Windtalkers Tamil Dubbed Movie Download

Windtalkers Tamil Dubbed Movie Download

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Windtalkers Tamil Dubbed Movie Download

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In the close quarters and brutal fighting of the World War II Pacific Theater, the U.S. Intelligence services desperately seek a fool-proof encryption code, immune to the code breakers of the Japanese. The answer is soon discovered in the ancient language of the Navajo. Enlisted into the Marine Corps are several "Windtalkers" who are deployed to frontline areas in the Pacific, to use their language as an impossible-to-crack secret code. A drawback, however, is that the U.S. military soon puts forth a directive that the Windtalkers must never be captured alive by the enemy, so additional Marines are assigned to make certain that this directive is carried out to the letter.
During World War II when the Americans needed to find a secure method of communicating they devised a code using the Navajo language. So Navajos were recruited to become what they call code talkers. They would be assigned to a unit and would communicate with other units using the code so that even though the enemy could listen they couldn't understand what they were saying. And to insure that the code is protected men are assigned to protect it at all costs. One of these men is Joe Enders, a man who sustained an injury that can make him unfit for duty but he manages to avoid it and is told of his duty and that the man he is suppose to protect is Ben Yahzee. Initially there is tension but the two men learn to get along.
&quot;Windtalkers&quot; is the latest action film that contains a lot of unnecessary action sequences and war epic that is an embarrassment to a genre that has brought excellence and honor to those who served and a world, which have been witness to films such as &quot;Saving Private Ryan&quot; and &quot;We Were Soldiers.&quot; Overblown action sequences, phony sentimentality and zero character development should give everyone enough reason to pass by &quot;Windtalkers&quot; and choose another film to watch. Nicolas Cage, Adam Beach, Roger Willie and Christian Slater unsuccessfully attempt to salvage a film that has lost so much with its writing and senseless action sequences.<br/><br/>Following my exit of the theater, I had to ask myself one question: Have there been too many war films made in Hollywood? This question is very difficult to answer, but fans will avoid them if films like &quot;Windtalkers&quot; are made because they will cringe at the senseless action and violence.<br/><br/>It disappoints me to watch a film that has such great potential but buckles under the poor execution of a script that was dead from the start. Fault must lie with the writers as they took a concept and failed to take advantage of the great potential it contained. <br/><br/>Instead, they turned it into a collage of excessive action sequences with no attempt to develop the characters and create valid empathy toward those involved. For example, the writers failed to capitalize on the plethora of opportunities to delve in the background of the code talkers portrayed by Beach and Willie.<br/><br/>Another missed opportunity was the failure to capture a true sense of bonding among the soldiers. The ideal opportunity to capitalize on this occurred between the battle scenes, but there was one major problem; there was little time was spent between battle scenes.<br/><br/>Cage is one of the most versatile actors starring in many different roles and becoming a success with each part, for this reason I jumped at the chance to watch &quot;Windtalkers.&quot; Portraying everything from a romantic lead in &quot;It Could Happen To You&quot; and &quot;Moonstruck&quot; to dramatic roles in &quot;Leaving Las Vegas&quot; and &quot;Bringing Out The Dead&quot; to comedic roles in &quot;Trapped In Paradise&quot; and &quot;Guarding Tess&quot; as well as action star in &quot;Con Air&quot; and &quot;The Rock,&quot;<br/><br/>Cage has solidified himself a spot as one of the top stars in Hollywood. However, his performance as Sgt Joe Enders was lackluster at best showing zero charisma and containing no sense of taking the leadership role. As I was watching the screen, I was shaking my head in disbelief at the number of times I asked myself where his dominating presence went.<br/><br/>For all the talent Cage has and success he has received, I have no doubt that Cage will bounce back and climb out of the valley he is currently in after &quot;Windtalkers.