DVD Search

DVD Movies
VHS Videos

Popular Music
Classical Music

Book Store
Magazine Subscriptions

Computer Equipment
Computer Software
Computer & Video Games

Electronics Equipment
Photography Equipment

Baby Products
Toys & Games

Kitchen & Housewares
Outdoor Living
Tools & Hardware
 

Featured Product
 
Personal Shavers for Intimate Areas

Personal Shavers for Intimate Areas
 

 

  Buy Online Shopping Mall > DVD Movies

Band of Brothers DVD

Band of Brothers and other best sellers. Great prices on Band of Brothers and other best selling DVD Movies. To find additional DVD Movies browse the DVD categories, or use the search box at the top of this page.

from: HBO VIDEO


See Larger Image



Customer Reviews
Average Rating: 4.90 out of 5 stars

Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - Complicated
I'm impressed by this series. I saw one episode on TV and on the recomendation of a friend (ok, of a passel of friends) bought the series for my husband, who was agitating for it. We both like it a great deal. It's something you can watch slowly, with some consideration, and enjoy (in a somber kind of way). It's about the original Airborn units... The interviews with the vetrans make it something very special. This is the last generation that these vetrans will be alive to tell their story, and we should listen and learn from them; they are us, and this war is something different from any war before or since. It's not for no reason it was called a world war. Trnasportation and communication were finaly good enough to involve the entire planet in a conflict, but the tactics and planning were still evolving to catch up with this fact. A lot of firsts, in that war.



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - Best war film
"Band of Brothers" picks up the realistic feel of war from "Saving Private Ryan" and adds to that the realistic emotions of war. While "Private Ryan" degenerates into a Western-style shootout and klutzy flag-waver, "Band of Brothers" digs into character psychology and emerges a stronger, better communication of war to those who have never been.

Each episode has a strong individual flavor and theme. Each episode shows the subtle shifts in mood in Easy Company. There's the gritty determination of the men during training camp, the numbing fear of the landing and fighting in Normandy. There's disgust and a blow to the morale of the men after the debacle of Operation Market Garden. Then there's the sheer horror of Bastogne, which no man emerges from without psychological damage, and they gripe and shirk duty. And then the war grinds to an end. During the course of their - and our - journey, the series examines leadership, loyalty, courage, horror, loss, and camaraderie.

It's amazing how the episodes maintain tension even as the violence and action diminishes over the course of the series. "Private Ryan" moved in the opposite direction, and gave its audience an action-packed, yet disappointing ending. It's as if while making "Band of Brothers" there was the realization that it is the men that matter, and not the battles.

But do remember that this is not a documentary. It's a fictionalized account of actual events, at least twice removed. And even though it gets us close to what it must have been like, there's no knowing unless you were there.



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - The Single Best TV Production Of All Time!!
I think this mini-series even eclipses "I, Claudius" to take 'top TV honors'. I'll also say it's the best WWII story and production (cinema, documentary or whatever) I've ever seen and I've seen a lot!

"Band Of Brothers" tells the true and incredible odyssey of Easy Company of the 506th Parachute Infantry Regiment, 101st "Screaming Eagles" Airborne Division, U.S. Army - from their formation in Georgia (1942), to Berlin and the end of the war in Europe (1945). The demand for, and on, elite paratroopers was unending and they were deployed as "the tip of the spear" of every major allied offensive (and many minor ones too) on the Western Front. Jumping behind enemy lines, often without critical equipment and supplies or lacking enough rest and under terrible conditions, they saw more than their share of hard combat and E Company itself took nearly 150% casualties. (Statistically at least, that's 100% of the company - 140 men and 7 officers - and half again of their replacements, lost).

The scope of the war is limited to E Company - the German POV is vanishingly small, life stateside, after their training and deployment in Normandy, is only referred to, usually in connection with mail call (or the wounded), and, apart from the brief and infrequent visit and/or pep talk from their company commander, the top brass is never seen. But the impact of the war on E Company, the civilians and other outfits they meet along the way (and on us) is anything but limited! The effects are as awesome as they are devastating.

There are so many reasons why it's effective. For one, as I've said, the story is true. If you've read the book you're in for a treat. The series follows the book to an unprecedented degree for movies. Not everything that's in the book is in the series, but everything that's in the series is in the book - finally, directors that understand the drama in real-life events! Even if you haven't read it, you're still in for a treat. Thanks to meticulous directing, you're rarely allowed to feel comfortable about the ultimate fates of the individual characters. Even when you are allowed, the directing is a very sure-handed affair. But most of the time you find yourself in the kind of war in which you never quite know what will happen next - who's going to be wounded and sent back into combat, promoted, demoted or transferred, wounded seriously enough to be sent home, captured, separated from their unit, killed, either in combat or by accident, or even murdered (though not in E Company itself). After all, this is not fiction-based material where the author is 'choosing' who survives. Here, when one character can no longer tell the tale, another member of the company will tell the story through his own eyes and few if any POV are left out.

