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Bruce Willis Tears Of The Sun

2003 flick by Antoine Fuqua

Tears of the Dominicus
Tears of the Sun movie.jpg

Theatrical release poster

Directed past Antoine Fuqua
Written by Alex Lasker
Patrick Cirillo
Produced by Ian Bryce
Mike Lobell
Arnold Rifkin
Starring Bruce Willis
Monica Bellucci
Cole Hauser
Tom Skerritt
Cinematography Mauro Fiore
Edited past Conrad Buff
Music by Hans Zimmer

Production
companies

Columbia Pictures
Revolution Studios
Cheyenne Enterprises

Distributed past Sony Pictures Releasing

Release appointment

  • March vii, 2003 (2003-03-07)

Running time

121 minutes
State Us
Language English
Upkeep $100.5 1000000[i]
Box office $86.5 million[2] [three]

Tears of the Sun is a 2003 American action thriller film[4] depicting a fictitious U.S. Navy SEAL team rescue mission amidst the civil state of war in Nigeria.[5] Lieutenant A.K. Waters (Bruce Willis) commands the team sent to rescue U.Due south. citizen Dr. Lena Fiore Kendricks (Monica Bellucci) earlier the approaching rebels reach her jungle hospital. The film was directed by Antoine Fuqua.

Willis produced Tears of the Sun through Cheyenne Enterprises, his production company. The cast of Tears of the Sun includes actual African refugees living in the United States, incl. Sudanese Lost Boys.[5]

Plot

Turmoil erupts in Nigeria following a armed forces coup d'etat led past exiled General Mustafa Yakubu in which President Samuel Azuka and his entire family are reportedly assassinated. The ethnic enmity is betwixt the Fulani Moslems in the northward and Christian Ibo in the south. Foreigners evacuate the land and Lieutenant A.K. Waters (Bruce Willis) and his U.South. Navy SEAL team consisting of Zee (Eamonn Walker), Slo (Nick Chinlund), Red (Cole Hauser), Lake (Johnny Messner), Silk (Charles Ingram), Doc (Paul Francis), and Flea (Chad Smith), board the aircraft carrier Harry S. Truman, to exist dispatched by Captain Bill Rhodes (Tom Skerritt) to extract Dr. Lena Fiore Kendricks (Monica Bellucci), a U.South. citizen by marriage to the late Dr. John Kendricks who was killed by rebels in Sierra Leone. Their secondary mission is to extract the mission's priest (Pierrino Mascarino) and two nuns (Fionnula Flanagan and Cornelia Hayes O'Herlihy), should they choose to come.

Waters gets to Kendricks, telling her that rebels are closing in on her hospital and the mission, and that his orders are to extract U.S. citizens; however, Kendricks refuses to get out without her patients that she loves so much. Waters calls Rhodes for options; after a brief conversation, he concedes to Kendricks' wishes and agrees to take those refugees able to walk. Kendricks begins assembling the able-bodied for the 12 kilometres (7.five mi) hike; the priest and the nuns stay behind to take care of the injured.

Irritated and behind schedule, the team and the refugees exit the infirmary mission after daybreak. At nightfall they take a curt suspension. The rebels quickly approach their position, and Waters stealthily kills one. Kendricks warns Waters that the rebels are going to the mission, but he is adamant to comport out his orders, and they continue to the extraction signal.

Back at the mission, the staff and refugees are detained by the rebels. Despite the priest's pleas for mercy, the rebels murder him and the remaining occupants.

When the squad arrives at the extraction point, Waters' initial plan becomes clear: the SEALs of a sudden plough away the refugees from the waiting SH-60B Seahawk helicopter. Waters forces Kendricks into the helicopter against her will, leaving the refugees stranded in the jungle, defenseless against the rebels. En road back to Harry Truman, they fly over the original mission compound, seeing information technology destroyed and all its occupants murdered, as Kendricks had feared.

Remorseful, Waters orders the pilot to return to the refugees. He and so loads as many refugees as he tin into the helicopter and decides to escort the remaining refugees to the Cameroonian border on pes.

