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Windtalkers Tamil Pdf Download

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Sep 18th, 2018
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  4. Windtalkers Tamil Pdf Download
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  48. In the close quarters and brutal fighting of the World War II Pacific Theater, the U.S. Intelligence services desperately seek a fool-proof encryption code, immune to the code breakers of the Japanese. The answer is soon discovered in the ancient language of the Navajo. Enlisted into the Marine Corps are several "Windtalkers" who are deployed to frontline areas in the Pacific, to use their language as an impossible-to-crack secret code. A drawback, however, is that the U.S. military soon puts forth a directive that the Windtalkers must never be captured alive by the enemy, so additional Marines are assigned to make certain that this directive is carried out to the letter.
  49. Two U.S. Marines in World War II are assigned to protect Navajo Marines, who use their native language as an unbreakable radio cypher.
  50. Ok, before I went to see this movie, I listened to what the critics had to say. The guys on Entertainment tonight trashed it saying it should definitely be on the NOT HOT list. Then, the local movie review guy from my town gave it 2 stars out of 4, and a lot of people on IMDb don&#39;t seem to like it either.<br/><br/>Anyway, keeping in mind that sometimes, critics are idiots (which is true!), I gave this movie a shot and watched it.<br/><br/>The ending was kinda slow, the first battle was sorta lame and unconvincing, but the storyline picked up well. Why you say?<br/><br/>Here are the reasons why this movie was good...<br/><br/>-The acting was surprisingly good. Nicholas Cage gave an above average performance, and the star was surprisingly Adam Beach!! He acted really well in portraying the young Navajo, and so did the whitehorse guy. Christian Slater also had a good part.<br/><br/>-John Woo came up big! Ok, i&#39;ve watched all his movies, Face off, broken arrow, mission impossible 2. These are pretty entertaining movies, B movies, with lots of fun and action, but no real substance. Yet, John Woo finally gives us some substance! Yay! good job john woo. He actually gave us a historical part of history that hardly anyone knows about, and then, we do find out about the battles in Saipan and the navajo code. once again, congrats to Director woo.<br/><br/>-This movie is historical. I thought John Woo would overdue his comic-violence, but it didn&#39;t turn out that way. Instead, we get a good feel for the Navajo codetalkers, and we are able to see exactly what these guys did.<br/><br/>-The war scenes are intense and you are exilirated! These war scenes are heavy and very realistic.<br/><br/>-Ending ends very nicely. I won&#39;t give anything away, but John Woo really does show us the cultures of the Navajo.<br/><br/>very good movie, just not as good as Saving Private Ryan and We Were Soldiers (which i give 10 starts both), so I give Windtalkers 9 out of 10 stars!<br/><br/>-
  51. though some of the battlescenes could be better for a john woo movie this was far better than &quot;black hawk down&quot; or &quot;we where soldiers&quot;. i think even better than &quot;private ryan&quot;; (spielberg always messes up the end of his movies)<br/><br/>cause it&#39;s about the relationship of men and not just about goin&#39; somewhere killing some nips, gooks or krauts in shiny pictures.
  52. Well matched both to the material and each other, Cage and Beach capture Windtalkers' true struggle, the fight to hold on to values like honor, friendship, and tenderness in an environment that demands otherwise. This is as much a Woo trademark as the carefully orchestrated gunplay.
  53. 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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