Watch: Tigerland 2000 123movies, Full Movie Online – In September 1971, a platoon of recruits arrives in Ft. Polk, LA, for infantry training before leaving for war. The final week takes place in Tigerland, a swamp similar to Vietnam. Jim Paxton has enlisted; he wants to experience everything and write books later. He befriends Roland Bozz, a cool Texan with a gift for getting into trouble and for helping misfits get discharges. At least one sociopath in the platoon hates Bozz, even as the sergeants grudgingly recognize his leadership abilities. As the platoon heads into its week in Tigerland, Paxton’s body gives out, Bozz makes plans to go AWOL, and the sociopath gets hold of live ammo. Is the Louisiana swamp more dangerous than the DMZ?.
Plot: A group of recruits go through Advanced Infantry Training at Fort Polk, Louisiana’s infamous Tigerland, last stop before Vietnam for tens of thousands of young men in 1971.
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7.0/10 Votes: 41,583 | |
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55/100 | MetaCritic | |
N/A Votes: 460 Popularity: 10.463 | TMDB |
It Was Always Muddy
It is certainly interesting to write a review about a film that took place where I actually resided for two months. In September of 1971 when this film is set, your’s truly was doing his basic training at Fort Polk, Louisiana. I did get to the North Fort at one point in my training where the infamous Tigerland was located. In fact Tigerland was a nickname given to the whole northern part of the army base.I was doing the basic training to be a weekend warrior and avoid Vietnam. But I saw so many of the kids who were just like the ones portrayed in the film it was actually a rather nerve wrecking old home week. In 1971 everyone except the policy makers in Washington knew that this was going to end when as Senator George Aiken declared, we said we won and then went home. And of course the South Vietnamese government we were protecting would fold like a napkin.
By that time the army was scraping the bottom for soldier material and you can see it in the company of men that are in Tigerland. This is where more soldiers shipped for Vietnam than any other place in the nation. The Louisiana swamps best approximated the climate conditions of Vietnam.
This particular company has a real odd ball in it with Colin Farrell. He’s doing his best to get out of the army, but the army just won’t oblige him. So he’s waging his own war against them by becoming a ‘barracks lawyer’ and getting others out. And he’s driving the officers and NCOs quite nuts doing it.
I would rate Tigerland a lot higher because there is much I liked about the film. It was not shot at Fort Polk, but in places that gave you feel of the place. What I remember best about it was rain and mud. In that summer of 1971 it rained nearly every single day I was there. But the rain and sometimes it would come a few times a day. Would be a sudden downpour, maybe at most 20 minutes then it would cool off and then resume being muggy. And the ground couldn’t absorb it fast enough so it was always muddy. You did your best work in that brief period after rain stopped it was then actually decent enough for normal activities.
What I couldn’t quite grasp was Colin Farrell’s motivations for what he was doing. I blame that on the writer and also the director.
As for the other players the best in the cast was Thomas Guiry playing this poor sad sack kid from the Louisiana bayous. I met a few just like him, he stopped his formal education at the 6th grade. It was a touching performance on Guiry’s part.
So here’s to Fort Polk, not a place I recommend, but sometimes a place which is needed to train our soldiers. It got a good film, but not a great one in its honor.
Rebel With A Cause
American military authority is the enemy for Pvt. Roland Bozz (Colin Farrell), a nonconformist trainee who, along with other infantry trainees, endures brutal, sadistic treatment in preparation for combat in Vietnam. Tigerland is a swampy, steamy camp near Fort Polk, Louisiana that is supposed to simulate conditions in Vietnam. The story is set in 1971.The amount and severity of physical and verbal aggression displayed in this film may be a tad overstated. But the point the film is making is that many, if not most, of the young guys drafted into the army in the late 60s and early 70s absolutely did not want, or deserve, to be there.
Roland Bozz is one of those young men. He’s angry at the war, angry at the army. The army won’t release him because they know that’s what he wants. If Bozz can’t get himself out, the next best thing is to try and get other recruits out. That will be his revenge, his way to fight the system.
A fellow trainee shares his background with Bozz, who then tells the trainee: “I know army regulations the way prisoners know the law. You’re a hardship discharge, man, if ever I saw one. Okay. I’ll get you out of the army”. Bravo for Roland Bozz, a young rebel with a mission, a cause, trapped like the others by an oppressive, controlling institution.
Acting is very, very good. Colin Farrell is terrific, at a time when he, and the rest of the cast, was largely unknown. No need for overpaid A-list actors. The film’s acting style trends naturalistic, spontaneous, and emotionally intense. None of the acting seems forced.
With a hand-held camera, combined with grainy film stock, and using quick zooms and unexpected cuts, the cinematography and editing convey a documentary look and feel, which results in sequences that are quite realistic. Lighting is mostly natural. Sets are plain and unadorned. Background music is minimal.
Much better than I ever expected, “Tigerland” is a well-made film with an intense, anti-war theme. It’s about putting others ahead of one’s own selfish interest. That Hollywood largely shunned this low-budget film is all the more reason to see it.
Original Language en
Runtime 1 hr 41 min (101 min)
Budget 10000000
Revenue 148701
Status Released
Rated R
Genre Drama, War
Director Joel Schumacher
Writer Ross Klavan, Michael McGruther
Actors Colin Farrell, Matthew Davis, Clifton Collins Jr.
Country Germany, United States
Awards 2 wins & 5 nominations
Production Company N/A
Website N/A
Sound Mix Dolby Digital
Aspect Ratio 1.85 : 1
Camera Panavision Cameras and Lenses
Laboratory DeLuxe, Hollywood (CA), USA (prints), Crest National, Hollywood (CA), USA (color)
Film Length 2,767 m (Sweden), 2,816 m (Spain)
Negative Format 16 mm (Kodak)
Cinematographic Process Spherical
Printed Film Format 35 mm (blow-up)