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A Few Good Men

  • 1992
  • R
  • 2h 18m
IMDb RATING
7.7/10
306K
YOUR RATING
POPULARITY
1,017
365
Tom Cruise, Demi Moore, and Jack Nicholson in A Few Good Men (1992)
Military lawyer Lieutenant Daniel Kaffee defends Marines accused of murder. They contend they were acting under orders.
Play trailer2:27
5 Videos
99+ Photos
Legal DramaLegal ThrillerDramaThriller

A military lawyer intends to prove that two US Marines charged with murdering a fellow Marine were only following their base commander's orders.A military lawyer intends to prove that two US Marines charged with murdering a fellow Marine were only following their base commander's orders.A military lawyer intends to prove that two US Marines charged with murdering a fellow Marine were only following their base commander's orders.

  • Director
    • Rob Reiner
  • Writer
    • Aaron Sorkin
  • Stars
    • Tom Cruise
    • Jack Nicholson
    • Demi Moore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.7/10
    306K
    YOUR RATING
    POPULARITY
    1,017
    365
    • Director
      • Rob Reiner
    • Writer
      • Aaron Sorkin
    • Stars
      • Tom Cruise
      • Jack Nicholson
      • Demi Moore
    • 524User reviews
    • 58Critic reviews
    • 62Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 4 Oscars
      • 10 wins & 30 nominations total

    Videos5

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 2:27
    Official Trailer
    A Few Good Men
    Trailer 0:27
    A Few Good Men
    A Few Good Men
    Trailer 0:27
    A Few Good Men
    A Guide to the Work of Aaron Sorkin
    Clip 5:24
    A Guide to the Work of Aaron Sorkin
    Chris Pratt and Elizabeth Banks Give Movies Lego Remakes
    Clip 1:58
    Chris Pratt and Elizabeth Banks Give Movies Lego Remakes
    Kevin Bacon Gets Quizzed On His IMDb Page
    Video 3:49
    Kevin Bacon Gets Quizzed On His IMDb Page

    Photos150

    View Poster
    View Poster
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    + 146
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    Top cast38

    Edit
    Tom Cruise
    Tom Cruise
    • Lt. Daniel Kaffee
    Jack Nicholson
    Jack Nicholson
    • Col. Nathan R. Jessep
    Demi Moore
    Demi Moore
    • Lt. Cdr. JoAnne Galloway
    Kevin Bacon
    Kevin Bacon
    • Capt. Jack Ross
    Kiefer Sutherland
    Kiefer Sutherland
    • 2nd. Lt. Jonathan Kendrick
    Kevin Pollak
    Kevin Pollak
    • LT Sam Weinberg
    James Marshall
    James Marshall
    • Pfc. Louden Downey
    J.T. Walsh
    J.T. Walsh
    • Lt. Col. Matthew Andrew Markinson
    Christopher Guest
    Christopher Guest
    • Dr. Stone
    J.A. Preston
    J.A. Preston
    • Judge Julius Alexander Randolph
    Matt Craven
    Matt Craven
    • Lt. Dave Spradling
    Wolfgang Bodison
    Wolfgang Bodison
    • Lance Cpl. Harold W. Dawson
    Xander Berkeley
    Xander Berkeley
    • Capt. Whitaker
    John M. Jackson
    John M. Jackson
    • Capt. West
    Noah Wyle
    Noah Wyle
    • Cpl. Jeffrey Barnes
    Cuba Gooding Jr.
    Cuba Gooding Jr.
    • Cpl. Carl Hammaker
    Lawrence Lowe
    Lawrence Lowe
    • Bailiff
    Joshua Malina
    Joshua Malina
    • Tom
    • (as Josh Malina)
    • Director
      • Rob Reiner
    • Writer
      • Aaron Sorkin
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews524

    7.7305.8K
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    Featured reviews

    stryker-5

    "Fast-Food, Slick-Ass, Persian-Bazaar"

    Guantanamo Bay is, apart possibly from the 38th Parallel in Korea, the only place left on earth where the US Military still confronts hostile Stalinism, eyeball to eyeball. Ceded to the USA after the Spanish-American War of 1898, Guantanamo is America's only outpost on the island of Cuba. Marines guarding the perimeter of the naval base are under immense pressure. Here in the Cold War's last remaining hotspot, they are responsible for protecting the Free World.

