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33 of 36 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars This Film Tells the Truth About War
I watched this movie for two reasons: I like Andie MacDowell and my last name is Harrison.

I liked this movie because I am a Viet nam vet that fought in Tet and therefore I have some considerable experience with war in a city, or as the Army used to call it War in a Built Up Area. If you have actually seen this kind of war, the movie is frighteningly accurate and like...

Published on January 23, 2004 by John Harrison

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12 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Feels a bit distanced from emotional connectivity.
"I would have felt something break inside if he were dead," sobs Sarah Lloyd after learning that her photo journalist husband has been killed on duty in Yugoslavia. Set in 1991, during a time of civil war, "Harrison's Flowers" is a somewhat murky exploration of human strength in times of distress, tacking a well-constructed production design to an emotionally mute story...
Published on March 20, 2002 by D. Litton


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33 of 36 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars This Film Tells the Truth About War, January 23, 2004
By 
John Harrison (Potomac, Md. USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Harrison's Flowers (DVD)
I watched this movie for two reasons: I like Andie MacDowell and my last name is Harrison.

I liked this movie because I am a Viet nam vet that fought in Tet and therefore I have some considerable experience with war in a city, or as the Army used to call it War in a Built Up Area. If you have actually seen this kind of war, the movie is frighteningly accurate and like war, necessisarily fragmentary and incomplete.

For example, in one perfect and horrific, scene Andie MacDowell and her two journalist companions are moving through a city to find a hospital where her husband may be. They come upon a situation: a young child, probably a girl runs out of a building in front of them. A soldier follows her out of the building, and kills her. War's brutality? Certainly. A killing mad soldier, killing an innocent child. Possibly. But, even more likely, the scene represents wars brutality on multiple levels. If you knew that the child had just thrown a hand grenade and the soldier escaped it but his buddy, or even more likely in this kind of war, his actual brother did not would that change the nature of the scene for you? Or, if that was true and you knew that the child had another hand grenade, or a pistol, would that change your impression of the meaning of the scene? And how about that soldier many years later as he looks down at his own child, assuming he survives the war, will he be able to forget the look on that other chid's face as he shot her? However good his reason and in real war there are many reasons that can make such an act necessary, will he be able to forget, or will it haunt him. This kind of awful situation, but not unusual situation, is precisely why William T. Sherman said that "War is Hell." For a soldier, having killed a child for any reason must be true Hell, but to have done it on purpose. That would be worse. While I avoided shooting at children, the reality of war among civilians is worse than you could ever imagine even in a nightmare. Say you are a sentry and there is a car speeding toward your post. You open fire. The car stops. Your post is safe. But it turns out that a child is dead. The car was speeding to get to the hospital. That is war in the city and all you have is an instant to make up your mind to shoot, or not to shoot. To kill, or not to kill, and either way to live with the aftermath.

Do the sailors or Marines on watch on the USS Cole wished that they had fired. Even if their orders were not to fire. Even if the approach of the boat with a bomb in it did not look like an attack. Even if a child had been steering the boat with a bomb. I have no doubt that they all wished that they had fired. And they will wish that, and relive that, until they too die. In that sense they are as much causalities of war as their shipmates that suffered actual physical hurt. The Captain of that ship, the Officer of the Day, the Watch officer all will relive and replay that day and regret that no one fired soon or often enough. Watch this movie and you will see what I mean. There are things that happen in war that are horrible, to everybody.

I have seen war and I have seen many war movies - but only rarely have I seen a movie as true to the appalling core of the experience as this is. As our soldiers fight a shadow war in Iraq and in Afghanistan it would be good to remember that war is hell. If you have forgotten, this is a very accurate picture of it.

Yes, the plot is a tad implausible, but I would hope that the wife that my son chooses when he grows up would do as Andie MacDowell's fictional character does and fight to find out what happened to him. I know my wife would.

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12 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Feels a bit distanced from emotional connectivity., March 20, 2002
By 
D. Litton (Wilmington, NC) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
"I would have felt something break inside if he were dead," sobs Sarah Lloyd after learning that her photo journalist husband has been killed on duty in Yugoslavia. Set in 1991, during a time of civil war, "Harrison's Flowers" is a somewhat murky exploration of human strength in times of distress, tacking a well-constructed production design to an emotionally mute story line that has its moments, and manages to keep one's interest for a reasonable portion of its lengthy duration.

Andie MacDowell plays Sarah, whose husband, Harrison (David Strathairn), is a Pulitzer-winning photographer who shoots various images for Newsweek, Life, and Time magazines. Oh, and he likes to keep up the flowers in his greenhouse, too, in case we should think he's all about work and no play. After deciding he's had enough of traveling to war-torn countries to take poignant snapshots, his boss convinces him to take one last job in Yugoslavia, where a civil war is breaking out.

