G. I. Jane
G. I. Jane tells he fictional story of navy topographic analyst Lt. Jordan O'Neil is chosen as a test case for the presence of women in combat where everyone expects her to fail. But she succeeds.
1 August 1929, Staten Island, New York, USA
28 March 1972, Ukraine
1949
7 December 1955, Worcester, Massachusetts, USA
16 November 1937, Louisville, Kentucky, USA
20 October 1958, Manhattan, New York City, New York, USA
15 September 1960, Roanoke, Virginia, USA
12 February 1963, Boston, Massachusetts, USA
1 January 1969, Cerritos, California, USA
24 July 1928, Kingston, New York, USA
29 March 1942, Atlanta, Georgia, USA
20 July 1960, Detroit, Michigan, USA
23 August 1972, Columbus, Ohio, USA
26 May 1959, Wisconsin, USA
9 October 1942, New Haven, Connecticut, USA
17 November 1940
21 June 1965, Ocala, Florida, USA
January 01, 2000
Rambo but with pretensions.
February 13, 2008
A rabid piece of militaristic pulp with a crucial and commercially shrewd difference: The hero, the soft clay to be molded into a steely instrument of death, is a woman.
June 23, 2002
Moore's typically prickly demeanor, often cited by her detractors as her biggest liability as an actress, actually works to her advantage here, as she unearths the voracious ambition in Jordan's soul.
June 21, 2002
Scott oversells every shot.
January 01, 2000
It ends up being an unfulfilling exercise in pseudo-feminism.
March 21, 2003
Unrealistic execution of an intriguing idea - a woman in the Navy SEALS. Moore is intimidating - and built! Viggo Mortensen gives an excellent early performance.
January 01, 2000
A simplistic, succeed-against-the-odds fantasy in Simpson-Bruckheimer mode.
August 21, 2002
Shows how zeal can be a spiritual dynamo bringing out the best that is in us.
February 26, 2003
The problem isn't that Ridley Scott is the Leni Riefenstahl of the U.S. military industrial complex, but that the man has no politics at all . . .

