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4.8 out of 5 stars

29,904 ratings



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Aspect Ratio

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1.78:1 Is Discontinued By Manufacturer

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No MPAA rating

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R (Restricted) Product Dimensions

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0.7 x 7.5 x 5.4 inches; 2.4 Ounces Item model number

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B07B12HNN1 Director

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Steven Spielberg Media Format

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4K Release date

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May 8, 2018 Actors

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Tom Hanks, Tom Brown, Tom Sizemore, Edward Burns, Ed Burns Dubbed:

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French, German, Italian, Japanese, Portuguese, Spanish Subtitles:

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Italian, Portuguese, German, Danish, English, French, Japanese, Spanish, Norwegian, Dutch, Swedish Producers

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Ian Bryce, Bruce Berman, Julie Goldstein, Amy J. Kaufman, Amy Slotnick Language

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Italian (Dolby Digital 5.1), German (Dolby Digital 5.1), English (Dolby Digital 5.1) Studio

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Paramount ASIN

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B07B12HNN1 Number of discs

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3


4.8 out of 5 stars

29,904 ratings



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Top reviews



Most recent



Top reviews













I always chose not to watch this movie because of the blood and guts etc. The subject of the movie made me feel sad but my daughter needed to watch this movie for school so I watch too. I don’t want to say I “enjoyed” the movie but I was very glad I watched it. Recommend that people take the time to watch it. Also The Patriot watch that one too.🇺🇸












It's Hollywood but it's a great movie.












Excellent movie and it's improved in 4k with an incredible atmos mix. You'll be dodging bullets! Good price and fast delivery!












Saving Pvt. Ryan was the best picture of the year hands down. Anytime someone takes a much traveled genre like the war movie, and reinvents and reinvigorates it while raising the bar for future films it is exceptional. Spielberg did that here. No one has ever depicted combat quite so effectively, and Pvt. Ryan is now the standard. Even the negative reviewers concede the Omaha Beach opening is stunning and excellent. But, I think the assault on the machine gun and the closing! battle just as intense and vivid. Pro War? Please. I don't think Spielberg's purpose was to be pro OR anti-war. I think his purpose was to honor the sacrifice of the men who fought the war. Period. But within that context, I think the death of Wayne (the Medic) is as horrifying in its unexceptionalness as anything I've seen on screen. This is war, overdosing with morphine a friend who is bleeding to death with a shredded liver. Just like that. And Mellish's hand to hand fight and vain attempt at stopping his own killing after being overpowered...this is pro-War stuff? Not to mention, that at the end of the movie nearly everyone in the squad has been killed. The idea that Spielberg was glorifying Americans at the expense of everyone else is nonsense. This movie wasn't about Stalingrad & the Eastern Front. It wasn't about the entire operation of Overlord. It wasn't about the entire scope of the Allied effort. It was about one squad of Rangers landing on Omaha and !then getting a strange assignment. Period. That such a mission never happened? So what? That there was no plot? That IS the plot. The mission. Works for me. One quick comment about the idea of cliched characters etc. Who do these people think fought the war? It was wise guys from NY, hillbillies from W. Virginia, hispanics from S.California, southerners, hobos, college men etc. How in hell else are you supposed to show them? AND, the military of WWII was not integrated, in case you didn't know. As to the reality of the ending battle. First, when the Sgt. says "something good coming from this mess" I don't think he meant all of WWII. I think he meant the mess of this mission and the men they had lost now & everywhere. Second, the Germans are attacking the town, Miller & the Airborne defending. Door-to-door street fighting is the most casualty-intensive fighting possible, and the advantage is usually always with the defenders. That's why soldiers hate it. S!o they had a chance and they had a plan....ultimately to retreat & blow the bridge. If you think this is too far fetched, you should read Ambrose's Citizen Soldiers etc. and find out just how incredible small unit actions have been. Many are unbelievable. And what were Miller & his squad to do when Ryan refused to leave? Say "tough luck 101st, we're outta here". Maybe. But I think they would have stayed & fought. Just read about the Rangers who scaled the cliffs on D-Day. Courage was a common currency in those days. As to the acting, characters etc. I thought they were fine. There were no false heroics to my mind. I believe they wanted to honor these men and they played it straight. Hanks was believable to me portraying a school teacher who is now a leader of men and his scene where he does the awful math of the men he's lost and the rationale he uses to live with the fact says it all. He seemed to me an average man having to do impossible, horrible things and wo!ndering what it is doing to him. The movie is about suiting-up, showing-up and getting-on-with-it. It is about the everyday heroism of doing the dirty job and trying to survive. Was the movie flawless? No. I would have had Ryan tell a better story to Miller than the somewhat stupid and cruel one he told. And, for that fact I didn't get the point of Wayne's story about his mother. The German shooting Miller and Upham shooting the German was somewhat problematic (emotionally satisfying, but empty. If the lesson is mercy will get you killed, by that logic, he should have shot them all)....but these are minor quibbles in a great effort. What about Spielberg? Spielberg is a brilliant and clever director. Too clever? Sometimes. But I liked most of his touches and flourishes. I liked the sniper seeing the other sniper shooting at him. I like the wall coming down & the standoff. I liked the tank rolling up on Miller blowing up by a seeming gunshot. I didn't mind !the bit of deception at the opening & closing of the film because by the time it ended I was moved by the sentiment. I thought the opening & closing battles were magnificent. I like his compositions. I thought all the combat throughout had a genuine feel never depicted as accurately before. His camerawork & direction was continuously inventive. I thought death was shown without glamor. The courage as that mustered up and brought to bear by ordinary men. Enough. I could go on, but what's the point? If you are nitpicking this movie you have missed the experience. And it WAS an experience (especially on the big screen) that was exceptional for eye, ear and emotions. If you were not moved, so be it. I found it a beautiful tribute to the fathers and grandfathers who did what they had to do. And it came as close as anyone has been able to convey to an audience the horrors they had to endure. It isn't a documentary, and it isn't a history. It's a movie. But a first rate! movie in all departments.












