitting for the mission, eating chow, and seeing the medic, they meet in the ship’s briefing room for the mission. They will HALO jump over Cameroon to the Nigerian jungle outside a small Catholic hospital mission, and extract Dr. Lena Fiore Kendricks, a U.S. citizen by marriage. The secondary mission is extracting the missioner priest and two nuns running the mission — if willing. With their "package", the SEALs then hike twelve-klicks to the extraction point, to fly out, by helicopter.
The mission begins as planned, the team free-fall to the target area drop-zone. They force a local, young woman to lead them to Dr. Kendricks, Lt. Waters tells the doctor of the company of rebel soldiers closing on her hospital and the mission — and that the team’s orders are "to extract U.S. personnel". Kendricks refuses to leave without the patients. Lt. Waters calls Cpt. Rhodes for options; after their short, ambiguous conversation, he concedes to Dr. Kendricks that they will take walking refugees. She agrees, and begins assembling the able-bodied for the twelve-kilometre hike. Irritated and behind schedule, the team and the refugees leave the hospital mission after daybreak. The journey is slow; guiding forty injured and wounded people is slow progress.
At nightfall, they take a short break, for the refugees to rest and Dr. Kendricks attend the sick. They establish a defensive perimeter. Moments after setting it, guerrilla rebels rapidly approach their position; Waters stealthily knifes the straggling tail-gunner. Dr. Kendricks worries to Lt. Waters that the rebels are going to the mission; he is determined to carry out orders, and they continue to the extraction point, and call the en route helicopters. When they land, Waters’s initial plan becomes clear, when the SEALs suddenly, at gun point, turn away the refugees from the awaiting helicopter. Lt. Waters forces Dr. Kendricks into the helicopter; the team collapse in, after them, for a swift extraction — leaving the refugees stranded in the jungle, unprotected against the rebels. En route to the aircraft carrier, they fly over the mission, seeing it raided, destroyed, and burning — as Dr. Kendricks predicted. Remorseful, Lt. Waters orders the pilot return to the refugees. Unilaterally, he has decided that the mission now is to escort them to the Cameroon border.
During the hike to the border, they discover the rebels are tracking them, with satellite scans of their area, thus, they enjoy mysterious success tracking the SEALs. As they escape and evade the rebels, the team enter a village that rebel soldiers are massacring. Aware of having opportunity to stop ethnic cleansing, Lt. Waters orders the refugees remain on high ground, while the team assault the village. They do so surgically. In the aftermath, they become morally conscious, on seeing the after-effects of the atrocities.
Again en route, Slo determines that a refugee is transmitting the signal allowing the rebels to locate and attack them so easily. The search for the transmitter reveals the presence of Arthur Azuka, surviving son of deposed President Samuel Azuka, thus, why the rebels are hunting them, to ensure killing him. A newer "refugee" — picked up during the trek — is discovered with the transmitter on himself; on attempting flight, he is shot dead. Lt. Waters is angry at Dr. Kendricks, because she always knew about Arthur, yet never informed him.
In light of the recently occurred, they unanimously decide to continue escorting the refugees to Cameroon, regardless of the cost. A massive fire fight explodes between the SEALs and many rebels hidden in the trees. Forming a defensive line, they order the refugees to the tree line — from where the Nigeria–Cameroon border can be seen. Zee calls the Harry S. Truman for air support; two F/A-18 Hornet jet fighter aeroplanes leave, en route with fire support. The SEALs hold the line, falling back to the refugees, however, with overwhelming firepower, the rebels kill Slo, Flea, Lake, and Silk. The refugee men provide some cover fire, for the remaining SEALs to fall back into some reeds, during which Lt. Waters, Red, and Zee are wounded — barely surviving as the fighter pilots ask where to drop their fire. The team light a smoke grenade, and order the pilots to bomb everywhere between the tree line and their smoke. Arthur and Dr. Kendricks are scrambling to the Cameroon border gate when they hear the thundering fighters’ approach. Terrified by the napalm fire dropped upon the rebel soldiers closing for the kill, and seeing the battlefield afire, they fear for the SEAL team.
