SPOILER ALERT! The plot
will be discussed.
Just as in the recent
movie 1917, the mission in Saving Private Ryan (1998) is an
ironic one. In the middle of a war, where soldiers are usually sent out to
kill, the goal here is to prevent death. It may seem odd to bring up Star
Trek, but that film franchise raised an idea that fits here: Sometimes the
need of the one outweighs the needs of the many. And this film implies that
sometimes they are one in the same.
Director Steven
Spielberg again explores (as he did in Close Encounters of the Third Kind,
E. T., War of the Worlds, and others) how ordinary people must
deal with extraordinary circumstances. The film opens with an old man walking
slowly through a military cemetery followed by a number of people (similar to
the ending of Schindler’s List). The man is with his relatives and he
begins to sob as he remembers the waves crashing on D-Day on Omaha Beach in
France on June 6, 1944. The replication of the invasion that changed the course
of WWII in this film has been considered by many, including those who
experienced it, as possibly the most authentic rendition of the courageous and
horrific nature of war. Captain Miller (another Oscar-nominated performance
from Tom Hanks), although he shows that he can be cool and intelligent under
pressure, reveals the effects of the stress of combat as his hand shakes while
trying to drink from his canteen before the landing. During the story, Miller
is at war with himself, as the trembling symbolizes, between what he considers
is the right action to take, and what his orders command him to do.
The camera is right in
the middle of the men, and we can almost experience their nausea as Miller’s
boat rocks back and forth. Miller barks out orders as they approach land,
telling the men to keep space between soldiers since groups of men provide a
“juicy opportunity” for the enemy, while an infantryman by himself means firing
to hit only him is “a waste of ammo.” Many soldiers don’t even get a chance to
set foot on the sand as they are shot as soon as their boats open their ramps,
which are called “murder holes” because they offer concentrated targets. Some
soldiers try to go over the side of the craft and are weighed down by their
gear. If the water doesn't drown them, bullets kill them in the water.
Spielberg (winning his second directing Oscar here) gives us Miller’s point of
view, and that of others, which makes us experience the devastation as if we
are there on the beach with them. The camera literally bobs up and down below
and above the surface of the water, simulating how it would feel if one of us
was trying to stay afloat. Visual slow motion and sound muting adds to the
feeling of confusion and disorientation. Bullets ring around the men (and the
audience) and bombs explode everywhere. Some men are engulfed in their own
napalm as a flamethrower explodes. Soldiers scream in agony. The craziness and
barbarity of battle is evident through several shots. A soldier picks up the
arm he just lost and tries to carry it with him. There is the futility of
Miller trying to drag a wounded man to safety when he realizes after a bomb
blast that he is now only holding onto the upper half of the soldier’s body.
One moment can be lucky because a bullet glances off of a soldier’s helmet, but
in the next moment, he is hit and killed. Medic Wade (Giovanni Ribisi) stops
chest bleeding in one man only to have him shot in the head a second later.
Such is the chaos that rules here.
Hardly anything goes as
planned. Miller’s attempts to communicate that the first wave was unsuccessful
in taking the beach are thwarted, since the signalman is dead and his radio is
destroyed. Most men are not where they are supposed to be as multiple companies
have dispersed in a random manner. The armored division can’t make it to the
beach. The Americans must take out an enemy machine gun nest that sits atop the
seawall and is killing soldiers as if they are targets in a shooting gallery.
Miller’s men use extended piping to set off grenades up the beach wall to clear
a path toward the gunners. Miller shows his improvisational skills by attaching
a mirror to a bayonet with some gum to identify the German men and their
weapons. Miller sends up small groups of soldiers at a time, but Sergeant
Horvath (Tom Sizemore) comments, “Why not just hand out blindfolds,” since it’s
like facing a “firing squad.” But Miller says unfortunately it is their only
option and otherwise, “All we can do here is die.” The film has many instances
where there are no good choices.