During the hike to Cameroon, the SEALs discover the rebels are somehow tracking them. As they escape and evade the rebels, the team enters a hamlet whose inhabitants are existence raped, tortured, and massacred by the rebels. Cognizant of his ability to stop it, Waters orders the team to kill the rebels. The team is visibly shaken by the atrocities they see the rebels have committed against the villagers.

Again en route, Slo determines that a refugee is transmitting a signal allowing the rebels to locate them. A newer refugee (Jimmy Jean-Louis) picked up during the trek attempts to run but is shot. A transmitter is discovered on his torso. Every bit he bleeds out, he confesses that he is coerced to be the rat because his family had been captured by the rebels. The following search for his co-conspirators reveals the presence of Arthur Azuka (Sammi Rotibi), the surviving son of belatedly President Samuel Azuka, which they realize is the reason the rebels are hunting them: Samuel Azuka was not only the president of the land, only also the tribal king of the Ibo. Equally the but surviving member of this imperial bloodline, Arthur is the only person left with a legitimate claim to the Ibo Nation. Waters is angered that Kendricks knew this merely did not inform him.

The SEALs determine to keep escorting the refugees to Cameroon, regardless of the cost. A firefight ensues when the rebels finally catch up with them, and the SEALs make up one's mind to stay behind as rearguard to buy the refugees enough fourth dimension to accomplish the edge safely.

Zee radios the Navy for air support; 2 F/A-18s take off and head towards them. The rebels kill Slo, Lake, Flea, and Silk. Waters, Red, Md, and Zee are wounded, simply direct the jets on where to attack. Arthur and Kendricks rush towards the at present-closed Cameroonian border crossing when they hear the jets approach and flop the pursuing rebels.

Waters, Zee, Medico, and Red rising from the grass every bit Navy helicopters land in Cameroon, opposite the Nigerian border crossing. Rhodes arrives and orders the gate open up, letting in the SEALs and the refugees. They are then escorted onto the helicopters.

Rhodes promises Waters that he volition recover the bodies of Waters' men. Kendricks bids tearful farewells to her Nigerian friends and flies away in a helicopter while comforting Waters, watching as Arthur is surrounded by his people proclaiming their freedom.

The motion-picture show ends with, "The but thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to practise cypher" quote attributed to Edmund Shush.

Cast

  • Bruce Willis as Lieutenant A.K. Waters, US Navy - Squad Commander
  • Monica Bellucci equally Dre Lena Fiore Kendricks - Doctor at the International Humantarian Aid
  • Tom Skerritt every bit Helm Bill Rhodes, United states Navy - Commanding Officer
  • Cole Hauser every bit James "Ruby" Atkins, US Navy - Heavy Gunner and Explosives Specialist
  • Paul Francis as Danny "Doc" Kelley, US Navy - Medic
  • Eamonn Walker as Ellis "Zee" Pettigrew, US Navy - Radioman and Grenadier
  • Johnny Messner equally Johnny Kelly "JKL" Lake, US Navy - Recon and Pointman
  • Nick Chinlund as Michael "Slo" Slowenski, United states of america Navy - SAW Gunner and Reconnaissance GPS Enemy Tech
  • Charles Ingram equally Demetrius "Silk" Owens, US Navy - Sniper
  • Chad Smith every bit Jason "Flea" Mabry, US Navy - Marksman
  • Cornelia Hayes O'Herlihy as Sis Siobhan O'Connor
  • Fionnula Flanagan every bit Sis Grace McIntyre
  • Pierrino Mascarino as Father Giovanni Gianni
  • Peter Mensah as Commander Terwase
  • Malick Bowens equally Colonel Idris Sadick
  • Akosua Busia as Patience
  • Sammi Rotibi as Arthur Azuka, son of Nigeria President Samuel Azuka
  • Benjamin Ochieng every bit Colonel Emanuel Okeze, bodyguard of Arthur Azuka

Product

Harry Humphries, a former U.S. Navy SEAL, was the technical adviser to the film, having advised the earlier Black Hawk Downward.[half-dozen] According to the Blu-ray factoid, the shipping carrier scenes were filmed aboard the active USS Harry S. Truman, threescore miles (97 km) due east of Greatcoat Hatteras in the Atlantic Ocean. The Navy repeatedly turned the carrier so that director Fuqua would accept beneficial lighting conditions.[5]

