Directed by:
Hal AshbyCinematography:
Haskell WexlerCast:
Jane Fonda, Jon Voight, Bruce Dern, Penelope Milford, Robert Carradine, Robert Ginty, Jonathan Banks, Charles Cyphers, Olivia Cole, David Clennon, Marc McClure (more)Plots(1)
When Marine Captain Bob Hyde (Dern) leaves for Vietnam, his wife, Sally (Fonda), volunteers at a local hospital. There she meets Luke Martin (Voight) a former sergeant whose war injury has left him a paraplegic. Embittered with rage and filled with frustration, Luke finds new hope and confidence through his growing intimacy with Sally. The relationship also transforms Sally's feelings about life, love and the horrors of war. And when, wounded and disillusioned, Sally's husband returns home, all three must grapple with the full impact of a brutal, distant war that has changed their lives forever. (official distributor synopsis)
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Reviews (3)
Giving a film with such a serious topic, like the return of war veterans to civilian life, less than 4 stars may sound sacrilegious, but despite the decent cast and the subject matter, the film did not evoke any strong emotions in me for a long time. The first hour carries on in an unremarkable manner, and if I were to compare Ashby's film, let's say with Oliver Stone's Born on the Fourth of July, the latter would easily come out as the winner. The film does gain some internal tension and becomes slightly more interesting starting from the key sex scene between the main characters, but once again, it lacks a key emotional scene at the end that would permanently etch the film in one's memory. In the long line of American films on a similar theme, Coming Home represents only a better average from my perspective. Overall impression: 65%. ()
It’s well known that in the 70s Hal Ashby was making great films like a treadmill, but I still can't help wondering how beautiful this intimate drama with a clear message and more or less typical characters of his was to watch. It must be thanks to the beautiful sixties, packed with unparalleled music (performed by Ashby in a uncensored form), real emotions and lost illusions about love and personal freedom. This is of course due to the perfect cast, led by a slightly schizophrenic veteran Jon Voight showing the more sensitive, contained side of his rich talent. And also due to Ashby himself, who was able to speak behind the camera in that area of turbulent human destinies as skilfully and, above all, convincingly as perhaps no one else. I'm sticking with 4 stars solely because absolutely nothing happens in the film that wasn't expected or even inevitable from the beginning. 80% ()
This film isn't unnecessarily emotional, and instead the actors try to keep it relatively calm, which they actually manage to do quite nicely. Jane Fonda and Jon Voight are just great and they work perfectly together, but the others also play their relevant roles. One of the best war films without war scenes I've ever seen. ()
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