Private Jackson (Barry
Pepper) is the crack marksman under Miller’s command. Miller tries to give him
a chance to reach a firing position by courageously running in the line of fire
to provide a distraction. When he regroups with Horvath, the sergeant asks what
Miller’s mother would think if she saw him be that reckless. Miller responds,
“I thought you were my mother.” That they can use humor in this situation is
remarkable, but also one of the few tools they have to cope with what’s
occurring. Jackson has a crucifix that he kisses and prays to God before
shooting. Later, he even says his deadly ability is a gift from the Almighty.
It gives him strength to rely on his religious beliefs, but it is ironic that
he calls on a supposedly benevolent entity to help kill others.
Others also pray as they
make their last confessions or plead to live. After Jackson is successful in
taking out enemy soldiers, Miller and his men follow up with supportive fire
and they can now shoot their way through to exit the beach. Another example of
how the situation can change quickly in battle occurs when the shooting gallery
metaphor is now reversed as American soldiers attack trapped German men as they
come out of a bunker. Those that are left inside are incinerated with a
flamethrower. The vengeful violence of war is seen when one soldier
says not to be merciful toward the Germans by shooting them, but instead urges,
“Let ‘em burn!” One enemy soldier raises his hands to surrender, but an
American kills him anyway. Horvath and another soldier shoot two others that
raise their hands. The irony is that they are not speaking German and are
Czechoslovakian prisoners forced by the Germans to be soldiers. The film
suggests that war is an immoral action, and decency and ethics many times are
pushed to the side.
Private Caparzo (Vin
Diesel) hands a Hitler youth knife to the Jewish Private Mellish (Adam Goldberg),
who says it is now “a shabbat challah cutter.” The satisfaction of the soldier
feeling a sense of justice in getting this souvenir off of a dead Nazi is
evident here. But, he then immediately feels shaken as the effects of all the
killing washes over him. Horvath fills a small tin with sand and labels it
“France” to be added to the ones that read “Africa” and “Italy,” which shows
how much combat he has seen and illustrates how this conflict is truly a world
war. As they take a break from the hostility, Miller’s hand is shaking again as
the violence catches up to him while he looks down at the carnage on the beach
of death. The camera then focuses in on one of the dead soldiers whose backpack
reads, “Ryan. S.,” which brings us to the central plot of the story.
The scene shifts to a
typing pool of women preparing the numerous condolence letters to be sent to
the families of dead soldiers. One typist realizes that there are several Ryans
killed in action. Three of the men turn out to be brothers. The fourth brother,
James (Matt Damon), parachuted into Normandy and he is the youngest of the
siblings. His whereabouts and condition are unknown. The mother lives on a farm
in Iowa and a sense of dread reflects on her face as she sees the military
vehicle approach her front door, and an officer and a priest approach her. She
collapses on the floor before she even realizes the extent of her loss.
The news reaches to the
level of the U. S. Army Chief of Staff, General George C. Marshall (Harve
Presnell). He has a difficult decision to make (another one here), since he is
advised that the parachutists were scattered all over the place, and even if
Ryan survived the drop, he was probably killed in action. Also, anybody
traveling through enemy territory to find the man would probably be KIA too.
Marshall has a letter written by Abraham Lincoln to a mother who lost five sons
in the Civil War. Marshall was so moved by the sacrifice of that one family
that he recites the contents by heart. Marshall believes that Private Ryan is
alive, and he is sending a rescue team to find him and “get him the hell out of
there” before his mother loses her last boy. He feels that her family has
sacrificed enough on what Lincoln called, “the altar of freedom,” a joining of
a religious image with a secular abstract one.
In the second act of the
movie, Miller reports to his superior officer, Lieutenant Colonel Anderson
(Dennis Farina). While waiting, Miller observes officers shaving, and enjoying
coffee and a large sandwich. He must feel bitter that these men are
experiencing such comforts after he and his men went through hell to allow
these officers to make themselves at home. Anderson tells Miller he gets tough
assignments because he can handle them, so he assigns Miller’s squad the job of
rescuing Ryan. To acknowledge Horvath’s concern about the difficulty of the
detail, Miller wittily admits it will be like looking for “a needle in a stack
of needles.” Miller needs an interpreter and seeks out Corporal Upham (Jeremy
Davies), who speaks French and German. It is immediately evident that Upham
does not have the stomach for combat. He is a nerdy type whose first response
is to tell Miller he has not been part of the fighting and has not fired his
weapon since boot camp. Even after what he has been through, Miller is still
able to politely dismiss Upham’s reservations and tells him to get his gear.
