War Dogs (2016) Poster

(2016)

User Reviews

Review this title
299 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
8/10
Interesting Story About 2 Con Artists Selling Weapons to the U.S. Government
CANpatbuck36643 September 2016
Warning: Spoilers
I was pretty stoked to see War Dogs. Jonah Hill has been on a roll lately and having an unconventional director like Todd Phillips telling a story about 2 guys lucking into a giant contract to arm the U.S. government was intriguing. I'm also a big fan of Lord of War, I think it's really underrated (one of Nicolas Cage's best movies) and I was excited to see a similar story. After having seen War Dogs, don't expect something mind-blowing but it does have an interesting story to tell.

*Minor Spoilers Ahead* David Packouz (Miles Teller) is working as a massage therapist in Miami. He's working to try and start a family with his girlfriend Iz (Ana de Armas) but he hasn't really found any purpose in his life. He gets stoned and tries to get through his day and his clients sexually harassing him. He also makes a stop as he's trying to sell bed sheets on the side and its not going well. The next day he has to go to a funeral for a friend and he runs into his best friend from middle school Efraim Deveroli (Jonah Hill). The two were trouble makers in their younger years and its implied that their parents separated them against their will. Efraim is happy to see David and they catch up a little bit. Efraim laughs at what David is doing and tells him he had a falling out with his last business partner (his uncle) and he moved back to Miami to set up shop for himself. He deals in small time contracts supplying arms to the U.S. government. David is impressed but is against the war. They go to score weed and when they get ripped off Efraim pulls out an assault rifle from the trunk of his car. It certainly causes the dealers to scatter and he invites David to his office to explain his job to him a little better the next day.

The plot of this movie has a really interesting hook. AEY (the company David and Efraim eventually form) finding contracts to fill that major suppliers ignore and making bank off of them is fun to watch. Efraim and David aren't completely incompetent but they're dishonest and they don't understand their place in their industry. How they could appear legitimate enough to be so seriously involved with Uncle Sam is baffling. It's a so strange it's true story and they include some interesting bits about how the U.S. government supplied their army in the Iraq war. War Dogs doesn't have too many twists and turns that you don't see coming but you'll find yourself wanting to know where David and Efraim will go next. It's not as informative as The Big Short for example but you do pick up some good nuggets along with following a pretty engaging story.

I mentioned that Todd Phillips was a strange choice considering how serious the material is. The trailers for War Dogs are misleading, the movie is more of a drama than a comedy but I enjoyed it all the same. It did have the sense of humour that Todd's movies tend to have (on the dark side and sometimes vulgar). The movie was also a lot more stylish than I expected it to be. It's well filmed and there was more effort put into creating an attractive movie as opposed to just relying on the material. The soundtrack was also good but it was a little on the nose and they really blared it at points. It didn't make me mad but the lack of subtlety with it was a little annoying.

Jonah Hill continues his recent run of excellent work. It's not my favourite performance of his but he brings life to this movie and although his character is a scumbag, he's the proficient one and how he's able to navigate through his job is one of the big reasons War Dogs works. Miles Teller is also good, he's playing the more normal of the two characters and he's less in your face. Bradley Cooper really does excellent work in the short amount of screen time he gets. He's menacing and I was happy to watch him play a different part in this movie. His character was more in the background and I liked that, any other movie would have made him an over-the-top villain. He was an appropriately ruthless businessman and it seemed more real. It was nice to see Kevin Pollak again and I also liked Ana de Armas in her role, she's definitely a supporting part and while she's not given a whole lot of backstory, she's fine in her part.

Another small thing I liked with War Dogs is that the ending didn't go the typical route. This is a rise and fall story and it looks like you're going to get that same old ending. War Dogs sidesteps that and instead of scolding David for doing what he did, they go for something more open-ended. The moral of the story is that what they did was wrong but instead of beating you over the head with it, they pose the question that will David stick to his new found moral code when presented with temptation? It was different and it upped the grade of the movie for me.

