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Courage Under Fire

Courage Under Fire

  • Status: Released
  • 04-07-1996
  • Runtime: 116 min
  • Score: 6.5
  • Vote count: 928

A US Army officer, who made a "friendly fire" mistake that was covered up, has been reassigned to a desk job. He is tasked to investigate a female chopper commander's worthiness to be awarded the Medal of Honor. At first all seems in order. But then he begins to notice inconsistencies between the testimonies of the witnesses...

Denzel Washington

Lieutenant Colonel Nathaniel Serling

Meg Ryan

Captain Karen Emma Walden

Lou Diamond Phillips

Staff Sergeant John Monfriez

Matt Damon

Ilario

Michael Moriarty

Brigadier General Hershberg

Michole Briana White

Maria

Bronson Pinchot

Bruno

Amy Hathaway

Annie

Diane Baker

Louise Boylar

Seth Gilliam

Stephen Altameyer

Regina Taylor

Meredith Serling

Scott Glenn

Gartner

Sean Astin

Patella

Sean Patrick Thomas

Thompson

Zeljko Ivanek

Banacek

Tim Guinee

Rady

Tim Ransom

Boylar

Ned Vaughn

Chelli

Manny Perez

Jenkins

David McSwain

Egan

Korey Coleman

Radio operator

Armand Darrius

Robins

Mark Adair-Rios

Bobcat 5

Ken Jenkins

Joel Walden

Kathleen Widdoes

Geraldine Walden

Robert Brent Lappin

Tank Commander (uncredited)

Jack Watkins

Coffee Sergeant

Benjamin Bryant

Tanker (uncredited)

CinemaSerf

What makes this film stand out (a little) is the intimate style of photography. The POV camerawork gives us a proximity to the story and characters that we rarely see. Sadly, though, the story itself is a little bit thin. Denzel Washington is tasked with investigating the worthiness of a deceased helicopter pilot during the Gulf war to receive the medal of honor. Assuming it would be a routine ratification, he interviews her crew only to find discrepancies and inconstancies that cast a shadow over the whole procedure. Had this just been a routine wartime tale, then it might have been ok - but the fact that it is based around a real wartime scenario, and married together with that sickly trumpet-based pseudo-military score and an annoyingly "Semper Fi" sort of mentality, the whole thing just sinks down into a mire of absurdity and sentimentality. Neither Denzel Washington nor Meg Ryan really have the weight to give this film any bite, oomph - or, for that matter, plausibility. Matt Damon makes some impact but I couldn't quite decide whether that was because he was good, or because it was interesting to see him before stardom set it in - but either way, this is pretty much devoid of action, and the dialogue could have been written by the US Army recruitment office. They all look great in their uniforms, though!