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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
40 of 42 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Sensitive, evocative film with timely/timeless soundtrack!,
By HarpswellWoman "HarpswellWoman" (Harpswell, ME) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Coming Home (DVD)
You can read the reviews to find out how moving and real this film is. Jane Fonda, Jon Voight and Bruce Dern are all perfect in their roles. Since the soundtrack doesn't seem to be available, I am going to share with you the songs played on the soundtrack so that you can compile your own soundtrack.
They are organized by group. Happy Viewing and Listening! This is a film not to be missed. Beatles - Hey Jude Big Brother & the Holding Company with Janis Joplin - Call on Me Tim Buckley - Once I Was Buffalo Springfield - Expecting to Fly, For What It's Worth Chambers Brothers - Time Has Come Today Bob Dylan - Just Like a Woman Aretha Franklin - Save Me Richie Havens - Follow Jimi Hendrix - Manic Depression Jefferson Airplane - White Airplane Rolling Stones - Out of Time, No Expectations, Jumpin' Jack Flash, My Girl, Ruby Tuesday, Sympathy for the Devil Simon & Garfunkel - Bookends Steppenwolf - Born to Be Wild
34 of 36 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Most moving of the Viet Nam films by far...,
By widowedwalker (USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Coming Home (DVD)
I realize that some folks' contempt for Jane Fonda has caused them to feel equal contempt for this movie... Dont let it... Regardless of one's perspective on Fonda's political position(s) over the years, "Coming Home" is nonetheless the most poignant of all the Viet Nam movies.
Made in a period before the subject had been done to death (especially in the 1980s, where pretense, posturing and insincerity reigned), "Coming Home" which, as per its title, takes place almost entirely on American soil, get the mood, and late-60s "look" uncannily correct. Focusing on a paraplegic vet (Jon Voight) who falls in love with a married and not-worldly army nurse (Fonda) while her officer husband (Bruce Dern) is overseas, the Oscar-winning "Coming Home" is its era's equivalent of 1946's "The Best Years of Our Lives"... Some may consider that blaspemous, but it isn't-- at all. Too bad this movie seems to be buried now... Is it because of the done-too-much-since-then subject-matter, or is it bias against Miss Fonda? I dont know. But despite all those other Viet Nam films that would come along, this a (rare) classic take on that period-- a period now so long ago. And long before Voight dun lost his mind.
36 of 41 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A paraplegic vet, a military wife and the war in Vietnam,
By
This review is from: Coming Home [VHS] (VHS Tape)
This is the moving story of a military wife, played by Jane Fonda, who volunteers in a veterans' hospital when her captain husband gets sent to Vietnam. Here she meets Luke Martin, a paraplegic, played by Jon Voight. When she first meets him, he's on a gurney, and when she accidentally bumps into him, his catheter bag is knocked over, embarrassing him so much that he goes into an angry rage and has to be restrained. Eventually, though, she comes to know him and, as his condition improves enough so that he can get a wheelchair, she gradually develops a relationship with him. Through the art of this film, I found myself drawn right into the emotional intensity of the situation and I learned more than I ever wanted to know about the life of a paraplegic.All the actors are great, including the supporting roles of Bruce Dern as the husband and Penelope Milford as Fonda's friend whose psychotic brother commits suicide. No wonder the film was nominated for eight academy awards in 1979 with those coveted statues going to Fonda and Voight as well as a trio of writers for the screenplay. I applaud the entire production though because it never slipped into maudlin sentimentality. Instead it was a real story the way the Vietnam War affected us all; it was easy to relate to it. The scenes in the veterans' hospital are particularly upsetting as we watch these young men gradually learn to live with their broken bodies. The audience is not spared the actualities of their care and of their suffering. However, as the film moves on, we get to know the Jon Voight character and the romantic scene between him and Fonda plays as bittersweet reality. Years have now past since the Vietnam War, but this film brings it all back. And it does this without one scene being placed in Vietnam itself. A fine film. Recommended.
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