Miller actually finds Upham’s bumbling amusing as the corporal grabs a German
helmet by mistake and juggles his typewriter, which Miller tosses since Upham
must replace it with a weapon for this assignment.
The squad is not
thrilled with the newcomer’s presence and the assignment in general, since it
seems to them that they are risking their lives for a public relations stunt.
Upham is awkward as he tries to connect with the others, saying he thought
soldiers should bond like brothers (which can apply literally to Ryan but also
to the connection between combat comrades). Caparzo laughs off making a
personal connection, saying that Miller won’t even tell them anything about his
past. There is even a pool set up as the men guess Miller’s background. Later
Private Reiben (Edward Burns) jokes that Miller was assembled out of dead body
parts at Officer Training School. The feeling here is that they must rely on
each other, but the closer they become, the harder will be the effect of losing
a comrade.
Reiben questions the
logic of risking eight men for one private. Wade rightly points out the
terrible impact on Ryan’s mother, but Reiben says they all have mothers. The
bookish Upham quotes the famous lines from poet Tennyson’s “Charge of the Light
Brigade,” by saying, “Theirs not to reason why/Theirs but to do and die.” The
sarcastic Mellish considers it gibberish, but Miller says Upham is right. As
soldiers it is their duty to follow orders, even if they are “fubar.” (It takes
a while, as a sort of initiation prank, before the squad lets Upham know that
the acronym means “fucked up beyond all recognition”). The questioning here
gets at the central theme of the movie, which is, whether there is any time
that soldiers can question the authority of those in higher positions. In the
midst of battle, there is little time to be democratic. But, suppose the
command is to do something considered irrational or even immoral? People have
committed atrocities based on the reason that they were “just following
orders.”
In this dangerous world
even the drops in a pouring rainstorm hitting puddles seem like bullets
landing. Miller’s squad reaches a town under fire from the Germans. Sergeant
Hill (Paul Giamatti) is disappointed that the arriving men are not backups to
offer support. But in order to proceed with the mission, Miller has to aid the
other soldiers. A German on a loudspeaker says, “The Statue of Liberty is
kaput.” Miller’s response is, “That’s disconcerting.” It is an example of using
dark, understated humor to deal with a dire situation. Mellish ‘s character, as
seen before, is more forthright in his comic remarks, and yells at the man on
the bullhorn, “Your father was circumscribed by my rabbi, you prick.” These
short lines illustrate the ability of the script to establish the differences
in characters. Even small actions accomplish these distinctions. Under fire,
Caparzo picks up fallen fruit from the ground, which not only shows calm while
ducking a barrage of bullets, but also the need to eat, which is especially
important to an Italian (which I can personally attest to).
They come across a
French family whose home now is the second floor of a building without a
facade. As Upham translates, the father says he wants to give up his little
girl so the soldiers can protect her. War literally rips apart the home and the
members of a family. Caparzo, saying that the family’s little girl reminds him
of his niece, takes the child and gives her his rosary. Just like Jackson’s
crucifix necklace, here is another contrasting mingling of religion in the
midst of violence. Miller yells at him, saying that he must leave the civilians
there. Caparzo says taking the children to the next town is “the decent thing
to do.” Miller says, “We’re not here to do the decent thing! We’re here to
follow fuckin’ orders!” They are in the middle of a war, and Miller here argues
that decency is not left to individual determination.
