The Pacific

The Pacific

2010
The Pacific
The Pacific

The Pacific

8.3 | TV-MA | en | Drama

Track the intertwined real-life stories of three U.S. Marines – Robert Leckie, John Basilone, and Eugene Sledge – across the vast canvas of the Pacific Theater during World War II. A companion piece to the 2001 miniseries Band of Brothers.

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Seasons & Episodes

1
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EP10  Home
May. 16,2010
Home

After the Japanese surrender, Leckie, healed from his wounds, leaves the hospital and returns home, while Sledge heads back to Alabama to be reunited with his family and Sid Phillips. Lena visits Basilone’s home and has an emotional meeting with his family. Leckie adjusts to post-war life by resuming his old job and starting a new relationship, but for Sledge, unsure why he survived the war seemingly unscathed, adjustment will require more time.

EP9  Okinawa
May. 09,2010
Okinawa

After battling across the island of Okinawa for more than a month, Sledge and the rest of the 1st Marine Division are ordered to relieve an Army division that has been in combat against the most strongly defended Japanese position on the island. The primordial conditions and the moral dilemma posed by the presence of civilians put tremendous strain on the physical and psychological endurance of Sledge and the other Marines.

EP8  Iwo Jima
May. 02,2010
Iwo Jima

Increasingly frustrated by his role campaigning for war bonds, Basilone convinces the Marines to allow him to train troops headed for combat. Transferred to Camp Pendleton, he enjoys a whirlwind romance with an initially reluctant female Marine, Lena Riggi. But the couple know they are living on borrowed time, as Basilone is soon to take part in the Marine landing on Iwo Jima.

EP7  Peleliu Hills
Apr. 25,2010
Peleliu Hills

The Marines, including the newly christened “Sledgehammer,” continue the battle of Peleliu against an enemy determined to fight to the last man. Devastated by the loss of a revered leader, and witnessing unimaginable barbarity on both sides, Sledge veers to the very edge of moral collapse. Their objective finally secured, the Marines return to Pavuvu fundamentally changed by their experience on Peleliu.

EP6  Peleliu Airfield
Apr. 18,2010
Peleliu Airfield

Despite the suffocating 115-degree heat and a lack of clean drinking water, Sledge, Leckie and the other Marines confront the highly-fortified enemy as they attempt to capture the Peleliu airfield. After seeing his comrades badly injured, Leckie himself is wounded and evacuated from the island. Sledge witnesses the shocking truth about what is sometimes required to survive and fight another day.

EP5  Peleliu Landing
Apr. 11,2010
Peleliu Landing

Basilone’s celebrity grows as he travels across the country on the war bonds tour. On Pavuvu, Sledge, assigned to the 5th Marines, 1st Marine Division, is briefly reunited with Phillips and Leckie rejoins his company. Sledge then gets his first taste of combat as he, Leckie, and the rest of the 1st Marine Division meet fierce Japanese resistance while landing on the intricately and heavily defended coral island of Peleliu.

EP4  Gloucester/Pavuvu/Banika
Apr. 04,2010
Gloucester/Pavuvu/Banika

Finally enlisted as a Marine, Sledge trains for combat at Camp Elliott. The 1st Marine Division lands at Cape Gloucester on the Japanese-held island of New Britain. As Leckie and the other Marines battle the Japanese, they quickly realize that the more ominous enemy is the smothering jungle itself. Having survived Gloucester and stationed on the godforsaken island of Pavuvu, Leckie begins displaying the physical and mental effects of combat and is sent to a naval hospital on nearby Banika for psychiatric observation.

EP3  Melbourne
Mar. 28,2010
Melbourne

Physically and mentally debilitated after the four-month ordeal on Guadalcanal, Leckie, Basilone and thousands of their comrades land in Melbourne, where they are greeted by adoring crowds and viewed as the saviors of Australia. While his buddies carouse, Leckie becomes deeply attached to an Australian woman and her first-generation Greek family. Meanwhile, Basilone is awarded the Medal of Honor and is asked to return home to help sell U.S. war bonds.

EP2  Basilone
Mar. 21,2010
Basilone

Basilone and the 7th Marines arrive on Guadalcanal to reinforce Leckie and the rest of the 1st Marine Division as they continue to defend the crucial airstrip. Basilone plays a key role in repelling a nighttime Japanese attack, but suffers a frightful personal loss. After four months of continuous action, the exhausted and disease-ridden members of the 1st Marine Division are evacuated off the island.