I thought War Dogs was an interesting movie that did a good job presenting the story of these 2 guys in a different way. It follows a familiar arc and you can guess where the story is going to go but the acting and the new angle it presents on arms dealers help compensate. I still prefer Lord of War but this was a solid movie and a good way to close out the summer movie season.
39 out of 41 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Is that even legal??
SpoilerAlertReviews1 September 2016
Hangover/Due Date director Todd Philipps makes a film base on the true story of young, entrepreneur gun-runners David Parkouz and Efraim Diveroli who managed to secure a ridiculous contract to supply arms to the afghan army via the pentagon.

Miles Teller plays the struggling and ambitious David who bumps into his childhood buddy Efraim played by Jonah Hill who is somewhat of the opposite, a loose cannon, fearless and a little trigger-happy. Now, Efraim has found himself a little niche in the market, the market of arms dealing and strikes up small deals with the US military. David needs a job to support his expecting girlfriend, the stunning Ana de Armas who looks a little like Penelope Cruz only more beautiful and has one of those exotic accents. Efraim sees an opportunity for David and the two team up to what leads to the deal of the century for all parties involved.

Now, the film has plenty of other film references most notably Scarface, even one of the promotional posters is a respectful nod to the DePalma/Pacino's film. But it's actually Lord of War Efraim is a huge fan of in real-life and it's probably more like Lord of War than Scarface, yet it has tinge of Pain & Gain, another crazy true story movie. Maybe it's Miami? But it has that vibrant and funny yet serious storytelling style that makes the film almost unbelievable and shocking.

The rest of the cast does include Bradley Cooper who also produced the film, playing the harden, borderline war-criminal, pretty much the Branson of the arms market and someone you don't really want to be messing with. There's Kevin Pollack playing the bankroll and an awesome cameo of venture capitalist playboy millionaire Dan Bilzerian.

It's accompanied by a great soundtrack with tracks from 50cent, Beastie Boys, Iggy Pop, UB40 and CCR but the awesome score threw me completely thinking it was Harry Gregson-Williams or Steve Jablonski, no, it was Cliff Martinez with those ambient sounds.

The film is highly entertaining, funny in parts but this is not a comedy; its perfectly paced with some great scenes like the duo gun-running across the triangle of death and some nice camera work. However it's not to epic portions, not that it should put anyone off watching this, it's still a very watchable and enjoyable film and I don't think they could have done it any better.

Running Time: 8 The Cast: 8 Performance: 8 Direction: 8 Story: 8 Script: 8 Creativity: 8 Soundtrack: 9 Job Description: 8 The Extra Bonus Points: 5 for a slick story, good editing and a great score/soundtrack to boot.

78% 8/10
60 out of 66 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
It's good. Better than "fine" but not "great".
bodeanura21 August 2016
Right off the bat the best part of this movie is the acting: Teller and Hill have great chemistry on screen. Jonah does a particularly good job at playing the "guy you love to hate". I can't attest to the faithfulness of their portrayal of the real life people since I don't know anything about them. The rest of the cast does a great job as well.

The marketing for this movie was, unfortunately, deceitful: the trailer made it out to be this upbeat, funny, over the top comedy - which it's not. In reality the movie has a much slower pace, not a lot of situational humor and is certainly not filled with hilarious quips (the bulk of which are in the trailer). This is not to say that the movie was bad or not at all funny, it just wasn't what I expected (and I am sure I'm not alone).

My final critique will go unnoticed for the majority of viewers but I found it personally offensive so I have to report it: some of the movie takes place in Albania, only the set for Albania is actually Romania. Which is fine, I understand that they probably did this for practical reasons and as a Romanian movie goer I just have to accept it (we all recognized it immediately though). However, at some point in the movie an "Albanian" woman says something, only she says it in Romanian. This may not seem like much but it totally took me out of the movie and ruined the experience for me. I find it completely unacceptable that they could not hire an Albanian to say those few lines. The two languages might seem interchangeable to the rest of the world, I am sure, but that was very much NOT the case for me and everyone else in the theater.

