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Tank

Tank (1984)

March. 16,1984
|
5.7
|
PG
| Comedy

After relocating his family - and his prized restored Sherman tank - to a small Georgia town, Sargeant Major Zack Carey butts heads with the local sheriff. Zack doesn't agree with the ways of the local police, and when the sheriff goes after Zack's son, it's time for Zack to roll out the Sherman tank and wage a little war of his own.

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Intcatinfo
1984/03/16

A Masterpiece!

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Kaelan Mccaffrey
1984/03/17

Like the great film, it's made with a great deal of visible affection both in front of and behind the camera.

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Deanna
1984/03/18

There are moments in this movie where the great movie it could've been peek out... They're fleeting, here, but they're worth savoring, and they happen often enough to make it worth your while.

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Bob
1984/03/19

This is one of the best movies I’ve seen in a very long time. You have to go and see this on the big screen.

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SimonJack
1984/03/20

The billing for "Tank" is right on the mark. It is an action, drama and comedy film, with some serious overtones. Although rated PG, it's most appropriate for mature adults. In other words, those who don't get too much glee out of the treatment of prisoners on the county work farm, and those who think the allusions and references to being beaten to death, gang-raped and killed are really that funny. It's not for kids at all – with just enough nudity, foul language and discussion of prostitution, adultery, etc. to go along with the violent aspects. The film also is a look at Army life during peacetime. The film came out in 1984, so it takes place around then. Sgt. Maj. Zack Carey (James Garner) has been in the Army 30 years. Both he and Maj. Gen. Hubik (Sandy Ward) have rows of ribbons on their chest. Both also have senior parachutist badges and Ranger patches, as well as Combat Infantry Badges (CIB). They would have entered the service after Korea and probably had considerable combat time in Vietnam. Zack appears to have nine hash marks on his sleeve – which would represent four and one- half years in combat zones. The IMDb film summary describes the plot in enough detail. The cast are all very good in their parts. Besides those mentioned above, Shirley Jones is good as Zack's'wife, LaDonna; C. Thoms Howell if very good as son, Billy; Jenilee Harrison as the local hooker, Sarah; James Cromwell is the doormat and abusive deputy Euclid; Dorian Harewood is very good as Sgt. Tippett; and G.D. Spradlin is excellent as Sheriff Buelton. "Tank" seems to have capitalized on the popularity of the long- running TV series, "The Dukes of Hazzard," which was set in the South. This film has more bite and sarcasm about the corrupt and dictatorial local law found in some places, but it is a lot of fun for mature audiences. We root for Sgt. Major Zack as he demolishes Sheriff Buelton's office and jail and makes his escape across the northern Georgia county to the Tennessee state line. The film takes pokes at the military and local southern communities that host military bases – mostly the latter. It jabs Bible-thumping law enforcement and hypocrites, especially those often characterized as being in the South. The setting for the film is a fictitious Army base, Fort Clemmons. It's located in Georgia, supposedly in the NW not far from the Tennessee border. Anyone familiar with that part of the country would know how hilly and high it can get. That's at the end of the Blue Ridge Mountains on the borders of Virginia, West Virginia, Kentucky, North Carolina and Tennessee. The opening scene shows vehicles driving through flat tree-covered country. That's the type of country around Ft. Benning, GA, much further south, which is also where most of the Army base scenes were shot. Ft. Benning has been the home of the U.S. Infantry since 1918, and has several specialty training centers and schools there. Among them are the Airborne (parachutist) and Ranger schools, Officer Candidate School (OCS), the Infantry school and others. Since 2005, it has been home of the Armor School, which moved from Fort Knox, KY. And, since that year, Ft. Benning has been designated the U.S. Army Maneuver Center of Excellence. The film shows the 114th Infantry Division at the fictitious base. There hasn't been such a division in the U.S. Army, although there has been a 114th Inf. Regiment Military families, those with such backgrounds and anyone interested in the military and war films should enjoy this film.

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lost-in-limbo
1984/03/21

Destruction! By tank. Revenge! By tank. Sadistic southern sheriff… yep let's roll over him with a tank! James Garner plays Commander Sgt. Maj. Zack Carey who moves to an army base with his wife and son in the south, but gets on the wrong side of the local sheriff when he knocks out the deputy in bar quarrel. Too proud to let it slide they want payback, so they frame his son with a drug charge and imprison him. Carey would now do it the sheriff's way to get his son out of prison, but circumstances change when that isn't followed leaving his son to be convicted serving three years. So Carey gets in his own prized Sherman tank to bust out his son while heading for the state border in search for actual justice. Ludicrous, but amusingly dreamt-up boot-kicking patriotic nonsense of standing up. What starts off quite serious (where I thought it might culminate in pushing "Rambo: First Blood" territory), ended up as chaotically gung-ho and comedic in a very mechanical, but spirited sense. Relatively well-made with spacious cinematography and an upbeat music score contributed by Lalo Schifrin. Material-wise the wit is there, but it's a little deeper in its perspective themes, in which it really does moralise its intentions --- as what eventuates is a tug of war involving sappy dialogues and silly humour. The early sequences build some intense confrontations -- where Garner and Spradlin's authority figures go at it each other in their own personal war. But soon that is all forgotten when Garner goes for a pleasant ride with his tank and ends up on sort of a road trip with what seems like all of America are riding the heroic underdog home. Go you good thing! One thing that's for sure is that in one sequence Jenilee Harrison looks good behind the tank's machine gun. An excellent Garner is suitably likable and G.D. Spradlin nails down his bastard role as Sheriff Cyrus Buelton. Also there's a very good support cast lined-up with Shirley Jones, Dorian Harewood, James Cromwell, C. Thomas Howell and John Hancock.

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knsevy
1984/03/22

***SPOILERS - LIKE I'M REALLY GONNA RUIN IT FOR YA!***When I first started seeing posters for this film in the movie theatres, I thought all my dreams had come true. A movie about a tank! ALL about a tank! It'll crush cars and blow things up!I went into the theatre on opening night expecting just that, and that's just what I got. At nine years of age, plot and acting didn't mean a whole lot to me - not when a Sherman tank was running over cop cars, anyway.Now, I can see this film for what it is: a paper-thin plot, mostly-wooden acting (Except for G.D. Spradlin chewing the scenery), and plot holes you could, well, drive a tank through. But what the hell? It's a fun little movie, with plenty of tankish action to keep armor enthusiasts like me interested, even if the rest of the story IS so stupid it makes me want to retch.

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Coxer99
1984/03/23

Garner's performance and quiet, comic authority carry this otherwise dull film about a sergeant major who owns his own Sherman battle tank, which he uses to rescue for son from the clutches of a redneck sheriff.

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