    A border incident has occurred. A marine sentry has fired a 'live' round in the direction of the communists. One of his colleagues has informed on him, bringing on himself a 'code red'. The 'code red' is an unofficial disciplinary measure, imposed by a marine squad when a member offends against the unit's esprit de corps. Having been gagged, bound and beaten, the marine dies at his colleagues' hands. There will now be a court-martial.

    Demi Moore plays Lieutenant-Commander Joanne Galloway, a lawyer in the Navy's Internal Affairs Department. A deft plot device has her rehearsing to herself a request to be assigned to the case as she walks across the parade ground, efficiently conveying necessary information to the viewer.

    Dan Kaffee (Tom Cruise) is a smart, flippant, good-looking young Navy lawyer. His father was a renowned jurist, and Dan feels the burden of his father's reputation. Indeed, his casual, tongue-in-cheek attitude to the law is his way of avoiding comparison with his father. You can't fail if you don't even try.

    Kaffee is assigned to defend the two marine privates accused of killing the informer. Why a junior officer should be given conduct of such a serious case is baffling, unless of course the Marine Corps wants these men to be found guilty, in order to protect somebody more important...

    Colonel Nathan Jessep is fascinating. Jack Nicholson always turns in a magnetic performance, but this one is special. He makes his character by turns urbane, self-assured, sarcastic, professional and menacing.

    Gradually, Demi and Tom start to pull together and to function as a defence team. The 'code red' doctrine is exposed as a pernicious practice.

    If the film is a stock courtroom drama pretty much like all the others, it certainly has qualities which set it apart. Three outstanding performances from the stars, Nicholson, Cruise and Moore, make it a bit special. The denouement is very hard to believe, but there are things in the film which linger in the memory and compensate for the exaggerations of the plot.

    The opening credits roll over lovingly-filmed images of a precision-drill rifle squad in action. The viewer is, from the very start, placed emotionally in the context of a severe, inflexible discipline which is both admirable and unnerving. Kaffee indulges in some sparkling legal jockeying. Though he may lack trial experience, we feel that he will defend these men ably. He is nobody's fool. The flirtatious bickering between Kaffee and Galloway is well done. Jessep's walk to the witness stand is a moment of high drama, with Nicholson filmed from a low angle, emphasising the formidable authority of the man.

    This clever, highly-polished film finally convinced me that Cruise can act. As for Demi, I am still unable to figure her out. What is it about her that remains stubbornly unsympathetic? She has abundant intelligence and talent, and is exquisitely beautiful, and yet is is impossible to warm to her. Does she get these parts because of her dark personality, or do the roles colour our perception of her?
    10thesar-2

    A Few Perfect People Make a Perfect Movie...forget "good."

    Top Ten best reasons why 'A Few Good Men' is one of the best movies ever made.

    #10 Direction: Reiner perfectly paces a 2+ hour film, giving all the cast freedom to actually act and develop the story beautifully without any scene dragging.

    #9 Cinematography and score: excellent scenes and music; making you believe you are there.

    #8 Despite your feeling on Cruise (God, I hate people who judge his couch-jumping to his talent on film) he delivers a perfect transfer from 80s hot-shot/top-gun to real acting. Watch him challenge Jessep in the closing.

    #7 It simply had the unfortunate timing of coming out the same year as 'Unforgiven' and 'Scent of a Woman' and lost best pic. Both of those were excellent movies and it would be tough for any voter.

    #6 All actors given time to show depth, creativity and originality. I absolutely loved Moore, Bacon, Sutherland, Pollak and Cruise.

    #5 In addition, even though everyone's performance was spectacular and Nicholson's was a brief one, he still stole his scenes and strongly deserved an Oscar. (I mean, c'mon…'You can't handle the truth!' scene was worth an award.)

    #4 The Dialogue. Please, the main characters were good enough at bantering back and forth, but just witness the conversation between Cruise and the newspaper man.

    #3 Chess = Courtroom. If Cruise's Kaffee performance wasn't evidence the direct correlation between chess and courtroom, I don't know what will. (i.e. Where's the mess-hall?)

    #2 How many movies since 1950 have you seen end with "The End"? They seemed to know this would be a classic, without excessive violence, language, no sex or nudity.