Release

The film was shown in U.S. theaters on March 13, 2003,[vii] having premiered earlier on March 3.[viii] The 20-minutes longer "Managing director's Extended Cut" was released on DVD in 2005 and begins with the killing of the Nigerian president, adding political context.[5] [9] The Blu-ray theatrical cut was released in September 2006,[10] containing low-definition deleted scenes instead of that extended cut.[eleven]

Reception

Critical response

On review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, the moving picture holds an blessing rating of 33% based on 155 reviews and an average rating of 4.93/10. The website'south disquisitional consensus states that the film "tries to exist high-minded, but in the end, it's just a stylish action motion-picture show."[12] On Metacritic, the film has a weighted boilerplate score of 48 out of 100, based on 36 critics, indicating "mixed or average reviews".[thirteen]

Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film an boilerplate grade of "A−" on an A+ to F scale.[14]

Roger Ebert gave the film iii stars out of iv and said, "Tears of the Sunday is a movie constructed out of rain, cinematography and the confront of Bruce Willis. These materials are sufficient to build a film almost equally practiced as if there had been a meliorate screenplay."[15]

Meet also

  • Listing of films featuring the United States Navy SEALs

References

  1. ^ Lang, Brent (September ii, 2011). "'Gigli's' Real Price Tag — Or, How Studios Lie About Budgets". TheWrap.com . Retrieved June 28, 2017.
  2. ^ Tears of the Sun at Box Office Mojo
  3. ^ "Tears of the Lord's day". TheNumbers.com . Retrieved May 8, 2013.
  4. ^ "Tears of the Sun (2003) - Antoine Fuqua". AllMovie.
  5. ^ a b c d Chester, Robert Thou (2013-08-01). "Crusading in Africa: Religion, Race, and Post-9/11 Intervention in Antoine Fuqua'southward Tears of the Dominicus (2003)". War & Gild. 32 (2): 138–155. doi:10.1179/0729247313Z.00000000021. ISSN 0729-2473.
  6. ^ Hunter, Stephen (2003-03-07). "'Tears of the Sun': An Accomplished Mission". The Washington Mail. ISSN 0190-8286. Retrieved 2021-09-27 .
  7. ^ "Tears Of The Dominicus", AMC Theatres, 2003-03-06, retrieved 2021-09-27
  8. ^ "Tears Of The Sunday Premiere Photos and Premium High Res Pictures - Getty Images". www.gettyimages.com . Retrieved 2021-09-27 .
  9. ^ Horiuchi, David (2005-06-07), Tears Of The Sun, Sony Pictures Abode Entertainment, retrieved 2021-09-27
  10. ^ Liebman, Martin, "Tears of the Sunday Blu-ray", blu-ray.com , retrieved 2021-09-27
  11. ^ Bracke, Peter. "Tears of the Sun Blu-ray Review | Loftier Def Digest". bluray.highdefdigest.com . Retrieved 2021-09-27 .
  12. ^ "Tears of the Dominicus (2003)". Rotten Tomatoes. Fandango Media. Retrieved June fifteen, 2020.
  13. ^ "Tears of the Sun Reviews". Metacritic. CBS Interactive. Retrieved March viii, 2018.
  14. ^ Tears of the Sun. CinemaScore Reviews.
  15. ^ Ebert, Roger. "Tears of the Sunday". Chicago Dominicus-Times . Retrieved 2009-06-xviii .

External links

  • Official website
  • Tears of the Sun at IMDb
  • Tears of the Sun at AllMovie
  • Tears of the Dominicus at the TCM Picture show Database
  • Tears of the Sunday at the American Film Institute Catalog
  • Tears of the Dominicus at Rotten Tomatoes
  • Tears of the Sun at Box Office Mojo
  • Tears of the Sun at Metacritic Edit this at Wikidata
  • Tears of the Sunday at the Internet Movie Firearms Database

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tears_of_the_Sun

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