I am a paying movie goer as well and I expect to be just as entertained as everyone else. This is, of course, not the first time that I've seen this in a film. But when a producer does something like this it shows me that they don't respect their movie, so they can't expect me to.

My rating, however, is not based on this final bit of criticism. I gave it a 7/10 for slow pacing and lack of humor, which is the opposite of what I expected.

I'd still recommend it, just don't expect to be blown away.

After watching it for a second time I decided to change my original rating from 7/10 to 8/10, mainly because the acting is just great and I respect the fact that the movie made me think about it and made me want to see it again.
211 out of 248 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
war is a business, and we're the commodity
lee_eisenberg30 November 2016
I don't know enough about the original story to determine the accuracy of Todd Phillips's "War Dogs", but it's an enjoyable movie. The tricks pulled by David Packouz and Efraim Diveroli just go to show that the people in the business of weapons have no principles (even violating arms embargoes). They're out to make money by any means necessary. To be certain, the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq proved quite profitable for weapons manufacturers. The mistake that Packouz and Diveroli made was getting caught.

It's not a masterpiece, but it does a respectable job showing the degrees to which these types go to enrich themselves. A very slimy world indeed.
63 out of 74 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
Better than I expected.
0U21 February 2020
War Dogs is based on a true story where two twenty somethings sell arms back to the US government. Jonah Hill and Mills Teller put up a great performance, they made the story very appealing. The storyline had plenty of connections with Scarface, from locations to tag lines. It was a good movie with a great cast. Definitely worth watching.
46 out of 53 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
Entertaining true-life tale that doesn't have the nerve to go all the way
tomgillespie20023 December 2016
There were many shocking and quite unbelievable stories to emerge from the U.S. during the Bush/Cheney administration, but none were quite as fantastical as the overwhelming position 20-something minor-league arms dealers Efraim Diveroli and David Packouz found themselves in. Their tale is utterly preposterous, but entirely true, although events naturally have been dramatised for the film. Like something straight out of a culture-clash comedy from the 1980s, Diveroli and Packouz landed a $298 million Pentagon contract involving over a hundred million rounds of ammunition. The mishandling of the deal and the pair's subsequent falling out was covered in a Rolling Stone article by Guy Lawson, and later in a book by Lawson entitled Arms and the Dudes.

David Packouz (Miles Teller) is a pot-smoking massage therapist working in Miami, Florida, dividing his spare time between his girlfriend Iz (Ana de Armas) and trying, somewhat unsuccessfully, to flog the high-quality Egyptian bed-sheets that he has invested in to retirement homes. At a funeral, he encounters his old best friend Efraim (Jonah Hill), who has made a success in Los Angeles trading in arms on eBay. They rekindle their friendship, despite Efraim proving himself to be a unpredictable loose-cannon, and David eventually joins his chum at his new business venture AEY. With the war raging in Iraq, the government has set up a website offering contracts for weapons and military equipment. David's job is to pick up the crumbs; those small orders the big companies ignore.

There are, as Efraim informs David, a hell of a lot of crumbs, and the two are soon making their fortunes while Efraim indulges in everything from prostitutes to copious amounts of cocaine. The two grew up loving Brian De Palma's Scarface (1983), and imagery from the film adorns AEY's office walls. The same unquenchable greed that possessed Al Pacino's character seems to drive Efraim also, and it isn't long before you can see the inevitable downfall on the horizon. Director Todd Phillips, on the back of those terrible The Hangover sequels, seems to be intent on making a semi-serious film, and wisely takes inspiration from some of America's great dark-side- of-the-American-dream cinematic works, such as De Palma's aforementioned drug-lord saga and Martin Scorsese's Goodfellas (1990). But, unlike Adam McKay's The Big Short from last year, Phillips doesn't have the nerve to go all the way.