The subtext is on the war within one's self and the loss and value of meaningful humanity. The wonderful cinematography replaces slow-motion effects with high shutter speeds in adrenaline-charged sequences - without bothering to stress formal compositions within the frame. It conveys a vivid "you are there" sense of immediacy. And yet at the same time, the overall vision is SO superbly and fully realized from start to finnish. The non-combat scenes will easily hold your attention and the battle sequences themselves are not only utterly convincing, but truly harrowing. And the whole thing is filled with potent, poetic imagery - the simple act of enclosing a violin within its coffin-like case - a metaphor for the humanity claimed by a world war, or the closing of a blood-smeared ambulance door during the high-water mark of E Company's casualties, or, the drawn-from-life moment of fatal hesitation - and doe-eyed look of disbelief - in the face of a clearly under-aged Nazi boy/soldier - the first victim in a bloody surprise attack - vibrantly resonate, like so many sounds and images in this work, with profound, often devastating meaning, and haunt the soul long afterward. Trust me, it's an absolute knockout.

Additionally, Spielberg and company engage in a judicious amount of cliche busting. I won't give things away here, but if you've seen your share of war movies, you won't be disappointed.

Since the head-honcho behind this 10 hour event is none other than Spielberg, comparisons with his "Saving Private Ryan" are bound to come up, especially since the directing and production values are of similarly high standards, and at first glance maybe, seemingly familiar. But at least one reviewer at Amazon criticizes "Ryan" for being fundamentally a war film made by, and for, pacifists (citing its first half hour as an example), and that since the war is basically evil and all the men are inherently good, it's difficult to believe their comments on the war. I think there may be something to that. But, in "Brothers", the war seems a little more necessary than evil, even if it is not always so clearly understood nor as well rationalized by its participants, as in "Ryan". Here, the weight of combat is far more personally affecting through its undeniable impact on the men of Easy Company. There is much cause for empathy here. Although I've never seen combat, this series makes me want to send a BIG thank you to ALL our servicemen and women. And again, though I wasn't there, I sometimes talk to and read from and about those who were, and to me at least, "Brothers" edges out "Ryan" and leaves all the rest behind as the best depiction of WWII on film to date.

My brother and I were raised on my dad's war stories (he was with the 11th Armored Division during the Battle of the Bulge) and they stuck in our heads. As a result we grew up with a shared interest in all things WWII. As a WWII buff I was hard pressed to find much of anything amiss in the series from artillery, aircraft and armored vehicles to small arms and field equipment - right down to the uniforms - U.S., British, French or German. There are big and small suprises everywhere you look - even an operational Jagdpanther, no less(!).

I hope the interviews I saw on HBO will be included on the DVD - it would be a crime if they weren't. If they are, you'll not only come to know, respect and appreciate the characters in the series (by the way, the acting is superb all around and David Schwimmer is great as Capt. Sobel!), but, appreciate the men of E Company even more through the eyes of the survivors, themselves. In fact, I'm astonished at how little difference there seems to be between the actors in the series and their real-life counterparts. As a footnote, I recall reading somewhere that Stephen Ambrose (who wrote "Brothers"), while interviewing a subject, was hoping to get permission to use some of the man's war stories in a book (non-fiction of course). When Ambrose, whose eye for courage is arguably unmatched, prompted him, the veteran said "Well, ok, but don't make me out to be some kind of hero or something" - to which Ambrose replied "I don't make heroes, I just write about 'em".

Like some others here, I subscribed to HBO just to see this show. Having read the excellent book, which, by the way, I also strongly recommend since it illuminates a bit more that the series can easily focus on, my expectations of the series were either matched or simply blown away! All in all it is a stunning and masterful tribute to E company, paratroopers and to all those involved with that war. I'm tempted to say it will not be equalled for a long time to come. Whether you are familiar with this story or not I can't recommend this mini-series highly enough! If I could, I'd give it fifty stars!!

 

Previous

Related DVD Searches

Band of Brothers and DVD related products can be found by following the links on the left. To search for a specific DVD product, or products from other categories use the search box below and select the appropriate category from the search box drop down menu.




Amazon.com Direct DVD Searches

Find Band of Brothers and DVD related books, electronics, videos, DVD's, music, soundtracks, toys, computer and videos games and more products at Amazon.com.

Books | Electronics | Videos | DVD's | Music & Soundtracks | Toys | Video-Games | more...


DVD Related Posters & Art Prints Search


DVD Related Collectibles

 

 
Gifts for Occasions & Holidays | Gift Themes | Gift Search
 


© COPYRIGHT 2003 ALL RIGHTS RESERVED MALL.BUY-ONLINE-SHOPPING-MALLS.COM

Online Shopping & Financial Services > Buy Online Shopping Malls