Coming under the cynical
axiom, “No good deed goes unpunished,” a sniper wounds the compassionate
Caparzo. The enemy creates sympathy so that other soldiers will expose
themselves to danger and try to rescue their comrade. In the upside-down
existence of war, human caring is used as a tool to do more harm. Caparzo has a
letter in his pocket that he wants sent home to his father which will act as a
prayerful goodbye. But this farewell literally and figuratively has blood on
it. The camera then shifts to the viewpoint of the German sniper. Through his
telescopic sight he can see Caparzo talking to someone, so he knows where
American soldiers are taking cover. He can’t act on this knowledge because the
marksman Jackson, again invoking divine influence, shoots him. But, the damage
is done as Caparzo is dead. The young French girl goes back to her family,
hitting her father for having exposed her to danger, but here again he had no
good choice to make given the harrowing alternatives. Miller says, as if
summing up a lesson, that the death shows how they can’t take kids with them.
He gets his men to move on quickly from this loss by yelling out orders.
Because they have sacrificed one of their own for one man who is a stranger,
Reiben curses Ryan, and, thus, the mission for which he and the others must
risk their lives.
What follows is a
different form of cruelty perpetrated by the misunderstanding that results in
the chaos of combat. Miller tells a soldier named Ryan (Nathan Fillion) that
his brothers have died. The man breaks down crying and asks how it happened.
When Miller tells him they were killed in action, he says that’s impossible
because his brothers are in grammar school. He’s James Ryan from Minnesota, not
Iowa, and has a different middle name. But Minnesota Ryan is so shaken that he
wonders if it’s really his brothers who are the ones that are dead, and starts
to repeat that he must get home to make sure his siblings are fine. Again, from
one moment to another, lives can become undone. As Miller questions soldiers in
Hamill’s camp, he finds that the mayhem is widespread, since parachutists fell
far from their targeted landing sites. Hamill says they could use Miller’s
squad, but he admits he understands Miller’s mission, which surprises Miller.
Hamill says he has brothers, too, and he tells Miller to find Ryan and get him
home. There is no definite right or wrong way to respond here. A viewpoint
depends on one’s own experiences.
The squad spends the
night in an empty church, with candles burning, as if a service is going on. It
is another religious image that can mean many things: Is God on the side of the
Americans?; Has the deity abandoned humankind because of its destructive ways?;
Has the waging of war left a void of spirituality that is symbolized by the
abandoned church? Horvath notes Miller’s shaking hand and humorously says that
the captain needs to go into another line of work. Wade copies Caparzo’s bloody
letter so he can send a cleansed version to the dead soldier’s dad (the letter
eventually passes to Miller, and finally to Reiben as the wartime band of
brothers is respected). Miller and Horvath laugh about the antics of a soldier
named Vecchio (which in Italian means “old,” suggesting combat ages people, as
Horvath noted). The name reminds Miller of another person of Italian heritage,
Caparzo, and the mood shifts. Miller says with a grim reaper look on his face
that he has lost ninety-four men under his command. But he says he tells
himself that those lost saved so many others (in a way comparing the sacrifices
to what Jesus did). He then gives a smile and says, “and that’s how simple it
is,” admitting to the way he needs to justify his actions. Miller says that’s
how he rationalizes “making the choice between the mission and the men.” His
line sets up Horvath’s response that the situation now is different because
“this time the mission is a man.” Ryan is one person so the only way to justify
the mission is by what comes of him later. Miller says, “This Ryan better be
worth it. He’d better go home and cure some disease or invent a longer-lasting
lightbulb or something.” But as things stand at this point, Miller may continue
to carry out his orders, but inwardly he feels, “I wouldn’t trade ten Ryans for
one Vecchio or one Caparzo.” Horvath adds an “Amen,” which continues the need
to attach some form of religious truth in a desperate situation.
Jackson does not seem to
have any conflict in his beliefs since, as Reiben observers, Jackson can fall
asleep immediately. Mellish observes that he must have a “clear conscience,”
implying that Jackson knows he is righteous in what he is doing. Reiben,
referring to how Jackson must feel, paraphrases a religious quote by saying,
“If God’s on our side, who the hell could be on theirs?” The scholarly Upham
provides the exact line, “If God be for us, who could be against us?” Although
most would agree if there ever was a justifiable war, it was this one that
stopped Hitler and his Nazi agenda. But, the film here is talking about war in
general, and there have been many fatalities because leaders said God was on
their sides.
