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[edit] Opinion paragraph removed from synopsis
I removed this paragraph, which is both opinion and added nothing to the synopsis:
Compared to later "realistic" war movies centering on the personalities in an Army platoon in combat, 'A Walk in the Sun' comes off as a shlocky government-approved Hollywood propaganda or an Army training film. Which was it was both; filmed on an obvious California backlot with studio contact actors who complained only mildly about army life. They always carried standard field pack complete with entrenching tool and also, they always wore helmet chin straps per regulations.
The director -- Lewis Milestone -- is famous for his anti-war stance (c.f. his All Quiet on the Western Front and Pork Chop Hill), so no matter what the Army's assistance on the picture was, trying to claim this was a propaganda film (made while the war was still going on, mind you) is doing both Milestone and the movie an injustice. (Ironically, he did work on actual Army training films during WWI.)
Besides, characters often relaxed with their helmets off, always a no-no in combat situations. ;)
--Robert Daeley (talk) 11:06, 16 March 2008 (UTC)