Plot: What’s it about?
It’s been fifteen years since I first saw this movie. I had read reviews of it and it being a hot Summer day, I went with my family to see this movie about a man named Forrest. I had seen previews, but the general jist of what I thought the story to be about was that he had braces on his feet and he wasn’t that smart. I was prepared for a sad movie…A mere two and half hours later, I walked out of the theater having seen one of the greatest movies in my entire life. Forrest Gump is a movie about a man who is stupid, yet he never does anything stupid at all. This was Tom Hanks’ follow-up to his Academy Award winning role in Philadelphia, and it’s no surprise that he won back to back Oscars for his role as Forrest Gump. So what is so special about Forrest Gump? Aside from the fact that he seemed to have a brush with most every major political event of the last half century, it was an approach to making a movie that we had never seen before. You could go and say that someone met JFK, but this movie actually shows the character shaking his hand and interacting with him. Unreal. Or real? While Forrest Gump has received its share of acclaim, there are those out there who don’t like it. That’s fine. With a movie as popular and as commercially successful as this, it’s bound to garner acclaim as well as criticism. Many feel that Quentin Tarantino’s Pulp Fiction should have received the Best Picture nod instead of this. But once the votes were cast, it was a man named Gump who stood triumphant.
As the computer-generated feather falls across the skyline of Savannah, Georgia, we can barely make out a figure of a man sitting on a park bench. He is dressed in a suit, dirty old Nike’s and carries a briefcase. This is Forrest Gump. Once you get past his accent and listen to what he says, it makes the story a lot more enjoyable. Forrest is telling his life story on a park bench, to almost anyone who will listen. But, as it turns out, Forrest has led quite the life so far. Forrest’s mother, played by Sally Field (who ironically plays Tom Hanks’ love interest in “Punchline”) is trying to get Forrest into school. But the “Progressive” system of Alabama doesn’t let people with an IQ lower than that of 80 into the system (Forrest has an IQ of approximately 75), but after a little coercing by Ms. Gump, Forrest is enrolled. It’s about this time that he meets the one person who influences him the most, Jenny. Jenny has had the cards stacked against her for a long time. Her alcoholic dad beats her and her siblings leading Jenny to pray to find some escape from her tortured life. We then flash forward a ways when Jenny and Forrest are in high school. It’s the same story, but when Hanks takes over, the movie really doesn’t go downhill. Jenny’s advice to Forrest has and always will be “RUN, FORREST RUN”. The movie follows Forrest through his journeys. He graduates from high school, and as he’s running away from the local hicks, gets recruited to play football at the University of Alabama (under Bear Bryant no less), manages to make national headlines when he is involved in the integration of the University and that’s just while he’s in college.
The movie takes on a different tone when Forrest joins the Army. Being a buck private, Forrest fits in the Army “like one of those square pegs, or somethin’…”. And it’s not long after that he meets his best friend, Benjamin Bufurd Blue (aka “Bubba”) played by Mykelti Wiliamson. Bubba comes from a long line of shrimp boat captains and his only dream is to own and operate a shrimp boat business after he gets out of the Army. But Vietnam changes all of that. Throughout Forrest’s journeys in the army, he meets another friend by the name of Lieutenant Dan (Gary Sinise), who is another influence on Forrest’s life. Though Forrest has received the Congressional Medal of Honor, been in China to represent the United States in Ping Pong and spoke at the reflecting pool in Washington to some 50,000 people, his life is still just starting…As we marvel at the life of Forrest Gump, we can’t help but wince when we see Jenny. Jenny has moved from town to town, been kicked out of her college for posing for Playboy and is heavily involved in the “Sex, Drugs Rock N’ Roll” scene of the 1970’s. It’s only after she comes home to Alabama and to Forrest that they start a life together.
The life of Forrest Gump, just like the movie, is almost too unbelievable to explain. It’s humorous to see how many key events Forrest was part of (though it’s all fiction), and how the movie seems to make it work. It’s a testament to Zemeckis’ great direction as well as another great performance by Tom Hanks and a great supporting cast. Without a doubt, Forrest Gump is one of the best movies that I’ve ever seen. It’s one of those rare treats that Hollywood can’t seem to crank out much anymore, but this little gem should find a good place in your library.