Miller walks among the
talking men, telling them to get some sleep, tucking them in as if they are
children under his paternal care. Miller asks how the untested Upham is doing.
His response surprises Miller. The man says that what he is undergoing is good
for him, and again uses a quote that advocates that war can strengthen a man’s
resolve. In the absence of real experience, Upham turns to books which can
inform but are no substitute for actual immersion in the horrors of war. We realize
that Miller is an educated person since he knows the lines are from Ralph Waldo
Emerson, and says the writer was probably just, “finding the bright side” in an
otherwise unpleasant situation.
The squad arrives at a
rally point where a glider went down. The craft was too heavy because extra
metal was welded on to protect a general who was a passenger. The pilot wasn’t
told of the extra weight. We have here an incompetent military action that is a
counterproductive attempt to shield a high-ranking officer. It also shows a
parallel attempt to save one life at the expense of others. The comparison to
their mission is not lost on the squad. However, Miller’s team is trying to
save a man whose average family has already suffered great loss due to the
international conflict. The squad sorts through the dog tags of all the dead
soldiers at this outpost to see if Ryan’s is among them. They make jokes,
saying they can use them as poker chips. As airborne servicemen look glumly on,
the compassionate medic, Wade, who has had to treat the wounded and those who
he could not save, is outraged by this cold activity, and grabs the tags. Out
of desperation, Miller calls out to the marching men if any know anything about
Ryan. He finds out that the private is at the town of Ramelle, which is
strategic because a bridge there allows tanks to cross the river.
On their way they
encounter another enemy bunker housing a machine gun. The men feel that they
should just go around the threat since they see it as an unnecessary risk to
engage it. They throw Miller’s words back at him, saying it is not their
mission. But Miller, after seeing all of the casualties along the way, appears
to want to look at the bigger picture now, and worries about the next group of
soldiers that have to deal with this German military obstacle. He now says
their mission is “to win the war.” But the assault ends in Wade’s agonizing
death.
There is one German
alive (Joerg Stadler), and the others, except for Upham, want to kill the
soldier. Miller wants him alive long enough to dig Wade’s grave. Upham wants to
know if Miller is going to allow the others to kill the German. He tells the
captain, “This is not right, sir.” Here again the film presents the difficulty
in determining what is the “right” thing to do in a situation where all of
society’s restrictions have been pushed aside. Miller, most likely feeling
guilt and a desire for revenge, does not give Upham a straight answer. Upham,
the outside observer here, asks out loud, “What is happening?” His disorientation
is evident as the rules he lives by are not in play here.
Miller’s hand is shaking
more now and he sobs in private, allowing himself to feel the loss of Wade, and
his culpability in the man’s death. As the German digs, Upham, trying to hold
onto his humanity, offers water to the prisoner, but Reiben stops him from
showing any kind of mercy. A little later Upham allows the enemy soldier to
take a break and smoke a cigarette. The German seems to be trying to exploit
Upham’s sympathy, joking about Mickey Mouse. When the other Americans arrive,
the German acts desperately to delay any execution by wanting to keep digging.
He says he likes America and spews out several American slang expressions. He
even tries to sing “The Star-Spangled Banner,” and says, “Fuck Hitler.” Would
an American soldier captured by the Germans try the same ploys?
Upham pleads that the
man is a prisoner-of-war and they can’t just execute him. Miller allows the
soldier to keep his blindfold on, walk a distance away so he won’t know where
the Americans are going, and then surrender himself to an Allied patrol.
Reiben, Mellish, and Jackson don’t understand how Miller could let the man go.
Upham says it’s against the “rules” to shoot a P.O.W. Reiben says that the
“rules just walked off,” which shows how war’s suspension of life’s laws can
lead to losing one’s soul. A brief mutiny occurs led by Reiben who questions
angrily Miller’s orders to attack the German bunker and release the prisoner.
