Warriors
Warriors
| 20 November 1999 (USA)
SEASON & EPISODES
  • 1
  • Reviews
    Ricardo Ribeiro

    Well, before anything else, a disclaimer: I have no relationship whatsoever with any of the belligerents involved in the Bosnian War, and, if any, my sympathy goes to the Bosniak side. On the other hand I tend to see the Serbs as too often involved in conflicts, which is not a good sign of their nature as a whole.This said, I couldn't finish watching this movie. I really dislike when I feel my intelligence being assaulted by manipulative tricks of ordinary quality. I have no patience for war movies depicting one of the belligerents as the bad guys and the other as the good people. Geez no. I have enough of that coming from USA, another country continuously involved in wars in the name of everything. From Hollywood we have three favorite "victims": the Germans, if the subject is Second World War; the Russian are still paying the bill for the Cold War; and very popular since the Twin Towers event, the Muslims. Well, ironically the British approached the Bosnian Muslim in this movie as the good ones. The gentle, human people. The nice ones. As to the Serbs, a scum. Just look at the way the Serb militia is characterized: an enormous bad attitude, a look of pigs, people who don't have a shower or shave for centuries. That's how public opinion is molded, and I guess a cinematographer should know better. I refuse to take a shower of brain wash of this sort.

    ... View More
    charger_82

    I could give a description of what it feels like to watch this. But I won't, since there are no words fit to describe the utter madness of war depicted here. Go see it and think about it. You might end up hating yourself for being part of this world we created.But if there is a slight chance flicks like these could make a difference......who knows. Deeply impressive. I am Dutch by origin so I may not be able to choose he right words, but I have talked to friends of mine who were there, and according to them, it comes close to how it really was. And it damaged them. I must pay my deepest respect towards the cast and directors,who did one hell of a job. I also recommend Savior. That flick takes the madness one step further, but I was not able to sit that one out 'till the end.

    ... View More
    Ray Massart

    This two-part series which was shown on TV is a description of how a majority of British UN soldiers experienced the war in former Yougoslavia.Their task was mainly a humanitarian mission based on a policy of non-intervention.This policy may have worked in the minds of well-intentioned theoreticians but was impossible to execute in the real environment of war-torn Bosnia.These soldiers were subjected to constant stress resulting from their orders not to intervene, the hostility they experienced as foreign intruders,the language barriers and the bestiality they encountered without being able to offer any significant help.The traumas that these men experienced definitely had a devastating and lasting effect on their further lives "Warriors" draws the viewer into the ongoing drama in such a convincing way that one fully grasps the frustration these soldiers must have experienced. Excellent production: a top-class cinematographic document performed by outstanding actors.

    ... View More
    dooose

    As far as I´m concerned Warriors is a very realistic depiction of what it was like in Bosnia during the war. It shows the brutality being committed to civilians and how the "hopeless" Un-mandate could comfuse (and disgust) both the population and the soldiers themselves. Just look what happened in the "safe sone" of Srebrenica(!).But one must bare in mind that the events depicted here is just in One particular region of Bosnia. Here it happenes to be the British-sector in the Travnic, Vitez, Amichi area. Some incidents I know happened (like the burned victims in the cellar) and some are most likely made up, but surely with the intent of realism in mind. Here obviosly the Serbs outnumbered the Muslims and therefor had most of the control. This I mention because after reading two comments here, both from Bosnia oe most likely to be Serb (saying that the depictions in this film are "black and white" portrayed) and one Muslim (Finding the film to be very realistic, having lived through the whole war in Sarajevo.)Having been in bosnia myself I think I can appreciate this film more. Being shot in Tsjekkia it still looks very much like Bosnia. Although it was wery calm there then (in -99),long after the war was over. The UN had been replaced by the NATO forces(maybe a bit too late). But the work consisted of pretty much the same(except for the extreme tasks given as the result of war off cource) , driving around in our "sizu`s", working with local interpreters and keeping in touch with the local population. The following year I went to Kosovo, a more recent conflict. During that war NATO bombed Serbia in protest of the treatment given to the Albanians in Kosovo. When we arrived(early 2000) the situation had turned to the opposite and it was mostly the Serbs who had to be kept safe of the Albanians, who had started returning to Kosovo.So I agree that there is no such thing as a "black and white" explanation of the tragedy. There was surely bad deeds made by all "sides", as in every war.Film rates 10/10!

    ... View More