It can be enjoyed on many levels and requires several viewings. Outside of Al Kut, Captain America is over-eager in his attempts to subdue a prisoner, while his men's growing disillusionment with his command is growing more. Ferrando has other plans to get his men back into battle. This series encapsulates the experience of war in microcosm. After First Recon is assigned the unfamiliar mission of escorting hundreds of civilians fleeing Baghdad, they begin to wonder if their part in the war may be ending. Morality when it reawakens in war is troublesome and diverse in its presentation. The subculture of the Recon Marines numbs morality - for good reason, but it also magnifies the flaws in human society with its rigidity against the backdrop of war. It's easy to miss some of these elements and focus on the failures of the leadership, while praising positive morality of some individuals, just like it is in war. The entire series is dripping with this sad irony. As time goes on, the marines shed their preconceptions about war and grow to despise and mistrust their leaders for their foolhardiness, yet at times these same marines expect their leaders to make such decisions on their terms as their morality reemerges and is questioned. Noel Murray Published JanuComments ( 11) Reviews DVDs A Generation Kill As an heir to the wartime realism of Combat and Band Of Brothers, the HBO miniseries Generation Kill. He attempts to show that no matter the motivation or objectives, everyone in war is foolhardy. This is where the story's writer - Evan Wright's anti war sentiment comes in. However, the show is less of a dark satire or cynical humor than it is an observation of what defines modern war in the Post Vietnam era and admittedly, there may be some overlap. In the end, little feels epic and there is no closure as the war has yet to rage another 17 years though as we all remember, "Mission Accomplished". Nothing hits home like the sad irony observed in the reality of war. This is a war epic with a deep undercurrent of observational irony. Referred to as Rolling Stone or Reporter by the Marines poor Evan found himself in a bit over his. In the end, little feels epic and there is no closure as the war has yet to rage another 17 years though as we all remember, "Mission Easily a 10/10. This is Evan Wright played by Lee Tergesen of OZ fame.
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