Excellent actors and storyline. Highlights the Navajo code talkers who were instrumental in helping to win WWII.












Product delivered on time in good condition


5.0 out of 5 stars








Top version 4K HDR au top !












C’est la meilleure version de ce film. L’image est issue d’un DI 4K fait à partir d’un scan de la pellicule. Je possède l’ancienne version BR qui était déjà très bonne, maus cette version 4K est nettement supérieure. Beaucoup de gain dans détails et HDR efficace qui apporte une palette de couleurs juste et améliorée. Certe, il y a du grain, mais il est très bien maîtrisé. C’est du grain de pellicule, voulu par Speilberg et non pas du grain numérique. C’est tout à fait acceptable et qui reste fidèle au film. Question son, la piste FR DTS 5.1 est la même que dans les versions précédentes, de très bonne qualité. Par contre la piste VO Dolby Atmos est une tuerie (sans jeux de mot « foireux « ). Je suis en 7.2.4 (4 HP au plafond) et vraiment la scène du débarquement (et toutes celles s’y prêtant) propose une immersion jamais entendue !! C’est vraiment impressionnant !! Bref, je recommande sans aucune restriction.



4.0 out of 5 stars









Great film - problematic 4K disc












Still one of the finest (war) films ever made. Before this we had never seen anything like the beach assault. Although well used techniques now, this was the first time we'd really seen the grainy, hand-held shaky camera work dropping us right in to the action. Even the climatic scene at the end with the noise, squeals and rumble of the tanks through the town, building the anticipation, was astounding. The film itself is definitely 5-stars. Some people bemoan the middle section which is slower and has less action, but actually I think it balances it all out and we learn much more and care more about the characters. There are a number of great cameos and the cast generally is brilliant - this is probably my favourite Tom Hanks performance, but there are also great turns from the likes of Tom Sizemore, Barry Pepper and Giovanni Ribisi. This was also I think the first film that really bought home the true horror and randomness of war. There had been some brilliant war films before this (think Platoon, Apocalypse Now, Full Metal Jacket, Hamburger Hill etc) but none really captured it in quite this way. Along with Schindlers List this is definitely one of Steven Speilberg's best. I've dropped a star for the 4K disc and specifically the packaging and lack of information. Had a lot of issues getting this to work with my system which I've not had with any other discs - it was telling me that my system wasn't able to play 4K HDR even though it most definitely can and my entire system is well-equipped for doing so - right down to cables which are all fully compliant HDCP and 18Gbps. I suspect this relates to the HDCP requirements (although I couldn't see anything on the packaging that said anything about it - only that Category 2 cables were required - which most of the other 4K discs also say and work without issue). After much fiddling with the TV and player settings it did work although next time I put the disc in I had the same issue. More fiddling and it worked again. In terms of the 4K once it was working, it looks brilliant. The film is deliberately grainy and retains the overall bleached look but with just that little bit of extra richness, colour and depth than the original. One issue I have with almost all 4K films at the moment is that they tend to lack the absolute sharpness that makes 4K truly stunning (just watch some 4K demos as an example and see the difference) - if it wasn't for the improvement in colour depth to the causal eye you may not really notice that this is any different to the Blu-ray although there is more detail if you look. This is mainly down to the way the films are usually shot though so not a criticism of this one in particular. This is certainly a worthy addition to have in your 4K collection and much better than much of the rubbish that seems to be being released in the format.