Where McKay exquisitely balanced comedy, drama and satire to dazzling effect, Phillips seems too intent on focusing on the goofball antics of its hapless anti-heroes to deliver any real bite. This is a story that highlights many things from the government's irresponsible approach to warfare, the dangerous practice of allowing just anybody to legally deal in arms, and the devastating effects of blind ambition, but these themes are only touched upon. Packouz is essentially our lead character, but he feels like little more than an exposition tool, with de Armas getting the thankless role of the boring partner who must warn her hubby whenever his actions lead him into the dark side. Thankfully, Jonah Hill is a tour de force, cranking his loathsome character up to 11 without ever feeling unbelievable, proving once again what a versatile actor he is becoming. If you're looking for an intelligent satire of a fascinating recent event, then you probably won't find it here, but as a piece of entertainment, it certainly delivers.
36 out of 46 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Seems like an odd pairing of Miles Teller and Jonah Hill in a war pic, but real great pic.
subxerogravity19 August 2016
Similar tone to Whiskey Tango Foxtrot, It was a lot more serious than what I expected after seeing the trailer. It's not the first time I've seen either Miles Teller or Jonah Hill in something more dramatic, I just may have assumed their first real outing together in a movie would be more of a straight up comedy.

Semi based on a true story of two young guys from Miami who became arms dealers, Miles Teller narrates the story of how David Packouz teamed up with this best friend from the tenth grade, Efraim Diveroli and got in too over his head.

I was expecting more comedy from the two rather than just two young stars being entertaining. The movie is not disappointing with the team of Teller and Hill. If you are a fan of either one of these guys you are going to love the film.

Jonah Hill gives a performance that seem to be something between what he did in 21 Jump Street and the Wolf of Wall Street. The part just fits him so well as he plays a con man who tries to be everyone to everything on the outside but is really evil in the inside, and no matter how much you discover about his evil, Hill still makes the character likable.

But the likability is more met for Miles Teller, who Hill is supporting with greatness. Teller plays the sympathetic role of a man whose lost in his life at a time when his girl is about to have a baby, and he needs the money.

Director, Todd Phillips weaves a story about how people have profited from the war, and done bad things to profit from a bad war. It's almost like the Big Short, with it's explanation about how the arms game really works, but I always felt that the actual story was getting overshadow by the personalities of the two stars worthy of watching.

But overall, It is a very funny film and very entertaining, thanks to the Hill, Teller combo

http://cinemagardens.com
23 out of 30 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
great work from Jonah Hill
SnoopyStyle25 March 2017
It's 2005 Miami. David Packouz (Miles Teller) is struggling as a masseuse. He reconnects with childhood friend Efraim Diveroli (Jonah Hill). Efraim has been buying guns from police auctions and reselling them online. There is a new government clearing house website for military contracts and he's looking to pick up some of the crumbs. David joins him after getting girlfriend Iz (Ana de Armas) pregnant. With dry cleaner Ralph Slutsky (Kevin Pollak) providing the capital, they start getting some contracts. Eventually, they meet unsavory arms dealer Henry Girard (Bradley Cooper) and get a massive Afghan deal.

This is unlike Todd Phillips' more famed comedic movies. It's not big laughs but it is a lighter look at a darker world. Jonah Hill gets chubbier to fit this character perfectly. He is a douche but he is not a threatening douche. He has just enough crazy but not uncontrolled. His chemistry with Teller is terrific. This is a compelling story told in a compelling and engaging way. It's great all around and an overlooked gem.
22 out of 24 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
Formulaic
sfx963 September 2016
War Dogs

One could sum up this movie in a single word, "formulaic."

If you've ever watched any of the movies about West Coast drug-dealing of the 80s (Blow), or any movie with Benicio Del Toro in it (Snatch, Traffic), you will quickly recognize one or more of the stylistic techniques stamped all over this movie:

  • Off-camera narration by one of the protagonists talking about how smart or stupid they were at this point in the adventure.


  • Wackiness in the face of danger.


  • Celebration of the stoner mentality.


  • Overhead shots using helicopters or drones.


  • Overuse of circular camera dolly around two subjects quibbling to suggest "tension."


  • Cool music.


Oddity

------

Choice of music. The setting for the movie is the early 2000s, and these guys are in their 20s, yet the music is a collection golden oldies from 60s. Is that the music the producers like? Is it aimed at the suspected target audience?