Sarah is supportive in his decision to go, like any good-natured wife would be. Her support turns to disbelief when she walks into work one morning and becomes the center of silent attention, which can only mean one thing: Harrison is dead. There's only one catch: no one saw his body being removed from the collapsed house that supposedly took his life. Sarah, in what we first believe is a deep sense of denial, sees an image of a shattered greenhouse on CNN, spots a man whom she believes is Harrison, and heads to Yugoslavia to find him herself.

So far, we've been given a so-so setup with a couple of meandering moments and throwaway subplots crossed with one or two important ones. The Lloyd's young son, Cesar, harbors a silent resistance for his father as a result of his absence, but it is never expanded upon, and never comes into play as it should. The whole greenhouse and flower connection is corny, but without it, there would be no basis for the movie's equally corny title. A beginning scene at the Pulitzer awards introduces Adrian Brody as a photo journalist who lashes out at Harrison in angst over his less-accomplished friend's death; later, out of guilt, he helps Sarah make it safely through enemy territory.

The second half of the movie places us in the rugged terrain of Yugoslavia, where members of the press and television camera crews make their way through battle by driving in cars marked with the letters "TV." Your acceptance of these scenes depends on how much of your disbelief you are willing to suspend, from scenes like a near-rape involving Sarah and several enemy soldiers (but from which side of the fighting?), to their many near-misses and close calls with dropping bombs and sniper bullets.

The film gets the look of war right, with settings and ramshackle towns ravished by the effects of continuous firepower that look authentic and realistically haunting. Yet, however real they may look, the war scenes lack the effectiveness of such films as "We Were Soldiers" or "Black Hawk Down," mainly because we know that our small group of reporters is going to survive no matter what stands in their way.

In a solid performance, MacDowell makes a good, but not entirely lasting impression as a wife and mother torn between disbelief and reality. Her character's interactions with those touched by war is not as prevalent as is needed to get a feel for the emotional taxation of such traumatic events, but she does try. The overall movie feels a bit distanced from any sort of emotional connectivity, but it does have redeeming qualities as a time-waster without much afterthought to it.

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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars What CNN missed . . ., March 3, 2008
This review is from: Harrison's Flowers (DVD)
This 2-hour French production with an American cast is an odd combination of a blithely impossible action plot played against a chilling reality. When a world-famous photographer is reported killed in the war-torn former Yugoslavia, his wife flies off from their comfortable home in Westchester to find him and bring him back alive. The best that can be said about this Hollywood-style storyline is that it provides a reason to accomplish something very different - to portray the ghastly truth of ethnic warfare as it took place in the Balkans in the early 1990s and the role of news photographers who risked their lives to capture it with their cameras.

Plunged into Croatia as Vukovar was being overrun by Serbs, the characters take the audience into a hell where everyone - men, women, children - must kill or be killed. We are witness to atrocities and inhumanities that take the breath away. While war in the movies has often been played for thrill-packed adventure - even anti-war films - this one leaves you with a sense of powerlessness in the face of unimaginable horror. Urban warfare and ethnic cleansing cease being abstract concepts. We see their portrayal with our own eyes, and the efforts of one American woman to retrieve her husband in the midst of it all are dwarfed by comparison. Worth seeing anyway for what CNN missed.
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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Sober but excellent, February 26, 2002
By 
I saw this movie last year on a French airline headed back from Polynesia. The subject is personal (I'm a photojournalist), and while it hit me like a brick after cruising to Tahiti, the realism and horrow of the war zone images are both necessary and disturbing.

I've waited quite some time for the movie to come to the U.S. I highly recommend the film to anyone, especially those who glorify war, and who needs convincing that war is horrible, even if it does bring out the best and worst of the human species.

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8 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Atrocity of WAR, February 23, 2002
By 
D. South "Edu List" (New York City, United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This film was released at the beginning of 2001 in Europe.

It is one of the most schocking and real accounts of war that has ever been shown on screen. The story of international reporters reaching the front line in the war in former Yugoslavia, Harrison's Flowers will leave you speechless for hours after the show. As the four hoursmen of the apocalypse, hunger, destruction, misery, and death, run rampant through the villages of Croatia, goosbumps will cover your skin as the wife of a famous photographer journeys to Vukovar in search of her lost husband. A definite must see, a cry for peace.

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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Andie McDowell has come a long way..., March 6, 2002
By 
Erren (San Francisco, California) - See all my reviews
she gives probably one of her best performances as sarah, a woman who refuses to believe her husband is dead and travels to the former yugoslavia to find him.her performance is believeable as woman who's quest to find her man is a testament to the power of the human spirit. Adrian Brody also is very good as kyle, a hotshot reporter who starts out as an adversary of harrison( played by david straihairn )but comes to the aide of
Sarah. you also get a taste of the war between the croatians and the serbs which is shocking and devastating.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Possibly the best film about the Yugoslavian Civil War, March 21, 2002
By 
...to date. Plot lapses aside, this was the best western-produced film about the breakup of Yugoslavia I've seen. The depiction of war was graphic but did a good job in conveying the atrocities that occurred during the conflict.