Video: How does it look?
It’s a good thing when a studio releases some of their top shelf catalog titles and with Forrest Gump, you can’t get much better when it comes to Paramount. Still, the still fledgling format has a ways to go and it’ll need the support of the studios to not only release some good titles, but do a good job with them. Watching the film on 4K, I was instantly taken back to the first time I saw it in theaters. The CGI feather falling across the skyline of Savannah and so forth. The 2.35:1 HEVC 4K image does improve on what the Blu-ray (also included) showed, but there are a few instances in which I was less than impressed. Granted, I’ve seen the film in every format out there, so little nuances do and will stand out. The best way to describe this presentation is inconsistent. It’s not “bad” by any means, just not the shining example of 4K that I’d hoped for. Colors are bold and vibrant, detail is immaculate and the additional depth provided by the HDR really does make this look, in parts, the best the film has ever looked.
Audio: How does it sound?
Gump has gotten an upgrade when it comes to sound. The previously-released Blu-ray featured a pretty robust DTS HD Master Audio soundtrack, but we now have a full on Dolby Atmos mix that ups the ante. As anyone who’s seen the film knows, music plays a big part in the film (more on that later) and the 40 some odd songs blend in seamlessly to the film adding life and even depth to the plot. The Vietnam sequence sounds as amazing as I expected it, right about the time it stops raining and Gump’s platoon gets ambushed. The speakers are alive with action for about the next ten minutes. Amazing. Dialogue is clear and crisp and though not all of the film can sound like the war scenes, Forrest Gump has the depth to make it stand out as a top notch disc.
Supplements: What are the extras?
Paramount’s three-disc presentation of Forrest Gump carries with it no new extras and what’s included is simply the two-disc Blu-ray set with the Ultra HD disc added in. All of the supplements are found on the Blu-ray. It’s disappointing that nothing new has been added, then again what’s included is pretty robust.
- Audio Commentaries – Two total: The first is with director Robert Zemeckis, Steve Starkey the producer, and Rick Carter the production designer. This is a pretty chatty track with Zemeckis taking the lead. Lots of technical jargon can be heard and it’s a treat to listen to. Oddly, the other track has a producer of the film, Wendy Finerman, as she offers her comments. The film is long, like two and a half hours long, but if you’re to choose one track over the other, it’s a no-brainer.
- The Make-up of Forrest Gump – Pretty self-explanatory as this focuses on the make-up used in the movie.
- Through the Ears of Forrest Gump: Sound Design – Several instances of sound were showcased here and we learn a bit more about what it takes to score the sound of a film.
- Production Design – Again, pretty self-explanatory as this focuses on production design and the locations used in the film.
- Seeing is Believing: The Visual Effects of Forrest Gump – Ten different segments are profiled here with some emphasis on how they did things like have Tom Hanks be next to John Lennon on the Dick Cavett show.
- Screen Tests – If you want to see a really young Haley Joel Osment, he can be found here. Others are shown as well.
- Trailers
- Musical Signposts to History – The movie has one of the better soundtracks that I can recall and with this feature you can select a mode that, when a song is played, a little popup window will show and some information will tell about the song and how it relates to what’s going on.
- Greenbow Diary – We get a “home video” sort of feel as it focuses on how the film was made. Kinda.
- The Art of Screenplay Adaptation – Author of the novel, Winston Groom, offers his insight as we see the ins and outs of how a book becomes a movie.
- Getting Past the Impossible: Forrest Gump and the Visual Effects Revolution – If you simply can’t get enough of the visual effects in the movie, here’s more for you including how they made Gary Sinise into a paraplegic.
- Little Forrest – Actor Michael Conner Humphreys is profiled here and his role as “Little Forrest” is dissected.
- An Evening with Forrest Gump – Basically a round table with Tom Hanks, Gary Sinise, Eric Roth, and Robert Zemeckis all who discuss the film.
The Bottom Line
There are classics and then there are films like Forrest Gump. While it’s nice to see the movie come to the new format, the new 4K transfer leaves a little to be desired, but it’s not really as bad as I (and other sites) make it sound. The lack of no new supplements is a bit disappointing, but given what has already been available – I don’t now if more exist. The new Atmos soundtrack takes it up a notch as well.