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Windtalkers is a 2002 American directed and co-produced by , starring and , with , , , and in supporting roles. It is based on the real story of from the nation during World War II.

The film was theatrically released in the United States by MGM Distribution Co. on June 14, 2002, receiving mixed-to-negative reviews from critics and grossing just $77.6 million worldwide against a production budget of $115 million, making it a .


Plot
During World War II, US Marine corporal Joe Enders returns to active duty after surviving on the Solomon Islands against the Imperial Japanese Army that killed his entire squad and wounded his left ear. Enders and Sgt. Pete "Ox" Henderson receive new assignments to protect Navajo code talkers Pvt. Ben Yahzee and Pvt. Charlie Whitehorse in a JASCO.

Yahzee and Whitehorse, childhood friends from the Navajo tribe, are trained to send and receive coded messages that direct . Enders and Henderson are instructed to kill their code talkers if capture is imminent so the code cannot fall into enemy hands. Both Enders and Henderson resent their new assignments, and the Navajos also endure racial harassment by some of the white Marines, notably Private Chick.

Yahzee and Whitehorse take part in the invasion of Saipan in the Mariana Islands. After the is secured, the Marines come under from U.S. artillery. With Yahzee's radio destroyed and the convoy unable to call off the bombardment, Yahzee suggests disguising himself as a Japanese soldier and slipping behind enemy lines to commandeer a radio, with Enders as his prisoner. Yahzee redirects artillery fire onto the Japanese position.

That night, the Marines camp in the nearby village of Tanapag. As Yahzee is temporarily reassigned to the command post to translate a code, Enders becomes increasingly conflicted about killing Yahzee versus following his orders, but his request to be relieved of duty is denied. The next morning, Japanese soldiers ambush the village. Henderson is killed, and Whitehorse is on the verge of capture. Realizing that the Japanese will torture him for the code, Enders throws a grenade at Whitehorse, killing him and his captors. Yahzee returns to Tanapag and, upon seeing Whitehorse's body, confronts Enders, revealing that he was the one who killed Whitehorse. An outraged Yahzee points his weapon at Enders but cannot bring himself to pull the trigger. Later, Enders confesses that he hated having to kill Whitehorse and that, like Henderson, his mission was to protect the code above all else.

The Marines face another mission, ambushed near a minefield on . Enders, Yahzee, Chick, and Cpl. Pappas take cover on a ridge, witnessing Japanese artillery fire on a Marine convoy below. Enraged over Whitehorse's death, Yahzee charges the Japanese line, leading to both he and Enders being shot while calling in an airstrike. Fearing capture and torture for the code, Yahzee pleads for Enders to kill him, but Enders refuses, carrying him to safety as Navy planes bomb the Japanese positions. Despite this, Enders is mortally wounded and dies.

Back in the U.S., Yahzee and his family sit atop Point Mesa in , Arizona, and, wearing the sacred necklaces and Navajo ceremonial dress, perform the Navajo ritual of paying their respects to Enders.


Cast
  • as Sergeant Joe Enders
  • as Private Ben Yahzee
  • as Gunnery Sergeant Richard Hjelmsted, Platoon Sergeant
  • as Private First Class Charles "Chick" Clusters, a BAR gunner
  • as Corporal Milo Pappas, a rifleman
  • as Sergeant Peter "Ox" Henderson
  • Roger Willie as Private Charlie Whitehorse
  • Brian Van Holt as Private Andrew Harrigan, the flamethrower man
  • as Private Thomas Nellie, a rifleman
  • Frances O'Connor as Pharmacist's Mate 2nd Class Rita Swelton
  • as Camp Tarawa Staff Sergeant
  • as Major Mellitz


Production
In November 1998, it was announced would develop Windtalkers as a directorial vehicle for .

Filming locations on included , the location where Lost and Jurassic Park were shot. To portray the Marines in the film the producers recruited extras that were volunteers from Schofield Barracks Army Base, Hickam Air Force Base, Pearl Harbor Naval Station, and Kaneohe Marine Corps Air Station. Some of the actual Marines from 4th Force Recon Company were used in the film portraying their actual job. Some violence was trimmed in order to avoid an NC-17 rating. This violence trim was restored for the Director's cut released on DVD running 153 minutes. The film's release date was moved from November 9, 2001, to June 14, 2002, due to the September 11th terrorist attacks.

For the F6F Hellcat fighters that appear in the beach-landing scenes on Saipan, the producers used computer-generated versions.


Reception

Box office
$41 million at the US box-office and a total of $77.6 million worldwide, against a production budget of $115 million.


Critical response
On , Windtalkers has an approval rating of 33% based on reviews from 164 critics. The site's consensus states: "The action sequences are expertly staged. Windtalkers, however, sinks under too many clichés and only superficially touches upon the story of the code talkers." On , the film has a score of 51% based on reviews from 35 critics, indicating "mixed or average reviews". Audiences surveyed by gave the film a grade B+ on scale of A to F.

of the Chicago Sun-Times gave the film 2 out of 4 stars, remarking that "the filmmakers have buried it beneath battlefield cliches, while centering the story on a white character played by Nicolas Cage". Robert Koehler of Variety called it "A powerful premise turned into a stubbornly flat, derivative war movie."

The film was criticized for featuring the Navajo characters only in supporting roles; they were not the primary focus of the film. The film was ranked number four on Careeraftermilitary.com's "10 Most Inaccurate Military Movies Ever Made" which also included The Patriot, The Hurt Locker, U-571, The Green Berets, Pearl Harbor, Battle of the Bulge, , Enemy at the Gates and Flyboys on its list of falsified war movie productions.

About the response, John Woo said: "The main themes of Windtalkers are friendship and understanding. Unfortunately, the studio wanted a John Wayne movie, just a typical American hero film with explosions every few minutes. I had to make them understand that this wasn't a story about heroes. It's a story about a man and his own demons, trying to redeem himself from war. I made the movie that way, but some people in the studio didn't appreciate it and, in the end, I guess neither did the audience." In 2023, Woo said: “There were not many people who really understood that movie or liked it. It was not good timing. The movie had to be released in 2001. Then 9/11 happened, so they had to push it. They were so afraid audiences wouldn’t want to watch a war movie at that time. I had a conflict with the writers. I said, “My kind of movie is usually about friendship, respect, and honor.” But the writers didn't feel good about that. They said, “The enemy is the enemy. The enemy has to be destroyed.” I tried to make it a human story. The audience didn't expect a movie about friendship. But I'm still proud of that movie.“


Accolades


See also
  • List of box office bombs
  • Native Americans and World War II


External links
  • A documentary exploring issues relating to involvement in film production.
  • (includes a dictionary of the code)

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