I can sit here and pick away at some of the inconceivable events that occur throughout the film, the need for more character development, etc. but the real accomplishment here is communicating the horrors of war to a general public that to this day is somewhat confused about what really happened over there.

If you've seen other films like "Welcome To Sarajevo", "Savior" "Behind Enemy Lines" or "Shot Through The Heart," then this will put them all to shame in regards to the portrayal of war. Other films I can recommend are "Vukovar", "Pretty Village, Pretty Flame" and "No Man's Land."

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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars War is Hell...but didn't we know that?, March 19, 2002
Harrison's Flowers is an interesting and intense look at the 1991 war in Croatia. Andie McDowell portrays Sarah, the wife of a Newsweek war photographer (David Strathairn) presumed dead somewhere in Croatia. The film starts in New York's Newsweek building and we see the journalists dismissing the war as ethnic skirmishes. Sarah rents a car in Graz and gives a ride to a Croatian going to get his wife and child out. As they cross the border the killing starts. We run into Serb Chetniks and Croatian forces as they kill everyone that can find.

The war scenes are very realistic, capturing the horror of that war. Usually it's focused on the victims after they're killed, the scenes implying all the terror and horror that occurred. Sarah travels with a group of photojournalists toward Vukovar where the war is most intense, all in an against all odds attempt to find her husband.

A few comments: the fiction of the story is obvious, as if this really occurred it would probably be one of the most famous stories of the war. And the vehicle used for introducing the Western viewer has been done many times: inject an innocent American into the blooshed. Also remember the Croatia war lasted a couple months with about 10,000 dead....the soon after
Bosnia war (ignored in this film) lasted over 3 years killing 250,000 people.

The film ends back in the safety of New York...until September 11th. And it's dedicated to the 47 journalists who died, not the hundreds of thousands of other innocent people. If only the West stopped it...well history is made up of "if onlys".

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars An ode to marital love, August 17, 2002
This review is from: Harrison's Flowers (DVD)
Quitte a few years after the end of the yugoslavic civil war , director's Chouraqui movie brings once more back to our memory the biggest tragedy of the Balkans' recent history . Harrison is a journalist whose traces have been lost during a job mission to the then united Yugoslavia . Witnesses claim he is dead yet his wife , Sarah ( MacDowell ) is not conviced . She still believes he is alive and takes a long , risky journey to Vukovar in order to find him .

Harrison's Flowers presents war in all it's horrow . It's well-made , brutal and realistic film concerning an always opportune subject. Director Chouraqui dezerves congratulations for chosing to focus once more on a war which destroyed millions of people yet the World Community seems to have already forgotten . Also credit must be given to MacDowell who chose to participate and support with her presence a project such as this as well as to Brody and Koteas who i hope that one day will become stars .

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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars tribute to journalists who died covering the Balkan conflict, March 15, 2003
By 
Carol C. "ccjello" (Kansas City, MO USA) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)   
This review is from: Harrison's Flowers (DVD)
Reviewer: A viewer from Kansas City, MO
This gripping film is a tribute to the 40+ journalists who died covering the war in the Balkans. The story centers around Andie MacDowell's character's search for her Pulitzer-award-winning photographer husband, who was reportedly killed when a building collapses in the war. Sarah Lloyd (Andie) is convinced that her husband is still alive, so she leaves behind her two young children & her job at Newsweek to venture to Serb-held Vukovar to find him. Her journey is fraught with violence -- shortly after she crosses into Yugoslavia, she encounters a Serb roadblock, where her hitchhiker/passenger/guide, a charming Croatian student in Paris returning to find his wife & baby, is needlessly executed, the rented Audi is crushed by a tank, and Sarah barely escapes rape. She is "rescued" by fellow journalists, and undaunted, continues her seeming suicide mission to find her husband in Vukovar. The violence in this film rivals anything you'll find on screen (think two hours of the opening scene of Saving Private Ryan) and you'll hear the ... word at least once a minute -- but it is well worth seeing. It will foster an appreciation of what photojournalists go through to document history, putting themselves at risk certainly as much as the soldiers, without the support & protection of an Army being them (albeit voluntarily). My only concern is that the film may oversimplify the issues underlying the conflict -- it depicts Serbs as evil and Croats as - - well, not evil, providing a relatively safe haven for the journalists. However, the film is not so much about the conflict itself as it is about the sacrifices of the journalists covering the conflict.
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