1. Hart's War (2002) - Financial Information - The Numbers
Hart's War (2002) ; Theater counts: 2,459 opening theaters/2,459 max. theaters, 3.4 weeks average run per theater ; Infl. Adj. Dom. BO, $35,395,526 ; Domestic ...
Financial analysis of Hart's War (2002) including budget, domestic and international box office gross, DVD and Blu-ray sales reports, total earnings and profitability.
2. Hart's War - Box Office Mojo
Missing: run theatre
3. October Extras 2: Hart's War (2002) - Horror Movie A Day
Missing: run | Show results with:run
OCTOBER 30, 2008 GENRE: OCTOBER EXTRAS 2 SOURCE: DVD (OWN COLLECTION) LAST SEEN: 2002 (THEATRICAL) My streak of seeing all of the master’s (...
4. Germans aren't the only enemy faced in 'Hart's War'
Feb 14, 2002 · As the movie opens, Hart has been captured, interrogated, and sent to Stalag VI in Belgium. He is a senator's son, destined for a desk job. At ...
3 Stars Directed by Gregory Hoblit. Starring Bruce Willis, Colin Farrell, Terrence Howard, Vicellous Shannon, Cole Hauser, Marcel Iures and Linus Roache. Music by Rachel Portman. Running time 125 m…
5. Hart's War (2002) - Filmaffinity
Hart's War (2002) ; Running time: 125 min. ; Screenwriter. Billy Ray. Screenwriter · Terry George. Screenwriter · John Katzenbach. Novel ; Music. Rachel Portman.
Genre: Drama | Synopsis: In the last months of the Second World War, american administrative Lieutenant Hart (Colin Farrell) is captured by German forces during the Battle of the Bulge. Sent to a German Stalag Prison camp ...
6. "Hart's War" never quite satisfies - OnMilwaukee
Feb 15, 2002 · Three days is all it takes for Hart to break down and point to a place on a map. POW Hart is then sent to a stalag in Germany. There he ...
Bruce Willis' new pic, "Hart's War," while entertaining throughout and never once boring, never fully captivates and fails to leave much of an impression thanks to an overly saccharine conclusion and too much sermonizing.
7. HART'S WAR - Movieguide | Movie Reviews for Families
Missing: run theatre
HART’S WAR, starring Bruce Willis, may be the first truly excellent American movie of 2002. It also is one of the most Christian movies of the year so
8. Telling a POW's Tale - Los Angeles Times
Feb 15, 2002 · As Nicholas Katzenbach walked onto the film set of “Hart's War,” the memories of his prisoner-of-war days during World War II were brought back full force.
Movies* John Katzenbach's novel, 'Hart's War,' was loosely about his father's WWII experiences; the film is yet another step away.
9. Hart's War (2002) - Christian Spotlight on the Movies - Christian Answers
Missing: theatre | Show results with:theatre
Submit your VIEWER COMMENTS
10. Hart's War - Box Office Prophets
Hart's War. Release Date: February 15, 2002 ... Yeah, we blame you for Colin Farrell just a little bit. ... Based upon the success of past films, studios ...
One-stop shopping for all current movie information needs, including front line analysis, a comprehensive database, up-to-the- minute release dates, and a huge trailer section, in addition to movie and DVD reviews, annual movie awards and numerous other exclusive features.
11. Hart's War - Entertainment Weekly
Feb 6, 2002 · The television ads for Hart's War, starring Bruce Willis and his elegant facial furrows, would lead you to believe that it's yet another in the ...
Hart's War
12. Hart's War - AV Club
Mar 29, 2002 · Director Gregory Hoblit (Primal Fear, Frequency) and his screenwriting team suggest that black men were fighting for liberties that weren't ...
Hart's War
13. "Hart's War" | Salon.com
Feb 15, 2002 · "Hart's War" opens with a fast, tense sequence that leads you to expect you're in for a gripping World War II escape drama.
Put Bruce Willis and this bewildering World War II movie in front of the firing line.
14. The Iraq War: The Movie (And Why It Is Such a Dud)
Otherwise recent war films have all, to one degree or another, been box office disappointments: World War II retakes like Hart's War (2002) and Wind Talkers ( ...
Can't you feel the war already slipping away, just like Saddam Hussein or Mullah Omar or Osama Bin Laden? How briefly triumphal it was, the Iraqis falling before our forces, our tanks heading north, our missiles hitting home, much of it in real time on our own private screens. There was the heroic rescue of Jessica Lynch, the toppling of Saddam's statue, our generals grinning behind that marble table in one of Saddam's palaces. How victorious we were – and then came the looting and s