He wants to know why Ryan “is more important than two of our guys!” Horvath
attempts to discipline Reiben, throwing the man to the ground for being “out of
line.” For Horvath, whatever is the decision of the commanding officer, a
soldier must follow the direction of that “line” set forth by the leader. But
what if the order is morally compromised, or what if the view of the
subordinate is warped? Again, the movie does not offer easy answers. Reiben
says he is through with the mission. Horvath tells him if he leaves he’ll shoot
him.
As shouting and arguing
breaks out among the soldiers and Horvath points a gun at Reiben, Miller is at
first quiet in the mayhem. He then diverts and diffuses the situation by asking
his men what the pool is up to on him. He discloses that he has been a schoolteacher
for the past eleven years. He teaches English composition in a small town in
Pennsylvania, and was also the baseball coach. His background seems unsuited to
lead men into battle, but it is obvious that he has stepped up to serve his
country as an officer. He admits that he has been changed by the war to the
point he wonders if his wife will even recognize him or believe what he has
undergone. He doesn’t care about Ryan, he says, but if he can save him, then
maybe it earns him a better chance to return to his wife, because killing only
takes him “farther away from home.” Here is where the film suggests, as some
religions do, that saving one man can save others. He offers Reiben the chance
to leave, but after all of the men bury Wade, he sticks with the squad.
On the road, they take
cover when a German armored vehicle rides by. It sustains a bazooka attack and
Miller’s squad shoots the German soldiers trying to get away. On the other side
of the road are soldiers who disabled the German half-track led by Corporal
Henderson (Max Martini). With Henderson is the elusive Private Ryan. After
Miller tells Ryan about his brothers, besides having to deal with the loss, he
also feels he is abandoning his post. His orders are to hold the bridge in the
bombed-out town until reinforcements arrive. Ryan finds out that Miller’s squad
has lost two men on the mission to bring him back. These additional deaths for
which Ryan had nothing to say about makes him sum up what war is when he says,
“It doesn’t make any sense.” He tells Miller that they should tell his mother
that he remained “with the only brothers I have left.” Here again we see
how the individual is inextricably intertwined with the fate of others.
We have entered the
third act of the story. Miller has to decide as to whether to let Ryan stay and
the squad leave, or help him out in the current predicament. Miller asks
Horvath, who says maybe they can look back and be able to say, “that saving
Private Ryan was the one decent thing we were able to pull out of this whole
god-awful, shitty mess.” Thus, the mission incorporates more sacrifice but also
a broader fight to do “the decent thing,” which Miller earlier said was not
what they were there for. But since Miller has become convinced that saving
Ryan may morally grant him passage home, he is onboard with what Horvath says.
Miller sets up a strategy to have marksman Jackson go up a tower and shoot the
enemy from above. He wants to bring German tanks down the main road toward the
bridge and disable their treads with “sticky bombs.” They are placed in socks
and covered with grease that will attach to the tanks. Reiben, again coping
with humor, says, “now we have to surrender our socks.” If the Germans get past
them, then they must retreat and blow up the bridge, which will not be a
victory but will stop the enemy from using it.
Mellish says the
soldiers will be moving around a lot and he gives Upham the task of carrying
and feeding the others ammunition since he is the novice when it comes to
combat. The sad singing of Edith Piaf plays, fitting the mood, but the soldiers
joke to cope during this calm before the storm prelude. Horvath sways his
handgun to the music, an image combining creation through art and destruction
through violence. Ryan talks with Miller, and says he can’t picture the faces
of his brothers, which shows how war can wipe out all that is good about life.
Miller tries to help him, saying when he thinks about home, he pictures what
gave him solace, such as a “hammock in the backyard, or my wife pruning the
rose bushes in a pair of my old work gloves.” These are the simple things that
are reminders of how things were, and contain the hope of returning to what it
was like after the current horror ends. Ryan remembers a crazy, funny incident
that involved him and his three brothers, one of which was literally trying to
have a roll in the hay with a girl. After laughing, the grief sets in again,
and Ryan says that event was the last time the four were together, which was
two years prior.