EP1  Guadalcanal/Leckie
Mar. 14,2010
Guadalcanal/Leckie

In the immediate aftermath of the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, Marine Sgt. John Basilone prepares to ship out and confront the enemy somewhere in the Pacific, while budding journalist Robert Leckie enlists in the Marine Corps. Eugene Sledge, unable to enlist because of a heart murmur, says farewell to his best friend, Sidney Phillips, who is about to leave for boot camp. Exactly eight months after Pearl Harbor, the 1st Marine Division, including Leckie and Phillips, lands on Guadalcanal in order to secure its strategically vital airfield and prepare for the inevitable counterattack.

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8.3 | TV-MA | en | Drama , Action & Adventure , War & Politics | More Info
Released: 2010-03-14 | Released Producted By: HBO , Playtone Country: United States of America Budget: 0 Revenue: 0 Official Website: http://www.hbo.com/the-pacific
Synopsis

Track the intertwined real-life stories of three U.S. Marines – Robert Leckie, John Basilone, and Eugene Sledge – across the vast canvas of the Pacific Theater during World War II. A companion piece to the 2001 miniseries Band of Brothers.

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Cast

James Badge Dale , Jon Seda , Joseph Mazzello

Director

Scott Bird

Producted By

HBO , Playtone

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Reviews

jwelsh8413 Not band of brothers, but still great. The three main characters are all phenomenal. Hits you in the gut on multiple occasions.
tecktomaket THE PACIFIC encapsulates WWII's brutal combat onslaught that the USMC had to face; beach landing operations and then their gory chore in routing out the Japanese military island strongholds. The story pivots on three excellent first person publications from those who were there and survived to write in emotional transparency.The full-spectrum subplots are seamlessly entwined to make viewing all 10 segments worthwhile-fulfilling and inspiring, bringing 'life goes on' closure in the epilogue. THE PACIFIC includes backdrop homage to all military services involved in this epic WWII story-it brings us closer to the core reality of the courageous sacrifice by the USMC Leathernecks.The signature opening theme has been re-composed (BoB) in its timeless recurrently sustained French horn ambiance overture.After reading two of the three books mentioned in the credits I could see the elements portrayed, in part, boiled down to one line dialogue plot points. Brilliant! Good to watch again to discover these subtle nuances.Ergo, this meets the highest standard of giving credit to the authors vastly detailed accounts. Clever and intelligent script continuity.The Marines fought to the death against an enemy that refused to surrender and had the marines surrounded (snipers and tunnels) for the most part resulting in close quarter thick jungle skirmishes. We follow notable true to life Marine characters lifted from the published memoirs: Chesty Puller, Manila Joe, Gunny-Henny, Ack Ack Haldane, Hillbilly, Runner, Moosier, Mani, Chuckler, SNAFU etc. And tragically we lose a few. I grieved.But paramount are 'Lucky' (Robert Leakey-Helmet For My Pillow) and 'Sledgehammer' (Dr. Eugene Sledge-With The Old Breed) who survived one of the the most hellish beach landings-Peleliu. Theirs are two of the three books drawn upon to tell this immortal story.(Tarawa, (not depicted) was the most disastrous Marine beach landing. Many veterans of previous operations confessed that Pelelui was the most frightening.)The Iwo Jima Marine assault is covered in this mini series account with Manila Joes (Basilone) death. The diverse controversial accounts surrounding his death and his wife's coping are managed with humane sensitivity.Leakey, a prolific writer of several factual book publications of the Pacific Theater (recommended readings for more in depth perception of what the mini series accomplished) conflict suffered internal injuries caused by a concussed bomb explosion when in the death-pitch of a bloody assault charge on a Jap held position (crossing the unbearable furnace-like coral deck at 115 degree heat) Pelelui airstrip; along with Sledge (assigned to a mortar unit) who miraculously came out of his several year Asian tour without even a debilitating illness. (Sledge suffered nightmares for the rest of his life. Sledge's wife was warned never to wake him but instead just whisper 'Skedgehammer' in his ear so as not to be physically attacked.)Some say Peleliu wasn't necessary. But I disagree. The unflinching heroic demonstration of the Marines conviction of death to the last man grit brought fear into the Japs hearts and minds whom later had to face them on subsequent island campaigns. It was alleged by Jap pronouncement that the Marines were ''psychopaths and murders' taken from prisons.Marines were facing certain death, contracting festering skin sores,dysentery, endless