Windtalkers
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In the drama Windtalkers, director John Woo, cinema's leading purveyor of balletic action crap, has made something quite radical, for him at least: an unapologetically earnest movie. It's not necessarily a good movie, but for those of us who tired of Woo's trumped-up, overrated shenanigans the moment he stopped making films in his native Hong Kong, it's passable enough. During World War II, numerous Native Americans were enlisted by the Marines to transfer wartime information through a code based on the Navajo language; this code was impossible for the Japanese to break, and it aided immeasurably in our World War II victory. It also meant that if any Native American was captured as a POW and subsequently tortured, any leaked information would destroy the code's usefulness. In Woo's film, battle-scarred Marine Joe Enders (Nicolas Cage) is instructed that his sole mission is to protect one of these \"windtalkers,\" Navajo Ben Yahzee (Adam Beach), from capture, even if it means killing him himself. Enders' mission, however, is complicated by his growing respect for Yahzee, and Enders must ask himself: Could he really murder a fellow Marine, a friend, for the sake of a military code 59ce067264
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