    #1 Everything, and I mean EVERY THING in this movie worked…but simply judge it on one of the BEST SCENES of any movie ever: "You can't handle the truth!"
    jjhoops7

    One of my favorites

    This is one of my favorite movies, and one of the best courtroom dramas ever. I can watch it over and over again. It's one of those movies that if I flip the channel and it's on, welp, that's it, I'm going to end up watching the entire thing. (Also in this category: Apollo 13. The constant? Kevin Bacon!) .. A Few Good Men is gripping. It's one of those rare films that is built almost entirely on it's dialogue, and succeeds brilliantly. The script is intelligent and thoroughly engaging. The directing is crisp and suspenseful. The performances are top-notch. Specifically, this is some of Tom Cruise's best work. There are, of course, a few unforgettable quotes, but the build up to these scenes is what makes them unforgettable. As the viewer, you feel like your fighting for justice right along side the cast. Their battle becomes yours, and the movie is all the more powerful for it.
    9rbverhoef

    Nicholson is great

    A good film is what A Few Good Men is. It is not perfect but especially the performances take this film to a higher level. Tom Cruise and Demi Moore as the 'good guys' are good, as is Kevin Bacon. But the 'bad guys' make this movie really good. Kiefer Sutherland and most of all Jack Nicholson are masterful.

    The story is interesting and well told. We all know the truth from the beginning, or we think we do, but the movie is still exciting in its own way.

    I liked this movie very much, it was never boring, and I was real pleased that some of the cliches you normally see in a movie like this one were left out. If you like a good story, good directing and perfect performances this is your movie. 9/10.
    10jhclues

    Thought Provoking Drama From Rob Reiner

    In one of the most telling scenes in this movie, Navy Lieutenant Commander Jo Galloway (Demi Moore), a lawyer who is helping to defend two Marines on trial for murder, is asked why she likes these guys so much. And she replies, `Because they stand on a wall, and they say ‘nothing is going to hurt you tonight, not on my watch'.' Which veritably sums up the sense of duty and honor which underscores the conflict of `A Few Good Men,' directed by Rob Reiner, and starring Jack Nicholson and Tom Cruise. There is a code by which a good Marine must live and die, and it is: Unit, Corps, God, Country. But to be valid, that code must also include truth and justice; and if they are not present, can the code stand? Which is the question asked by director Reiner, who examines the parameters of that code with this film, which centers on the murder of a young Private First Class named William Santiago, who was killed while stationed at the Marine Corps base at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. The case draws the attention of Commander Galloway, Special Counsel for Internal Affairs in the Judge Advocate General's Corps in Washington, D.C. Galloway, taking into consideration the impeccable service records of the two Marines charged with the crime, convinces her superiors that a thorough investigation is warranted in this case, though there are those in high places who would rather see this one plea bargained and put to rest.

    Galloway persists, however, believing that Santiago's death may have resulted from a `Code Red,' a method of disciplinary hazing employed in certain circles of the Corps, though illegal. And if this was a Code Red, the real question is, who gave the order? Ultimately, her tenacity prevails, but though Galloway is a seasoned lawyer, she has little actual courtroom experience, so Lieutenant Daniel Kaffee (Cruise) is assigned to the case, along with Lieutenant Sam Weinberg (Kevin Pollak), with Galloway, as ranking officer, to assist. Kaffee, the son of a legendary lawyer, has skated through the first nine months of his Naval career, successfully plea bargaining forty-four cases. Outwardly upbeat and personable, Kaffee seems more concerned with his softball game than he does with the time he has to spend on the job. But underneath, he's coping with living his life in the shadow of his late father's reputation, which is an issue with which he must come to terms if he is to successfully effect the outcome of this case. And on this one he will have a formidable opponent: Colonel Nathan R. Jessup (Nicholson), who commands the base at Guantanamo.

    As Jessup, Nicholson gives a commanding performance, and once he enters the film you can sense the tension he brings to it, which begins to swell immediately, and which Reiner does a great job of maintaining right up to the end. Jessup is a soldier of the old guard, a man of narrow vision and a particular sense of duty; to Jessup there's two ways of doing things: His way and the wrong way. He's a man who-- as he says-- eats breakfast three hundred yards away from the enemy, and he's not about to let a couple of lawyers in dress whites intimidate him. And that's exactly the attitude Nicholson brings to this role. When he speaks, you not only hear him loud and clear, you believe him. It's a powerful performance and, as you would expect from Nicholson, entirely convincing and believable.

    Cruise, also, gives what is arguably one of the best performances of his career as Kaffee. He perfectly captures the aloofness with which Kaffee initially regards the case, as well as the determination with which he pursues it later. Cruise is convincing in the role, and some of the best scenes in the film are the ones he plays opposite Nicholson in the courtroom, the most memorable being one in which Kaffee exclaims to Jessup, `I want the truth!' to which Jessup replies, `You can't handle the truth!' And the atmosphere fairly crackles.