tropical monsoon downpours filling foxholes, nauseating dehydration, land crabs, blood sucking insects, diarrhea, bone cracking feverish malaria and overall inhospitable reptilian conditions, not to mention constant "shalacking" shelling barrages and Jap bonsai charges... how these 'raggity ass' marines survived to win staggers the mind. Sledgehammer never cowered in the heat of battle. He commented once;"They taught me how to kill Japs... and I got pretty damn good at it!"Only realistic cinematic recreation can push emotional triggers to the point of unquestioning believable. THE PACIFIC accomplishes this.When Sledges home town (Mobile, Alabama) boyhood friend Sydney Fields (a Marine who served on Guadalcanal and Gloucester-and wrote his own war memoir) said in response to Sledges question, "What's it like?" "That is something you could never imagine," in a southern gentleman's drawl. Spielberg and Company's exhaustive research & painstaking re-enactment details brings that incomprehensible ''imagine' reality to be relived and respectfully given the hundred of thousands of casualties recognition; a sincere tribute and much overwhelmingly deserved acknowledgment for beating Imperial Japan is achieved.While watching THE PACIFIC I became tear eyed many many times-in fact choked up moments aplenty; gratefully humbled by the unimaginable price our Americans were willing to pay with their lives in the Pacific Theater, overall. We were on the right side of the wars cause. REF: Ack Ack Haldane. In their own right; BAND OF BROTHERS and THE PACIFIC gives us a brief true to life experience in what the WWII human condition felt like-thrust into "on the line" choices forced on everyone to make. Sobering.A gift for generations to have an enriching historical accounting as to how horrific war can be... Semper Fidelis!
bheadher Pacific is done with a similar flair that Band of Brothers possessed, but doesn't have quite the same feel to it...and there is no reason it should really...The War in Europe, and The War in the Pacific, were totally different...and the overall tempo of the Pacific War is shown pretty much the way it was, in an island hopping campaign that never seemed to end...Where BoB tells a story of deep emotional ties, developed within an Army company of Paratroopers, Pacific tells a completely different story, one of young men who made the giant leap from civilian to Marine, in a very short time. There is a certain loyalty displayed, and patriotism, but each character is portrayed as an individual...the movie dwells a lot on the inner turmoil that every soldier had to deal with...One reviewer really slammed the series, for not being realistic...I would agree partially, but this wasn't supposed to just focus on how fanatical the Japanese were. Instead, it tries to paint a broader picture of how our young men reacted to the constant fighting...Frankly, I did like Pacific, more because I did not expect it to be another movie...
feakes The Pacific does for the War in the Pacific theater. What Band of Brothers did for the European theater. It makes it more realistic. More understanding. and That's not an easy feat to do. As with Band of Brothers there is a large cast here . But the main focus is on only a few soldiers . Not surprising as the source matériel is taken Robert Leckie's Helmet for my Pillow and Eugene Sledge's In with the old Breed. Both books present a often shocking and brutal picture of the war. The Main focus is PFC Robert Leckie. PFC Eugene Sledge. And Gunny Sgt. Medal of honor Winner John Basilone. And the others caught in their orbit.Leckie's story is simply the story of a every man caught up in forces he can't control. the Horror and mind breaking conditions he faces as the war progresses almost kills him several times and yet he persists.Eugene sledge is the innocent young man 18 years old who wants to fight who wants to defend his country. And loses his innocence in the process. Sledge's story is the most emotional harrowing one here. Watching his story and the horrors he saw. Makes you wonder how he maintained his sanity. Sledge's friend Snafu is also a joy to watch as he helps Sledge maintain something of normality. In one scene when the new guys show up and snafu asks questions of them like their name sledge replies with a What Now you want to know their names . A common enough thing to happen during th war in which the seasoned vets did'not want to know the names of the new guys because they did not want to mourn them later on. The LAst main focus is Sgt. John Basilone a Marine who wins the medal of honor winner who wins it on Guladcanel after holding off a force of three thousand Japanese soldiers for three days . That story is vividly brought to life as well as his struggles in being a hero doing a War bond drive. and eventually returning to duty on Iwo Jima .The Pacific isn't perfect by any means . but in telling the story of the war. Its as good as it ever gets .