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Tunnel Rats (film)

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1968 Tunnel Rats
DVD release cover
Directed byUwe Boll
Written byUwe Boll
Story byUwe Boll
Daniel Clarke
Produced byUwe Boll
Chris Roland
Daniel Clarke
StarringMichael Paré
Nate Parker
Rocky Marquette
Brandon Fobbs
Scott Cooper
Wilson Bethel
CinematographyMathias Neumann
Edited byKaren Porter
Music byJessica de Rooij
Production
company
Distributed byKinostar
Vivendi Entertainment
Release dates
  • May 31, 2008 (2008-05-31) (Hoboken International Film Festival)
  • November 13, 2008 (2008-11-13) (Germany)
Running time
96 minutes
CountriesGermany
Canada
LanguageEnglish
Budget$8 million
Box office$35,402

Tunnel Rats, also known as 1968 Tunnel Rats, is a 2008 German-Canadian war suspense film written and directed by Uwe Boll. The film is based on the factual duties of tunnel rats during the Vietnam War. In a documentary for the film, Boll revealed the film really did not have a script, and instead the actors are improvising their lines.[1]

Although a box office failure, Tunnel Rats was met with positive reviews.

Plot

A group of US Army soldiers, trained in underground warfare, arrive at base camp in the jungle of Vietnam. The soldiers spend the first day and night getting to know each other. The next morning they begin to explore the Viet Cong's underground tunnel network at Củ Chi. Led by Lieutenant Vic Hollowborn (Michael Pare) along with Platoon Sergeant Mike Heaney (Brad Schmidt) Corporal Dan Green (Wilson Bethel) and Privates Peter Harris (Mitch Eakins), Carl Johnson (Erik Eidem), Terence Verano (Rocky Marquette), Jonathon Porterson (Garikayi Mutambirwa), Dean Garraty (Adrian Collins), Samuel Graybridge (Brandon Fobbs), Jim Lidford (Nate Parker) and Bob Miller (Jeffery Christopher Todd).

Armed with nothing more than bayonets, pistols, grenades and flashlights, the US soldiers take to the tunnels in a search and destroy operation, and begin to encounter dangers including primitive but lethal booby traps, such as punji sticks, grenades rigged with tripwire, as well as roving Viet Cong. Meanwhile, Garraty and Johnson are killed first, and later Sergeant Heaney and Verano are both killed as Green escapes, and up on the surface Harris and Lidford escape to the bottom of the tunnel, and Lidford is killed later on, Porterson successfully escapes through the tunnels. On the surface, the Viet Cong also attack the US base.

As things escalate above and below the ground, soldiers for both sides are pushed to the limits of their humanity. Miller and Graybridge try to escape, with the former barely making it, but Graybridge is killed. The events implicate that all (or almost all) the protagonists are killed by each other, by boobytraps, or by the airstrike ordered by the wounded US commanding officer Hollowborn, who called on it when everything seemed to had been lost. Green dies in the tunnels. Harris convinces Vo Mai (Jane Le) that he isn't a threat to her or her family. Porterson retreats to the surface and later meets Miller at the camp where many soldiers have been slaughtered by the NVA. Porterson and Miller witness the bombings and their ultimate fate or survival is left ambiguous. Harris and Mai try to dig their way out, slowly realizing they are both trapped with nowhere to go and had been left to die. They remain in the tunnels until the end of their days.

Cast

Reception

1968 Tunnel Rats was a box-office failure, earning less than $36,000 in ticket sales. The film's budget was $8 million.

Despite this, 1968 Tunnel Rats received generally positive reviews from critics, making it one of Uwe Boll's most critically successful films to date. Jeffrey M. Anderson of Combustible Celluloid gave the film 3/4 stars and wrote "If Boll had made this film in 1986, he might have won an Oscar and become the next Oliver Stone!"[2] Bill Gibron of Filmcritic.com gave the film 3.5/5 stars, calling it "very good -- and that's amazing, considering who's receiving said accolade."[3]

On the negative side, Uwe Boll won the Golden Raspberry Award for Worst Director for his work on the film, which he also received for directing In the Name of the King and Postal.

Video game

Uwe Boll also presented a video game of the same name based on the film. The title was developed by Replay Studios using the Replay engine, and it was released on Steam on May 15, 2009.[4]

References

  1. ^ The Making of Tunnel Rats documentary.
  2. ^ Anderson, Jeffery. "Tunnel Rats (2008)". combustiblecelluloid.com. Retrieved May 26, 2013.
  3. ^ Gibron, Bill. "Tunnel Rats". movies.amctv.com. Retrieved May 26, 2013.
  4. ^ Tunnel Rats Video Game Steampowered Store