List
Bat*21

Director: Peter Markle
Writer: William C. Anderson, William C. Anderson
Producer: Michael Balson, Mark Damon, David Fisher, Evzen Kolar, Gary A. Neill, Jerry Reed, David Saunders
Theatrical: 1988
Rated: R
Studio: MGM/UA Video
Genre: Action & Adventure
Duration: 105
Media: Digital
Collection ID: 1309
DVD Details
Languages: English
Subtitles: Spanish, French
Sound: Dolby Digital 2.0 Surround
Aspect Ratio: WideScreen
Picture Format: Pan And Scan
Region: 1
Release:Nov 2000
Price: $14.95
Credits
Lt. Col. Iceal Hambleton
Gene Hackman
Capt. Bartholomew Clark
Danny Glover
Col. George Walker
Jerry Reed
Ross Carver
David Marshall Grant
Sgt. Harley Rumbaugh
Clayton Rohner
Maj. Jake Scott
Erich Anderson
Col. Douglass
Joe Dorsey
Vietnamese Man (as Rev. Michael Ng)
Reverend Michael Ng
Boy on Bridge
Theodore Chan Woei-Shyong
Helicopter Crew
Don Ruffin
Helicopter Crew
Scott Howell
Helicopter Crew
Michael Raden
EB-66 Officer
Timothy Fitzgerald
EB-66 Officer
Stuart B. Hagen
Helicopter Gunner
Jeff Baxter
Vietnamese Man (as Rev. Michael Ng)
Michael Ng
Helicopter Gunner (as Jeff Baxter)
Jeffrey Baxter
Helicopter Gunner
Alan King
NVC / VC Officer (as Bonnie Yong)
Bonny Yong
NVA / VC Officer
Willie Lai
NVA / VC Officer
Martin Yong
NVA / VC Officer
Jim Aman
NVA / VC Officer
Freddie Chin
NVA / VC Officer
Dennis Chong
NVA / VC Officer
Liow Hui Chun
NVA / VC Officer
Fung Yun Khiong
NVA / VC Officer
Henry Lee
NVA / VC Officer (as Michael Lee)
Ming-Yang Li
NVA / VC Officer
Jeffrey Liew
NVA / VC Officer
Fredolin Leong
NVA / VC Officer
Benedict Lojingkau
NVA / VC Officer
Walter Lojingkau
NVA / VC Officer
Johnny Michael
NVA / VC Officer
Clarence Mojikon
NVA / VC Officer
Wilod Nuin
NVA / VC Officer
Harold Sinpang
NVA / VC Officer
Paul Yong
NVA / VC Officer
Conidon Wong
Summary
High octane action and the perseverance of some of the leads elevate "Bat-21" to that higher level of Vietnam movie. Basically the story of how a high-level intelligence officer eludes capture after being shot down behind enemy lines in Vietnam, "Bat-21" is relentless and never exploitative. Hackman is Iceal Hambleton, a USAF colonel who fights the war in Vietnam from the offices and golf courses of Saigon. Tasked to identify communist missile sites, he boldly (and unwisely) tags along on an EB-66, an unarmed electronic warfare bird loaded with intelligence equipment. The sole survivor after being shot down, Hambleton finds himself pursued by the enemy who apparently appreciate his value as a prisoner. While the enemy (was it the NVA or the Cong? I could never tell) is unable to find Hambleton, they prove more than capable of making life hell for the rescue choppers sent to rescue him - including the crew of a "Jolly Green" cut to pieces over an enemy-held village. While on the ground, Hambleton stays in contact with Bart Clark (Danny Glover), a USAF captain who flies spotter missions for more heavily armed bombers. (Clark flies FAC - from his slow-moving Cessna, he finds targets for the strike fighters, marking them with white-phosphorous rockets). Knowing that the enemy is monitoring them, Hambleton and Clark work out a code that posits the map of Vietnam as a big golf course. As rescue attempts become more dangerous, Clark finds himself drawn ever deeper into the rescue, climaxing in his going rogue when his superiors throw in the towel."Bat-21" isn't really a classic. There's plenty of thrilling action, and the script even manages to find room for irony (as when Clark pauses during a radio conversation with Hambleton while he zaps a few communist troops). Still, nothing really convincingly explains how Hackman manages to elude capture...by anybody (the script makes clear that he is definitely no Rambo). The film also breezes over the biggest irony - that Hackman's code is based on his smarts on the golf course rather than the battlefield. If the film excels over cheap action flicks, it's in the determination and exhaustion of its leads and persistent refusal to avoid Hollywood glory. Also, unless anybody knows of another film, this is the only one I've seen that captures the critical role played by Forward Air Controllers in both prosecuting the air war in Vietnam, and rescuing those airmen nearly lost.