Waters, Zee, Doc, and Red rise from the grass as Navy helicopters land in Cameroon, opposite the Nigerian border fence gate. Cpt. Rhodes arrives and orders the gate open, letting in the SEALs and the refugees. A detail of Marines then escort the SEALs to some helicopters, where their wounds are tended. Dr. Kendricks says farewell to friends and flies away in the same helicopter with Lt. Waters.
The finale shows the refugees recognizing Arthur Azuka as king and rightful heir to Nigeria; he raises his arm exclaiming "Freedom!" as everyone celebrates around him. The Edmund Burke epilogue of Tears of the Sun is "The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing".
[edit] Cast
The cast of Tears of the Sun features refugees portrayed by true African refugees living in the U.S.
| Actor | Role |
|---|---|
| Bruce Wills | Lieutenant A.K. Waters |
| Monica Bellucci | Dr. Lena Kendricks |
| Cole Hauser | James "Red" Atkins |
| Eamonn Walker | Ellis "Zee" Pettigrew |
| Johnny Messner | Kelly Lake |
| Nick Chinlund | Michael "Slo" Slowenski |
| Charles Ingram | Demetrius "Silk" Owens |
| Paul Francis | Danny "Doc" Kelley |
| Chad Smith | Jason "Flea" Mabry |
| Tom Skerritt | Captain Bill Rhodes |
| Malick Bowens | Colonel Idris Sadick |
| Awaovieyi Agie | Musa |
| Akosua Busia | Patience |
| Ida Onyango | Lansana |
| Sammi Rotibi | Arthur Azuka |
| Jimmy Jean-Louis | Gideon |
[edit] Production
The actors who portrayed SEALs underwent a two-week boot camp; during principal photography, they had to address and refer to each other by character name — even off camera, to improve interaction. Tears of the Sun is the first film photographed on the Nimitz-class nuclear aircraft carrier USS Harry S. Truman. The SH-60B Seahawk helicopters in the film are from the HSL-37 "Easy Riders" stationed at Marine Corps Base Hawaii, Oahu, Hawaii. The F/A-18A Hornet jet fighter aeroplanes are from the VFA-204, the "River Rattlers". The VFA-204 is a Navy Reserve strike fighter squadron at Naval Air Station New Orleans.
The shooting was touched by misfortune when actor Kevin Tod Smith, cast as one of the SEAL men, died accidentally, while visiting a film set in China. On February 6, 2002, while waiting for a ride back to his hotel, after completing work on Warriors of Virtue 2, Smith decided to walk about the Central China Television film studio grounds, and climbed a prop tower in a set of another film, lost his footing and fell approximately three stories, severely injuring his head. He was taken to hospital, then transferred to Beijing. He lapsed into coma and was on life support for ten days, until it was discontinued. He died on February 15, 2002, without regaining consciousness.
[edit] Reception
Tears of the Sun received mixed reviews; the movie review aggregation websites Rotten Tomatoes and Metacritic record average favourable review ratings of 38% and 45% respectively.[2][3] Time Out London was scathing, lambasting the focus on a fictional atrocity in a real country, when there was ample opportunity to explore similar, but historically accurate atrocities.
[edit] References
- ^ a b Tears of the Sun at Box Office Mojo
- ^ Tears of the Sun at Rotten Tomatoes
- ^ "Tears of the Sun (2003): Reviews". Metacritic. http://www.metacritic.com/video/titles/tearsofthesun?q=tears%20of%20the%20sun. Retrieved on 2009-07-09.
[edit] External links
- Official website
- Tears of the Sun at the Internet Movie Database
- Tears of the Sun at Allmovie
- Tears of the Sun at Rotten Tomatoes
- Tears of the Sun at Box Office Mojo
- Tears of the Sun at Metacritic
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