Download Hindi Movie GI Jane

Download Hindi Movie GI Jane

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Download Hindi Movie G.I. Jane

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When a crusading chairperson of the military budget committee pressures the would be Navy secretary to begin full gender integration of the service, he offers the chance for a test case for a female trainee in the US Navy's elite SEAL/C.R.T. selection program. LT. Jordan O'Neill is given the assignment, but no one expects her to succeed in an inhumanly punishing regime that has a standard 60% dropout rate for men. However, O'Neill is determined to prove everyone wrong.
A female Senator succeeds in enrolling a woman into Combined Reconnaissance Team training where everyone expects her to fail.
This movie proves one thing--that film makers frequently have but a nodding acquaintance with reality. The producers should issue an apology to the SEALs for their offensive cartoon image of our most dedicated warriors and their training. It's almost amazing to see the difference in timbre between the reviews of this movie (on IMDB) and those of films dedicated to true military events. UGH!
A senior member of the U.S. Senate Arms Committee is critical of the Navy's progress—or lack thereof—in gender neutrality, and wants the full integration of women into all branches of the service. Enter Lieutenant Jordan O'Neil, an intelligence officer handpicked as a test subject for the CRT, a rigorous SEAL training program with a 60% dropout rate for men in the military. Despite all the bureaucratic red tape in Washington, O'Neil is determined not to be shown special treatment and tries to progress through the unrelenting, nearly inhumane training regimen. The setup has potential, Moore is effective in the lead, and Mortensen has an especially intriguing role as her austere Master Chief, but—despite holding your attention for the most part—it all builds to a conventional, contrived, and unsatisfying finale. Highly watchable, but not very compelling considering its promising premise. **½
It's the kind of high energy, fast-paced film where you can guiltlessly root for the heroine to persevere -- but that's all it succeeds at.
As the first &#39;test case&#39; of a woman to undergo SEAL training in the US Navy&#39;s elite Combined Reconnaissance Team (CRT), Lt Jordan O&#39;Neill (<a href="/name/nm0000193/">Demi Moore</a>) demands to be treated like all the other guys and attempts to prove her ability ...although everyone else expects her to fail. G.I. Jane is based on a screenplay by American screenwriters David Twohy and Danielle Alexandra. They&#39;re ship fenders: they&#39;re hung between Naval vessels as bumpers to prevent damage from ships docked next to each other that would collide if the fender weren&#39;t there. The fenders are large, bulky, heavy, and are used as a test of both strength and teamwork for the trainees. It&#39;s the Navy equivalent of a dunce cap to show that Cortez (<a href="/name/nm0883008/">David Vadim</a>) had shamed the rest of the company by not helping O&#39;Neill over the wall at the end of the obstacle course. Master Chief Urgayle (<a href="/name/nm0001557/">Viggo Mortensen</a>) explains that SEALs don&#39;t leave their crew members behind. Urgayle wanted to show the entire trainee company that Cortez acted inappropriately. Later, as O&#39;Neill is walking away from the Master Chief&#39;s quarters, Cortez is shown digging a hole with the oar as punishment. &quot;Head&quot; is a Navy term for toilet. &quot;Dropped On Request&quot;. Urgayle and his command staff use it on their roster board to refer to anyone who leaves the training program before completing it—hence the few trainees we see ringing the bell. The US Navy SEAL program has a very high dropout rate, as we hear explained at the beginning of O&#39;Neill&#39;s training. The program is deliberately tough because the Navy wants recruits that can handle the hard demands of the work they do. Using her experience as a topographical analyst, O&#39;Neill surmises that the Master Chief is not about to lead the Libyans to the spot where the team is waiting to rally with the Las Vegas and would, most likely, follow a southwest wash instead. They make their way near to the mouth of the wash and set up an ambush, planting mines in a &quot;kill zone&quot; and hiding in wait behind the rocks. As O&#39;Neill predicted, the Chief comes barrelling down the wash with the Libyans directly behind him. The team attempts to cover him, but Urgayle is hit by two Libyan bullets and falls in the &quot;kill zone.&quot; O&#39;Neill rushes into the minefield and, with McCool&#39;s (<a href="/name/nm0004820/">Morris Chestnut</a>) help, drags Urgayle out. The mines are then detonated, and the team extracted by helicopter. Some time later, back at the SEAL training facility, the successful graduates are accepted to the CRT and given their pins from Urgayle. In the final scene, O&#39;Neill opens her locker and finds a copy of D.H. Lawrence&#39;s Selected Poems with a Navy Cross marking the page containing the poem &quot;Self Pity&quot;. She turns to see Urgayle, his leg in a brace, walking out of the locker room but not before flashing her a short, congratulatory smile. It would seem strange that Urgayle would give his decoration to someone but he likely did it because O&#39;Neill dragged him out of a very dangerous situation in much the same manner that Urgayle dragged a comrade to safety, the action that got him the decoration in the first place. It&#39;s also done to show the high respect that Urgayle now has for Jordan for completing such a difficult training course and to thank her for rescuing him. a5c7b9f00b

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