Adrift, Bentley and Hudson stare and sniffle, respectively, as Ledger attempts, in vain, to prove that movie-star intensity can overcome bad hair design.
The Four Feathers (2002)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:150
Fresh:62
Rotten:88
Average Rating:5.4/10
Consensus: Though beautiful to look at, The Four Feathers lacks epic excitement and suffers from an ambivalent viewpoint.
Runtime: 2 hrs 10 mins
Genre: Action/Adventure
US Box Office: $18,236,897
Synopsis:
A gripping adventure of epic proportions, "The Four Feathers" is a story of heroic redemption, undying loyalty and rivalry in love. Exquisitely filmed against the austere beauty of the Moroccan...
A gripping adventure of epic proportions, "The Four Feathers" is a story of heroic redemption, undying loyalty and rivalry in love. Exquisitely filmed against the austere beauty of the Moroccan desert as well as within the grand walls of English aristocracy, this thrilling tale takes audiences into exotic cultures seldom seen on film and explores the fascinating contrast between disparate civilizations. A sweeping saga that captures a friend's bond and a hero's destiny, "The Four Feathers" is a look at man's indomitable spirit to survive. The story is about Harry Feversham (Heath Ledger), admired by comrades as one of the finest British soldiers in his regiment. Passionately devoted to his beautiful bride-to-be, Ethne (Kate Hudson), Harry has a promising future in the military and a happy life ahead of him with the woman he loves. But when an army of Sudanese rebels attacks a colonial British fortress in Khartoum and his regiment is sent to active duty in North Africa, Harry becomes overwhelmed by self-doubt and uncertainty and resigns his commission as his regiment is being shipped off to war.
Shocked by his son's actions, Harry's father disowns him. Assuming he is afraid, three of Harry's friends -- and even Ethne his fiancee -- each send him a white feather, a symbol of cowardice, none of them able to understand what Harry has done.
Tormented, isolated and alone in London, Harry learns that his best friend Jack (Wes Bentley) and his former regiment have fallen under brutal attack by rebels. Instantly, the bond he has with his comrades inspires him to transcend his uncertainty and self-doubt in order to take on the one mission that is stronger than his resolve against war -- saving his friends at all costs.
Undertaking the perilous journey into the Sudan alone, he strikes up an alliance with Abou Fatma (Djimon Hounsou), a wise mercenary warrior. Harry then disguises himself as an Arab and goes behind enemy lines to rescue Jack and the rest of his regiment, in an act of unparalleled self-sacrifice and bravery.
"The Four Feathers" takes place during the heyday of imperialism when the nations of Europe were scrambling to divide Africa among themselves. In 1884, a Muslim religious leader, Muhammad Ahmed, known as the Madhi, led the Sudanese Arabs in a revolt against British rule, and General Charles Gordon was dispatched to quell the rebellion. But the Madhi's warriors proved to be too much for Gordon, and he and his men found themselves besieged in Khartoum, which eventually fell in 1885, sending the general and much of his army to their graves.
Inspired by A.E.W. Mason's classic novel, the film begins in 1875, ten years before the fall of Khartoum to the Mahdi's warriors. It is the extraordinary story of the courageous British reinforcement troops sent to raise the siege of Khartoum, and it exemplifies the pride of those young soldiers as well as their vulnerability against an enemy unafraid to die.
"The Four Feathers" is perhaps more contemporary today than ever because of the nation's passion for patriotism, a theme which is at the heart of the film. But while young Harry Feversham is certainly proud to serve his country, he is concerned about fighting blindly in the name of England's imperialist expansion, and that is what sets the film in motion.
Starring: Heath Ledger, Wes Bentley, Djimon Hounsou, Kate Hudson
Starring: Heath Ledger, Wes Bentley, Djimon Hounsou, Kate Hudson, Alex Jennings, Rupert Penry-Jones
Director: Shekhar Kapur
Director: Shekhar Kapur
Screenwriter: Hossein Amini, Michael Schiffer
Producer: Stanley R. Jaffe, Marty Katz, Paul Feldsher
Composer: James Horner
Studio: Paramount Pictures
Reviews for The Four Feathers
Nicely sidesteps the book's musty perspective as it weaves a rousing good action saga that, in stretches, almost matches the scope and grandeur of Zulu and the acclaimed 1939 British Four Feathers.
What The Four Feathers lacks is genuine sweep or feeling or even a character worth caring about.
A movie of ridiculous transitions and logistical leaps that no amount of pretty scenery can whitewash.
Director Kapur is a filmmaker with a real flair for epic landscapes and adventure, and this is a better film than his earlier English-language movie, the overpraised Elizabeth.
Just take it for what it is -- action-filled, saber-rattling escapism.
This is a sweeping, swaggering, ambivalent, often incongruous camel-tale whose vivid images evoke an unsettling connecting with 'Mohammadan' fantatics and the current Afghanistan conflict.
While it often misses the mark dramatically, feeling bloated in some sections and choppy in others, the adventure is often stirring and the production is expertly polished.
Considering the harsh locations and demanding stunts, this must have been a difficult shoot, but the movie proves rough going for the audience as well.
Prim in attitude but lavish in presentation, Feathers is just a gorgeous film to watch.
Badly miscast and directed, it's a costume drama that is a half hour too long.
Tedious and overblown even at a surprisingly short two hours, Four Feathers is the movie made for the teeny boopers who don't want to read the book.
The movie tries not to offend anyone, except for the British, who are depicted as arrogant white supremacists who treat their dark-skinned subjects with brutality.
Rehashing the same tropes and scenery, rarely breaking new ground in the art of storytelling.
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