Hacksaw Ridge 2016 [exclusive] -
What happened next is the stuff of legend, and the film sticks remarkably close to the source material. As the Americans retreated over the cliff, Doss stayed behind. He dragged wounded soldiers to the edge of the escarpment. Using a rope knot he had learned as a boy (a modified surgeon’s knot), he lowered man after man down the 40-foot drop to the beach below.
Mel Gibson’s directorial style has always leaned toward the visceral and the brutal, evident in films like Braveheart and The Passion of the Christ . In Hacksaw Ridge , he leverages this penchant for realism to create a jarring dichotomy. hacksaw ridge 2016
Hacksaw Ridge was a major critical and commercial success, marking a significant "comeback" for Mel Gibson. What happened next is the stuff of legend,
As he worked, he prayed aloud: "Lord, help me get one more." He would run back into the smoke, find a wounded soldier—sometimes a Japanese soldier, whom he treated equally—and drag them back. For 12 hours straight, through the night and into the dawn, he saved 75 men (Doss modestly claimed 50, but his commander estimated 100; the Army settled on 75). Using a rope knot he had learned as
The Japanese attack is sudden and chaotic. A soldier firing a BAR is cut in half by a mortar. Men are set on fire by flamethrowers. Gibson uses slow motion not for beauty, but for agony—watching a soldier’s face ripple as a grenade goes off next to him.