This a commemorative 20th-anniversary edition. (3 discs, 4k + Blu-ray + Special Features If considering upgrading from your Blu-ray version of the film I can tell you that in my opinion buying on 4k is a sound investment The picture quality greatly enhanced on the 4k format especially evident during the 24-minute Omaha beach sequence and indeed the action toward the latter part of the film. - One of Steven Spielberg's many classics, perhaps the best. During the war years, many families would have at some point received more than one letter informing them of the loss of a loved one killed in action, this film was inspired by the Miland Brothers story part of an Irish/American family, all four brothers served in the military during the war, two in fact died during the first few days of the Normandy landings during the operation. The film opens and closes with James Ryan at the Normandy Cemetery at which over 50 years on he visits to pay his respect at the grave of the man who'd led the squad that saved him John H Miller (played in the film by Tom Hanks) where he reflects on those days. The film after the opening sequence portrays the brutal and bloody intensity of the Omaha assault, filmed so well you almost feel a part of it. After the beach is secured Captain Miller will be given a seemingly impossible task during the early and often chaotic days of D-Day. - In part, my original review with modification - We begin on the beaches of Normandy on the 6th June 1945 where 'Capt Miller' (Tom Hanks) and his battalion have been ordered to secure a beach-head. During the bloody landing two brothers are killed on the beaches whilst at a similar point in time in 'New Guinea' a third brother is killed, their mother will receive notification of her loss on the same day. When the U.S War-Department realize the situation and become aware of a fourth brother serving in the invasion force instructions that a squad is assembled to try and find him are issued. 'Capt Miller' and his squad are assigned to attempt the task which will take them through much of war-torn Europe on what from the outset looks to be an impossible mission with little chance of success. The squad on the mission chosen from his trusted squad include - 'Sgt Horvath' (Tom Sizemore) - 'Private Reiben' (Edward Burns) - 'Private Jackson' (Barry Pepper) - 'Private Mellish' (Adam Goldberg) - 'Private Caparzo' (Vin Diesel) - 'T-4 Medic Wade' (Giovanni Ribisi) and 'Corp Upham' (Jeremy Davies) the latter outside his squad but included because he speaks fluent French and German. They will encounter many dangers along the way and have several encounters with the enemy as the mission looks increasingly hopeless, however, eventually, they will find 'Private James Ryan' (Matt Damon) however the town in which they find him is under enemy attack......will the mission be all in vain? ''James, earn it'' - ''earn it'' The film graphically portrays the horror of battle from the outset with the well-staged Normandy landings and the carnage of the operation. The squad becomes involved in many skirmishes with the enemy which are again well-staged and convincingly portrayed. A brilliantly portrayed war-drama. Well worthy of a re-visit or indeed first viewing


5.0 out of 5 stars









4King Perfect!












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