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Matt Damon shows up late in Saving Private Ryan, but when he finally does, the film shifts in a way very few can expect. He doesn’t enter with any flashiness or weighty speeches, but instead, his presence quietly disrupts what audiences might expect. In a film that is drenched with sacrifice and the ache of war, Damon’s Private Ryan is strangely underwhelming, and truth be told, that’s precisely the point.
Steven Spielberg’s 1998 war drama has earned its legendary status not only because of its gut-wrenching combat scenes or Tom Hanks’ steady performance but because it refuses to romanticize its story.
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The film’s mission seems simple on paper where Captain Miller and his dwindling squad must find James Francis Ryan, a soldier whose brothers have all died in action. And let’s be real, we all know that many films would treat Ryan as some kind of missing messiah, one who’s noble and reflective, but in this classic, when they finally find him, he’s just a regular kid trying to make sense of a situation far beyond him.
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Damon delivers one of the film’s most strangely memorable scenes without following any script. While being seated with Hanks, he spins a ridiculous story about his brothers catching another brother in an awkward, intimate moment with a woman in a barn.
The humor is undoubtedly crude and the whole thing stumbles along like a story told by someone who knows it probably shouldn’t be shared but goes ahead anyway. And that’s why it works. It was Damon who improvised the entire thing, and it shows his awkward rambing, which is pointless. But at the same time, it’s also human, and it is what a young man might actually say in that moment to make sense of loss with laughter that barely covers the cracks beneath.
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Nobody on set expected that scene to survive the final cut. Some figured Spielberg would drop it for something cleaner which would go in tune with Hollywood’s usual idea of emotional weight. But the director saw something honest in it. He saw the harsh truth about a boy who’s too young for the weight he’s been asked to carry (Via Far Out).
In the movie, Ryan doesn’t stand out because he’s brave or wise. In reality, he was forgettable in the exact way many real soldiers were, the ones who were barely able to process the enormity of what’s happening around them.
No wonder Hanks looks so confused during the scene. He didn’t know where it was going. Maybe he thought Damon had derailed the moment, but Spielberg saw what it really was.
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