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Download Full Movie Windtalkers In Hindi

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Sep 18th, 2018
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  4. Download Full Movie Windtalkers In Hindi
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  55. During World War II when the Americans needed to find a secure method of communicating they devised a code using the Navajo language. So Navajos were recruited to become what they call code talkers. They would be assigned to a unit and would communicate with other units using the code so that even though the enemy could listen they couldn't understand what they were saying. And to insure that the code is protected men are assigned to protect it at all costs. One of these men is Joe Enders, a man who sustained an injury that can make him unfit for duty but he manages to avoid it and is told of his duty and that the man he is suppose to protect is Ben Yahzee. Initially there is tension but the two men learn to get along.
  56. WWII. Joe Enders, a decorated Marine who is by-the-book to a fault, is just coming back on duty (by cheating on his medical tests). "Ox" Anderson, much greener, is also getting the same new task: Protect the Navajo codetalkers (Ben Yahzee and Charles Whitehorse, respectively). While Enders is initially frustrated with his assignment, his respect grows as the codetalkers prove their worth in the brutal battle to take Saipan.
  57. Somewhat predictible plot and characters but extraordinary battle scenes and terrific acting from Nicolas Cage. Action sequences as vicious as the D Day sequence in Saving Private Ryan. The reason that this film will fail is the same reason Pearl Harbor and The Patriot failed: today's audiences have no sense of history. They haven't been taught any and they couldn't care less. Scooby Doo and Men in Black 2 are more to their liking. The mediocre reviews were predictible too. Any film that puts America in a positive light is bound to incur the wrath of the left-liberal critics. I'm sure a film about Bin Laden and his al queda murderers would have gotten two big thumbs up. This is an extremely well-made and exciting film that deserved a lot better.
  58. This is probably the WORST war film I&#39;ve ever been subjected too, if I had not been part of a group, I would have most probably walked out on the film.<br/><br/>Normally, my friends and I are very talkative and love to debate our favourite movies, Windtalkers, my GF, my two best friends and I walked out of the theater, and just didn&#39;t say anything, we didn&#39;t want to aknowledge that travesty.<br/><br/>Jon Woo, get your ass out of the director&#39;s chair when it comes to movies, you want to make a Hong Kong Blood Opera, I will not stop you, but don&#39;t insult the heroes of World War II.<br/><br/>A Native American on my discussion board said he&#39;s boycotting the movie because &quot;it&#39;s a movie where an American saves an Indian, where are the movie cameras to cover where they screwed our women, took our land, gave us smallpox and got us loaded on alcohol for a few centuries?&quot; I tend to agree with the fellow.<br/><br/>Also, I never knew one Marine could be such a deadly weapon, Cage slaps a magazine into his Thompson, burns down a half dozen Japanese RUNNING with the gun at the same time, drops the mag, puts a fresh one in, then repeats afte r awhile, a pile of dead Japanese soldiers and he&#39;s unscathed with no ammo left, fascinating isn&#39;t it?<br/><br/>semi-Romantic sideplot: Uh-Huh, helping a bitter marine with impaired hearing get back into combat so he can kill people forms a special bond of love doesn&#39;t it?<br/><br/>Acting: What&#39;s that?<br/><br/>Fight Scenes: Cinematography was allright, but the way he set it up was abysmal at times, he&#39;s got no respect for what happened in World War II, period.<br/><br/>Realism: Again, what is that in this film?<br/><br/>All in all, a travesty of filmmaking.<br/><br/>I&#39;m not a huge movie buff either, I appreciate a good action film that&#39;s a tad corny, but this, I don&#39;t want a refund on the money as much as the time that was RIPPED from me.
  59. Despite some feints in a soulful direction, the picture has none of the interior quality of a multifaceted war film like Terrence Malick's "The Thin Red Line." Woo is all about elegant surfaces, not inner conflicts.
  60. During World War II, U.S. Marine Sergeants Joe Enders (<a href="/name/nm0000115/">Nicolas Cage</a>) and Pete &quot;Oz&quot; Anderson (<a href="/name/nm0000225/">Christian Slater</a>) are each assigned to protect two Navajo Indians, Privates Ben Yahzee (<a href="/name/nm0063440/">Adam Beach</a>) and Charlie Whitehorse (<a href="/name/nm0932194/">Roger Willie</a>) respectively, recruited for the sole purpose of using their native language in the western Pacific island of Saipan as an impossible-to-crack encryption code. In reality, however, it is the code Enders and Anderson are assigned to protect at all cost, not the code-talkers. Although the story presented in the film is fiction, it is based on hundreds of Native Americans, referred to as code talkers, who used their native languages to transmit impossible-to-crack coded messages during the first and second World Wars. Yahzee manages to get a message to the flyboys, giving them the coordinates of the Japanese artillery. As they attempt to make a run for safety, they are both hit with gunfire. Figuring that they are about to be either killed or captured, Yahzee turns Enders&#39; gun on himself and tells Enders to shoot him as ordered to protect the code, but Enders refuses. Instead, he carries Yahzee on his shoulders into the safety of a dugout. Suddenly, allied planes fly overhead and strike the Japanese shooting from the ridge. Yahzee notices the wound in Enders&#39; chest and tries to comfort him. Enders admits that he didn&#39;t want to shoot Charlie and begins to recite the &quot;Hail Mary&quot; as he dies. In the final scene, Yahzee and his family stand on the top of Point Mesa in Monument Valley. Yahzee places Enders&#39; dogtags around his son&#39;s neck and tells him what a &quot;brave warrior&quot; Enders was. As Yahzee recites a Navajo prayer in Enders&#39; honor, a text screen reads: &quot;The Navajo Code was vital in the victory at Saipan and every major battle in the Pacific. The code was never broken.&quot; a5c7b9f00b
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