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The Odd Angry Shot

The Odd Angry Shot (1979)

March. 01,1979
|
6.6
| Action Comedy War

A group of Australian SAS regiment soldiers are deployed to Vietnam around 1967/8 and encounter the realities of war, from the numbing boredom of camp life and long range patrols, raids and ambushes where nothing happens, to the the terror of enduring mortar barrages from an unseen enemy. Men die and are crippled in combat by firefights and booby traps, soldiers kill and capture the enemy, gather intelligence and retake ground only to cede it again whilst battling against the bureaucracy and obstinacy of the conventional military hierarchy. In the end they return to civilization, forever changed by their experiences but glad to return to the life they once knew.

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bill-74423
1979/03/01

I was station and did my tour of duty over seas' and I saw this movie and enjoyed it .... I watch it with my brother in my back yard on a sheet and neighbors hung out on me fence line watching it also... we all enjoy the movie... you really gotta watch it and enjoy it for what it reveals the story line and a group of men that eventually came home ....a lot of good boys went over there and did not come back .....and some that did was screwed for life ....we all made the best of what was available to us...but the people back home did not, when I finally did got orders.. we were not received at home like we should have ... also at that time we had the draft and had no news of home so we did not hear about marches and riots and sit in's I had four brothers three of us went in the services' not one of us became career soldiers' but we did our duty for the country we love WATCH the MOVIE and enjoy it for what you see not what you read or see on TV's newspapers and radio

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prestonp94
1979/03/02

This movie is quite simply outstanding. The writing, acting and general production talent are first rate. If you're looking for non-stop intense war action scenes and high drama, this isn't it, nor what the subject of the movie is about although some of that is there. Ultimately, it is about enduring hardship and perseverance. I saw this movie on cable 35 years ago and it has stuck with me since then. I also watched it a few days ago and found it has much greater insight for me through my own life experiences, now that I myself am a veteran. The dialogue really makes this movie the gem that it is. Funny, satirical, and containing very harsh truths about military service and society in general. All around well done.

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johnnyboyz
1979/03/03

One of the funnier sequences Australian war drama The Odd Angry Shot features somewhat of a mass brawl between the often friendly, although on this occasion rival, Australian and American soldiers at an army camp, when a skirmish that they organise between one side's "pet" scorpion and one side's "pet" spider does not unfold in the blood thirsty manner either side would like. To compensate for this, the masses of troops then begin to break out into a fight amongst themselves; a fight designed to quench that thirst for the conflict they all turned up expecting between two creatures, but must then instigate among themselves accordingly. We enjoy the absurdity as well as the rather blackly comic overtone of the scene, the sequence in director Tom Jeffrey's film rather sadly embodying the overall role these Allies are playing in being there and involved in what is The Vietnam War; principally, a premature instigating of conflict with those it is they've gone out of their way to interfere with, that has initially come across as organised and preordained, and yet has then spiralled out of control into free-for-all brawls and unhinged chaos in which people might get seriously hurt.The film begins and ends with a commemoration, the opening is a birthday and strikes us as chaotic and busy and contains a character looking a little like Norman Bates envisaging sexual intercourse with a girl he quite likes the look of; the ending being what strikes us as the lone occasion two soldiers share the frame together and appear to be able to keep their mouths shut for longer than a duration of a few seconds, an instance born out of their newfound ability to enjoy a particular view with little else on their minds other than how far they've come and how much they've matured. We begin with that aforementioned character; a fast-talking, frenetic young man named Harry (Kennedy), whose birthday gathering is full of those he knows and loves in the form of family members and additionally sports a banner above him with the words "Bon Voyage" all over it.The reasoning for which lies in the fact young Harry is off to Vietnam, no less; a serving in the War with that of an Australian unit aiding the Americans in that perilous Asian jungle-set conflict of the early 1960s heading on into the mid 70s. Harry, and some new recruits, jet off to their surroundings, triumphantly; the film granting them a rousing send off to beer and banter whilst on board as they fly out of Oz as if romping off for a holiday somewhere. The reality is really quite different, since life in the 'Nam, specifically their muddy headquartered camp, is less than desirable in that it rains; the others that Harry and co. meet up with are antagonistic and certain precautions in regards to one's health and the exposing of one's self to the elements take a queasy centre stage.These boys are not to be discouraged; they hunt, indeed crave, the warfare. A patrol out in the dense jungles of somewhere sees very little transpire to actually be out there bar an awful lot of standing around and waiting for something to kick off, causing one of them to exclaim that they may as well be back at home and in front of some B-movie war film on the TV such is the sparseness of action. Such a film they might as well have been watching could arrive in the form of The Great Escape; John Stuges' romping prisoner of war film, which diluted harsher realities of war for an array of instantly recognisable actors playing rounded characters of varying ages and nationalities attempting to thwart the dastardly Hun in an array of humorous ways, the mentioning of one of that respective film's stars in Steve McQueen in this, fleetingly at a canteen, director Jeffrey's own verbal reiteration of his consummate rejection of such an approach to a war film as things continue to play out.Preceeding the likes of Platoon, and doing a much better job at what it covers than that of something like Sam Mendes' 2006 piece Jarhead, The Odd Angry Shot covers that of the tribulations and trials of an extroverted Aussie Air Service Regiment stuck in the back end of nowhere squabbling amidst themselves; waiting on conflict and doing their best to keep clear of infection and illness; indeed, the titular odd and angry shot is in reference to that of what little conflict rears up. Here is one of those tricky, knotty war films rejecting unrealistic bravery; stone-wall leads and causality driven missions that either end gloriously in the Allies' favour or ingloriously in the Allies' favour, the film a grubby, dialogue-driven if anything else, episodic drama exposing heroism and the lust for brutality whose general sensibility wouldn't necessarily go amiss on the stage and whose nature is persistently involving and engaging. The film's dialogue is a real high point to proceedings, delivered in a manner we sense troops of this age in this scenario would commonly do so and rather refreshing in comparison to mission exposition and so forth often rife within other genre pieces. The film's cast are uniformly spectacular; their delivery of the screenplay, belting out one-liners and exchanging quips, is executed in a fashion that has us feel as if they've known one another for eons. The location shooting, I read, within certain domesticated locales looks rich and convincing; the drama sharp, the writing smart and the covering of a war mongering, unbalanced young soldier going through a nastier experience than he would've liked whilst abroad fighting quite affecting.

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sk-142
1979/03/04

ignore all the reviews saying this is a good film, personally i found it to be nothing like what was portrayed in full metal jacket, platoon or any of the other Vietnam films in fact it felt like an old dads army film complete with bad jokes and terrible music. All the jokes made in the film were really lame and staged and no effort was made to give any of the characters in the film any character, i didn't even know any of their names. The movie had no plot and to top it off the music at the end is absolutely shocking i had to turn it down and watch it in silence before actually turning it off early and cursing having wasted an hour and a half of my life on it. I then apologised to my friends for putting through such a lame movie and we all laughed and agreed it was the biggest load of crap we had all ever watched. VERY FRUSTRATING

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