Nitpicks

-------

The lead character says "Bro" more times than any character in any movie in history. Guess that's a refreshing change from "dude." LOL.

Aside from all that, I still liked the movie, just thought is was hackneyed and formulaic.
71 out of 108 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
Eye opening - very interesting and funny look at arms dealing
phd_travel1 September 2016
The story is eye opening, relevant and very clearly told with a humorous tone through the serious subject matter. This is based on a true story with some fictionalized elements to make it entertaining. A massage therapist links up with a childhood friend who is a small time arms dealer. Very interesting to get a look at the legal but morally questionable world of arms dealing. I thought this would be a juvenile buddy movie with a bit of war thrown in but it isn't.

Jonah Hill has some funny lines and he does a great job with the over the top character but he can be subtly sinister when he needs to be. Miles Teller plays his character sympathetically and I liked him here. Quite different from the rather annoying characters he usually plays. Bradley Cooper who produced the movie and has a small but pivotal role and he is effective as an arms dealer.

Quite a transporting experience as the action takes you from Miami to Jordan and Iraq with some funny situations there and Albania.

Watch this movie. It deserves to do better than it has so far.
99 out of 122 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Ever seen Lord of War or Wolf of Wall Street or maybe even both?
bklgreene5 December 2023
Ever seen Lord of War or Wolf of Wall Street or maybe even both? This film was quite enjoyable at the most basic level. There were some interesting ways the story was told as well which certainly spiced something's up and had you caring about the characters in the movie. Obviously the point. The biggest flaw I have with the movie is I know with certainty it was release after the two films mentioned in the title and it reminded me of one of those two films multiple times in the movie. Not a pure rip off by any means but I don't know that I've ever watched a film and been reminded of two totally unrelated movies ever as much as this experience. Worth a watch but be prepared for Deja vu.
2 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Exciting, funny, and illegal
skullhead73921 July 2020
The movie starts off narrated, interesting and very cohesive. They do a great job of introducing characters and foreshadowing what is later to come. The characters are very well developed and their relationship especially at the start is funny and light hearted. The acting is great if you like films like "superbad" and "neighbour's".

The plot itself is based off a true story and is really interesting from start to finish. The action is great with slight comedy here and there. It has very wolf of wall street vibes and is a thrill ride.

When Bradley Cooper gets involved there is a lot of mystery and suspense. You really don't know whats gonna happen and your interest becomes even greater. The contract part was extremely predictable. The ending was very weird, without spoiling it, someone goes to jail for what seems a really short amount of time considering the crime. Then someone gets given money which is somewhat satisfying. But you really don't get a feeling of revenge or justice.

Summary: Overall I was really surprised at how good this was. Its not just your average comedy. It has great characters, acting, story, and is a blast to watch. Highly recommended.
14 out of 15 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Shocking True Life Story
lavatch28 December 2016
Warning: Spoilers
Based on the Guy Lawson Rolling Stone article "Arms and the Dudes," the film "War Dogs" tells the story of two young hustlers in Florida who maneuvered their way to lucrative government contracts for the sales of arms to the United States government for use in the wars in the Middle East.

Efraim Diveroli and David Packouz were the two wheeler-dealers who negotiated a $300 deal for guns and bullets for the Afghan National Army worth approximately $300 million. Their unsavory and illegals deals included such outrageous acts of purchasing Chinese ammunition, then removing the bullets from the cases to give the appearance of legitimacy.

Eventually, the two arms dealers were busted by the FBI, yet given amazingly lenient sentencing. Perhaps this was the reason that the filmmakers did not take the subject very seriously. As interpreted by Jonah Hill and Miles Teller, the relationship of Efraim and David is portrayed in a whimsical manner with David as excessively naive and the Efraim with a puckish charm.

