UNLIMITED STREAMING
WITH PRIME VIDEO
TRY 30-DAY TRIAL
Home > Drama >

The Pentagon Wars

The Pentagon Wars (1998)

February. 28,1998
|
7.1
|
R
| Drama Comedy War TV Movie

From the director of “Made In America” and “The Money Pit” comes a hilarious look at one of the most expensive blunders in military history. Over 17 years and almost as many billion dollars have gone into devising the BFV (Bradley Fighting Vehicle). There's only one problem. . . it doesn't work.

...

Watch Trailer

Cast

Similar titles

Reviews

Stometer
1998/02/28

Save your money for something good and enjoyable

More
PodBill
1998/03/01

Just what I expected

More
Erica Derrick
1998/03/02

By the time the dramatic fireworks start popping off, each one feels earned.

More
Mandeep Tyson
1998/03/03

The acting in this movie is really good.

More
Hollywood_Yoda
1998/03/04

"The Pentagon Wars" is the story of one of the most expensive military fiascoes in American History, the Bradley Fighting Vehicle and its long road from whence it began. Cary Elwes stars as Col. James Burton, a man sent to help finish the Bradley project at the Pentagon. However, General Partridge played beautifully by Kelsey Grammar has other plans, to send Burton packing.Burton's plan was to complete the project, which at his time of entrance had been ongoing for nearly 20 years. With every test Burton would schedule for the Bradley, the General would find a way to make it even harder to get the results Burton needed to sufficiently pass the project. In the end, Col. Burton is reassigned and taken off the project and General Patridge thinks his headache is over.That is until a Congressional investigation by the Armed Services Committee gets underway and the General is under investigation as to why the Bradley has taken over 20 years in development and still not completed. Col. Burton finally gets his tests, and the result was that the Bradley Fighting Vehicle was not suitable for military personnel, but a profit-horse for the General.It's a film that shows that the process of Democracy can sometimes work in the favor of good vs. evil.

More
papamac630
1998/03/05

Anyone who has ever been connected to the military understands the great oxymoron that it is...and probably always will be...but this movie is a classic example of how the military can run amok if it isn't closely monitored...although the humor in this movie does help to make it easier to take...there are a few notable performances that elevate this past the "TV Movie Of The Week" stereotype...Richard Schiff as the put-upon colonel who gets the Bradley project dumped on him 1st, Cary Elwes as the Air Force lieutenant colonel who ends up with the task, Kelsey Grammar as a smug and pompous Army general...all spice up the film and make it better than it should have been...at the end, there is a scene involving the enlisted men on the testing team and Elwes that could be considered semi-sappy...unless you served in the military and understand the relationship between the men and Elwes and how it evolved...then that scene is strikingly important...you will love the part about the sheep...and I can assure you, having been in the Army, yes, this is how Army people talk and act...get this movie, watch this movie, enjoy this movie...it's a nice vacation from today's headlines...and you will roll your eyes at the end...

More
eric-young
1998/03/06

First I want to stress how wonderful Kelsy Grammar is as a pompous, self important, dilettante pentagon bureaucrat general, and how a lesser actor would probably been unable to portray a character sharing so many character traits with a character he is best known for (Frazier Crane), while creating a totally distinct individual character without a scene that the other character creeps in a little. Gen. Partridge is a classic privileged twit of the first order, and I never confused him with Frasier for a second. Richard Schiff is equally good as a career officer trying to hold his wits together without jeopardizing his career. He watches his simple, common sense defense department project spiral out of control into one of the most publicized and outrageous examples of the military industrial complex run amok in recent history. What makes this so relevant today is the attitude of "we'll fix the problems in the field" and the casual disregard for life and limb of the troops who face death of injury due to the decisions of those at the highest levels of power. Our current leadership had an agenda to go to war in Iraq from it's outset, but neglected to ramp up military production of armored Hummvees, body armor, etc. in the 2 years from when it took power until the Iraq war started. Whether you support the war or not, this is troubling, especially when you take into account that large portions of our defense budget went to develop a missile defense shield system that shows little progress, does not address the most likely threat we face, but puts billions of dollars into the hands of a company with close association with a secretary of defense who told troops "you go to war with the army you have, not the army you want." Both sides of this issue can find source for outrage.

More
koolduck23
1998/03/07

i first saw this movie well before coming into the military, and while i found it very entertaining, didn't fully appreciate it. having now been 3 years in, i can very much appreciate the humor of this fantastic satire. granted, there is a fair amount of hyperbole, and no, not everyone in the military is so very inept... but simply put, a few years working with military intellegence elevates my view of this film quite a bit.

More