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In a thrilling WWII story inspired by actual events, Captain Ernest Krause (Tom Hanks) leads an international convoy of 37 ships on a treacherous mission across the Atlantic to deliver soldiers and supplies to Allied forces. (Apple TV+)

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Reviews (8)

Kaka 

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English A more likeable and restrained alternative to Emmerich's Midway. With a shorter runtime, better structure and formal stylisation, and more straightforward. Hanks takes this on with (un)surprising aplomb as the Captain of a destroyer. The paradox is that, although this is a war film, what is more interesting than the sometimes highly digital combat sequences is the meticulously detailed depiction of the workings of the crew and the procedures and tasks they perform as part of their routine. Nothing groundbreaking, but at least it doesn’t want to be a megalomaniac war flick. ()

EvilPhoEniX 

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English Tom Hanks in another war movie, and is great again, and the short running time makes it a fairly brisk suspenseful one-off, but the combat at sea is not as appealing to me as combat on land, so I saw the film more out of obligation and curiosity. Story****, Action***, Humor>No, Violence>No, Entertainment***, Music***, Visuals****, Atmosphere***, Suspense****. 6/10. ()

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POMO 

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English Set aboard a ship in the Atlantic, this medium-length war movie is kept afloat by Hanks’s personality. There is practically no development of the characters and the war situations and maneuvers carried out within them are not exactly clear, but the movie still manages to keep up the suspense and reminds you how hellish it must have been to there – no sleeping, no eating and making decisions very quickly and intuitively. That’s what Greyhound is all about. Pathos, yes, but subtle pathos. The film’s runtime and content are insufficient for the cinema, but a VOD release is ideal. ()

3DD!3 

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English Greyhound is a dynamically filmed adaptation of a book about escorting convoys of merchant ships across the Atlantic during the Second World War to territories that airplanes couldn't reach from the mainland. The sometimes nerve-racking maneuvers of giant steel ships are intensified by Neely’s background music with a spine-chilling whale motif. The mocking pack of Nazi wolves pitted against Christ – a real American – does not come across as ridiculously as you might think. Tom “Covid Survivor" Hanks again thoroughly relishes his role of a professional, logical captain, first doing what has to be done, then humbly leafing through the Bible, and then going to bed. Strong emphasis on detail, good length. The special effects were not consistently good. ()

Lima 

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English As if, after Band of Brothers and Pacific, Tom Hanks needed to pay homage once more to the front-line heroes of World War Two. This film falls short of the parameters of a war movie for the big screen; it rather feels like an expensive TV production, with one studio, one incomplete model of the ship, a bit of wizardry with the weather, and lots and lots of greenscreen. At times it is monotonous with one order after another being barked at subordinates, but it also contains interesting ideas (to wit: the provocative radio calls of German U-boats). Hanks, who has the proper charisma of a captain, reliably keeps the picture afloat, and the torpedoes provide one moment of suspense – but overall, I’m not impressed. Das Boot isn’t dethroned by this. ()

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