From fond nostalgia, to
quiet melancholy and now to imminent danger, war again shows how quickly it
disrupts the timeline. The rumbling of armory ruptures the tranquility and the
soldiers disperse to their positions. Jackson in the tower signals that there
are a couple of tanks coming and the Americans are very outnumbered by the
approaching German infantry. During the ensuing battle, the camera, like it did
at the beginning of the film, puts us at ground level, and makes us feel like
we are soldiers, running through a firestorm of bullets. Miller tries to keep
Ryan out of danger as much as possible. But the surprise here is that Reiben,
who almost led a revolt against continuing the mission, rescues Ryan from an explosion.
It seems saving Ryan has become the goal of the whole squad to achieve
salvation amid the hell of battle.
But there will be tragic
sacrifice for that atonement. Despite hitting many of his targets, Jackson
misses a couple, which is an omen of what is to come. A German tank zeroes in
on his position above, fires, and the blast kills Jackson. Upham cringes in
hiding and hesitates bringing ammo. Mellish gets into hand-to-hand combat with
a German soldier in one of the buildings. Upham, ironically wearing belts of
bullets but who is only fit to handle a typewriter and not a weapon, ascends
the stairs slowly instead of rushing to Mellish’s aid. The German kills Mellish
with a bayonet to the heart. The enemy soldier heads down the stairs, walks
past the terrified Upham, and doesn’t bother with him. He knows that Upham is
not a threat. This image is a damning one since the enemy soldier is telling
Upham that the American is impotent in the presence of his own fear.
Horvath is wounded in an
exchange with a German, and grabs the frozen Upham as the Americans must
retreat to the “Alamo” spot, the bridge that must be destroyed to prevent the
Germans from using it. Upham hides again while the others scramble. He is like
a ghost and the Germans pass over him, which, ironically, saves him, although
he is spiritually dead. Horvath is shot multiple times. His tough stoicism is
in evidence as he says he just had the “wind knocked out” of him. As Miller
prepares to blow up the bridge, an explosion knocks the detonator out of his
hands. There is symmetry at this point as Miller experiences the same
disorientation that occurred on Omaha Beach, as the camera again slows to jerky
movements and the sound is muted. Miller sees Ryan crying over a lost comrade
and he realizes that Horvath is dead. In an ironic moment, the captured German
who Miller set free is here and shoots Miller as he tries to retrieve the
detonator. Even though he is dying, Miller refuses to give up, shooting at an
approaching German tank with his handgun. The tank explodes and Miller sees
that an American plane has destroyed it. More planes fly overhead attacking the
Germans. The timid Upham survives and comes out of hiding to capture a group of
Germans, including the one for whom he asked for mercy and now has shot Miller.
Upham uses his rifle just this one time and kills the German soldier, probably
out of revenge and guilt. But he contradictorily allows the other Germans to
leave. The film suggests that war is irrational, and it creates conflicts not only
between others but also within individuals.
Reiben’s attempt to help
Miller is futile. He calls for a medic as the still alive Ryan kneels near
Miller. The airborne soldier tells Miller that the American planes are P-51’s,
known as “Tank-busters.” Miller continues the film’s seemingly conflicting
mingling of violence and religion by calling them, “Angels on our shoulders.”
Miller’s last words are to Ryan as he wants him to play forward the huge
sacrifice made to save him. Miller says, “Earn this. Earn it.”
The words written by
General Marshall to Ryan’s mother assuring her of the return of her son who
distinguished himself in combat are spoken, as he repeats Lincoln’s words.
Ryan’s young face transforms into his older self (Harrison Young) who was in
the first scene of the movie. Ryan visits the grave of Miller. He addresses
Miller by saying he has led his life the best he could and hopes he earned what
they did for him. His words speak for everyone who owes a debt to those who
fought and still fight for the lives of others.
Since words are important, the next film is appropriately titled, The Words.
Actually, that (stated at 2:06:16) WASN'T the last time those four brothers were ever together, because at 00:32:00 into the movie, they show a photograph (on the radio, in the Ryan home, when Jame's mother is about to be informed of the loss of her three sons) that shows ALL FOUR soldiers posing together in their Battle Dress uniforms!
ReplyDeleteHow come NOBODY ever mentions that glaring mistake from the movie??