&quot;<br/><br/>While it wasn&#39;t his best role, it was a delight to watch Slater because he has a spark that comes out of each performance he gives. He has always been an actor that viewers can relate to as he has a youthful look of innocence and can be depended upon to deliver time after time. I knew it would be extra special watching Slater in this movie since it is a departure for him from the roles he has been taking. <br/><br/>&quot;Windtalkers&quot; didn&#39;t fail due to his lack of effort because it was clear that he took his role seriously and wanted to do well. There is one guarantee I can make; Slater will not disappoint the audience with the performance he gives as Sgt. Ryan &#39;Ox&#39; Anderson, a soldier enlisted to protect a code talker.<br/><br/>For all of the faults it contained, &quot;Windtalkers&quot; can boast of one bright spot; the name of this bright spot is Adam Beach. A virtual unknown, Beach comes out of obscurity to grab the spotlight from veterans such as Cage and Slater. <br/><br/>Beach&#39;s performance was so good it nearly made forget how bad the movie really was. Beach is one of the brightest young stars I have seen in a long time. Beach has won my respect and has proven that he is an actor who can give performances utilizing little effort.<br/><br/>Aside from the premise &quot;Windtalkers&quot; is supposed to based upon and Beach&#39;s great performance, this film falls flat on its face. Director John Woo missed the mark, Cage and Slater made the wrong choice to star in &quot;Windtalkers&quot; and Beach starred in the wrong movie.<br/><br/>In conclusion, &quot;Windtalkers&quot; is a film for those who don&#39;t mind watching an overblown action film with zero story development and no character development.
If you love action, regardless of the realism sacrificed, then yes you will love this. And I&#39;m talking for beginners of the war genre as a whole. Allow me to elaborate. A lot of the cinematography and scenery is beautiful and the location shots are for the most part well done. The costumes and weapons look great and accurate. However, there are many parts I find laughable about this movie. For one, the character development is weak despite an attempt to tell a tale not known by many; that of the Navajo Code Talkers. Speaking of which, the non-Caucasian characters are barely gone into at all and very cliché. The movie spends the majority of its focus on the mere gore of war, which definitely is a necessary factor in any movie about war. It maintains the sad realism of war, but this film relies on that alone and nothing else. To add to this Nicholas Cage makes sport out of the bloodiest conflicts of World War II by single-handedly wiping gout whole regiments of Japanese soldiers. When I watched it, I felt as if I was watching a Rambo film from the 80s. And I&#39;m not talking the original &quot;First Blood&quot;; I&#39;m talking the popular but incredibly unrealistic sequel which is probably the most popular.
Well matched both to the material and each other, Cage and Beach capture Windtalkers' true struggle, the fight to hold on to values like honor, friendship, and tenderness in an environment that demands otherwise. This is as much a Woo trademark as the carefully orchestrated gunplay.
During World War II, U.S. Marine Sergeants Joe Enders (<a href="/name/nm0000115/">Nicolas Cage</a>) and Pete &quot;Oz&quot; Anderson (<a href="/name/nm0000225/">Christian Slater</a>) are each assigned to protect two Navajo Indians, Privates Ben Yahzee (<a href="/name/nm0063440/">Adam Beach</a>) and Charlie Whitehorse (<a href="/name/nm0932194/">Roger Willie</a>) respectively, recruited for the sole purpose of using their native language in the western Pacific island of Saipan as an impossible-to-crack encryption code. In reality, however, it is the code Enders and Anderson are assigned to protect at all cost, not the code-talkers. Although the story presented in the film is fiction, it is based on hundreds of Native Americans, referred to as code talkers, who used their native languages to transmit impossible-to-crack coded messages during the first and second World Wars. Yahzee manages to get a message to the flyboys, giving them the coordinates of the Japanese artillery. As they attempt to make a run for safety, they are both hit with gunfire. Figuring that they are about to be either killed or captured, Yahzee turns Enders&#39; gun on himself and tells Enders to shoot him as ordered to protect the code, but Enders refuses. Instead, he carries Yahzee on his shoulders into the safety of a dugout. Suddenly, allied planes fly overhead and strike the Japanese shooting from the ridge. Yahzee notices the wound in Enders&#39; chest and tries to comfort him. Enders admits that he didn&#39;t want to shoot Charlie and begins to recite the &quot;Hail Mary&quot; as he dies. In the final scene, Yahzee and his family stand on the top of Point Mesa in Monument Valley. Yahzee places Enders&#39; dogtags around his son&#39;s neck and tells him what a &quot;brave warrior&quot; Enders was. As Yahzee recites a Navajo prayer in Enders&#39; honor, a text screen reads: &quot;The Navajo Code was vital in the victory at Saipan and every major battle in the Pacific. The code was never broken.&quot; a5c7b9f00b

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