So many rabid haters or slavish fans here.
Segal is a great actor but this is not a movie he would/should be proud of. It's monstrously dated and the performances are almost soap-opera level.
As for realism, I wouldn't compare it to Saving Private Ryan. It's not fair. SPR had an immensely larger budget and the benefit of new simulating technologies and CGI. Having said that, I think it's hilarious some of the ppl here have said this film is better than SPR (in terms of combat simulation). Huh? SPR has bodies decapitated or limbs shot off. In this, as was traditional for the 60s, a soldier is "hit" and then "faints": there's no injury shown except perhaps a discreet blood stain. The explosions mostly all resemble goofy fireworks. The sound effects are ridiculous (and lazy).
But to your point: that hair. I couldn't stop seeing the 60's hair, blow-dried, with just way, way too much on the sides. I'm not military, but there's no way they'd let hair get that long. (Look at any picture from WW2 combat: even for guys on the front line, they found ways to get their hair cut.) That hair should be short-- and dirty from combat.) I never get how most combat films don't bother to get the hair right. It's one of the easiest and cheapest things you can do to further the realism and make the audience feel the different-ness of an era.
You really thought Gazzara was doing a good job? I thought Gazzara was kind of a hack here.
Vaughn was pretty good, albeit the director was trying to have it both ways: Vaughn shoots the two deserters running away (normally, he'd get the "evil" tag), but gets to emote that he feels really bad about it (so we're supposed to let him off the hook for it).
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