    Moore is outstanding, as well, and she manages to hold her own and make her presence felt even in the scenes dominated by Nicholson and Cruise. It's a fine piece of acting by Moore, who deserves more than just a passing mention for it. Also turning in notable performances are Pollak, whose dry humor adds such an extra touch to the film, and Wolfgang Bodison, who makes an impressive screen debut as Lance Corporal Dawson, on of the Marines on trial for the murder of Santiago.

    The supporting cast includes Kiefer Sutherland (Kendrick), Kevin Bacon (Ross), James Marshall (Downey), J.T. Walsh (Markinson), Cuba Gooding Jr. (Hammaker) and Christopher Guest (Dr. Stone). A powerful drama, superbly delivered by Reiner, `A Few Good Men' is a thought provoking, unforgettable motion picture that makes you take pause for a moment to consider some things that are for the most part out of sight and out of mind. Like who is on that wall tonight, and are we safe because of him. And it makes you reflect upon some things perhaps too often taken for granted. And that's what really makes this film so good; and it's all a part of the magic of the movies. I rate this one 10/10.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The original play was inspired by an actual Code Red at Guantanamo Bay. Lance Corporal David Cox and nine other enlisted men tied up a fellow Marine and severely beat him for snitching to the Naval Criminal Investigative Service. Cox was acquitted and later honorably discharged. In 1994, David Cox mysteriously vanished, and his bullet-riddled body was found three months later. His murder remains unsolved.
    • Goofs
      A Judge Advocate has the same qualified immunity as any other attorney arguing a defense. The premise that he could be subject to Court Martial for Professional Misconduct if he accuses Jessop and Kendrick of a crime is preposterous. He could be prosecuted however for failing to do so if it was necessary in the defense of the accused and if he, in good faith, believes that they may be guilty of said crime.
    • Quotes

      Judge Randolph: [to Kaffee from the judge's bench] Consider yourself in contempt!

      Kaffee: Colonel Jessup, did you order the Code Red?

      Judge Randolph: You don't have to answer that question!

      Col. Jessup: I'll answer the question!

      [to Kaffee]

      Col. Jessup: You want answers?

      Kaffee: I think I'm entitled to.

      Col. Jessep: You want answers?

      Kaffee: I WANT THE TRUTH!

      Col. Jessup: YOU CAN'T HANDLE THE TRUTH!

      [pauses]

      Col. Jessup: Son, we live in a world that has walls, and those walls have to be guarded by men with guns. Who's gonna do it? You? You, Lt. Weinberg? I have a greater responsibility than you could possibly fathom. You weep for Santiago and you curse the Marines. You have that luxury. You have the luxury of not knowing what I know; that Santiago's death, while tragic, probably saved lives. And my existence, while grotesque and incomprehensible to you, *saves lives*. You don't want the truth because deep down in places you don't talk about at parties, you want me on that wall. You need me on that wall. We use words like honor, code, loyalty. We use these words as the backbone of a life spent defending something. You use them as a punchline. I have neither the time nor the inclination to explain myself to a man who rises and sleeps under the blanket of the very freedom that I provide, and then questions the manner in which I provide it! I would rather you just said "thank you" and went on your way, Otherwise, I suggest you pick up a weapon and stand a post. Either way, I don't give a *damn* what you think you are entitled to!

      Kaffee: Did you order the code red?

      Col. Jessup: I did the job I...

      Kaffee: [interrupts him] *Did you order the Code Red?*

      Col. Jessup: *You're God damn right I did!*

    • Connections
      Edited into The Arrivals (2008)
    • Soundtracks
      Hound Dog
      Written by Jerry Leiber and Mike Stoller

      Performed by Big Mama Thornton

      Courtesy of MCA Records

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    FAQ40

    • How long is A Few Good Men?Powered by Alexa
    • How did Markinson go UA at Gitmo and how did he get to the states?
    • Besides perjury could Kendrick be charged with any other crimes?
    • Can someone with Downey's limited intelligence be accepted into the Marines?

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • December 11, 1992 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Languages
      • English
      • French
    • Also known as
      • Cuestión de honor
    • Filming locations
      • Naval Air Station Point Mugu, Point Mugu, California, USA(Guantanamo Bay US Naval Base, Cuba)
    • Production companies
      • Columbia Pictures
      • Castle Rock Entertainment
      • David Brown Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $41,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $141,340,178
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $15,517,468
      • Dec 13, 1992
    • Gross worldwide
      • $243,240,178
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 2h 18m(138 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby SR
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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