But despite any shortcomings, the film is an eye-opening experience about the troubling way in which the government used tax payers' dollars for unlimited munitions contracts. The fact there was limited oversight in the transactions in an extremely disturbing in allowing two sleazy amateurs to work the system for their financial benefit.
3 out of 4 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
3/10
A dull movie with no new ideas
Rendanlovell20 August 2016
Miles Teller and Jonah Hill in a movie about international gun runners? Sign me up! Is what I was saying going into the film. Coming out was a different story. As is the story with many movies so far this year, 'War Dogs' is a boring mess of a movie. If you saw 'The infiltrator' or read my review you know I hated that film. And for the same reasons I hate that film, I hate this one. Except this one has the nerve to be nearly identical to the far superior 'Wolf Of Wall Street'. This movie hits all the same beats and story lines that Scorseses near masterpiece does. The difference between the two is that this one is neither funny nor entertaining to watch.

It is quite possibly one of the most dull, lifeless, boring films I have seen this year. Every time something funny or stressful could have happened it just cuts to another scene. Or, even more upsetting, ques up a voice over track from Teller. It blatantly skips over possible character building scenes in favor of out of place, lazy voice overs.

I don't think I would be lying when I say that there is more voice overs here than in 'Knight of Cups'. Which literally had not script. Why the choice was made to do this really comes down to laziness. There is no other reason to explain why it couldn't just let scenes play out. Not only was there countless voice overs that robbed scenes of tension, but it also did chapter kind of things.

Every twenty minutes or so a black screen with a sentence appeared on screen, describing what we were about to see. Just like the voice work, it didn't seem to have a point to it. It just felt like it didn't know how to transfer to the next scene so it threw in these random titles. They came from no where and served literally no purpose other than to tell you what was going to happen before it did.

But what was I expecting? Right from the first few scenes this film has jarring tones that clash with each other from scene to scene. The first shot of the movie is a tense scene involving a kidnapping and it cuts immediately to a stylized, scene with a pop song playing over top. It is a completely jarring tonal shift that is off and on through out the film. And, much like 'Suicide Squad' it has no idea how to place a song in a scene.

The songs it chooses are good on their own but, the scenes they are used in makes me hate them. All but maybe once were they used appropriately. It's sad that films have decided to just throw in pop songs to try and get a bigger audience instead of making a score that works in the film. It never helps the story move forward, they are all just kind of there.

That being said, nothing could have saved this story. As I said, it's exactly like 'Wolf of Wall Street'. But it's not near as fun nor does it have the interesting character study that 'Wall Street' has. It has Jonah Hill and Miles Teller furiously trying to make the dialogue they have sound organic. Yet, it's so poorly written that these Oscar worthy actors come across with little chemistry and sound like morons while doing it.

There isn't much that redeems this film. It's mostly well shot and these two performances aren't to bad. Other than that everything fails. It's poorly written, horribly boring, offers no interesting characters, and fails to deliver any comedic moments. It's one of those movies that thinks it's so much better than it is. It wants to be great and desperately tries to be but falls flat on its face.
30 out of 65 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
A success story that makes you think and reflect
Gordon-111 September 2016
This film tells the story of a message therapist who goes broke because his business venture of selling luxury bed sheets does not work out. He is recruited by his childhood friend to make big money by bidding on military contracts.

"War Dogs" touches on a mysterious aspect of the world which is not often talked about. Therefore, the story is already intriguing, and I want to find out what happens to the two guys. What they do might seem questionable to some, and their subsequent success gives much food for thought. The ending makes you think and reflect on the fine line between right and wrong; and how people can get caught up in their successes. Another god aspect is that despite the subject matter, the story manages to be funny yet still remains dramatic enough to be taken seriously. I enjoyed watching it.
32 out of 46 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
"This is about being pro-money!"
classicsoncall27 February 2021
Warning: Spoilers
I watched the movie and still can't believe it's based on a true story! How these two guys with no background or expertise managed to become big time, international arms dealers is beyond comprehension. Now I've seen Jonah Hill in a number of vehicles but never this huge, that was rather shocking. This was my first look at Miles Teller, he had a nice All-American look, but both guys looked so young to pull off what they were doing that it defied belief. The biggest disconnect occurred late in the film when it was stated that it would take fifty men eight weeks to repack a hundred million rounds of Chinese ammunition to sell back to the United States government. But then Efraim (Hill) didn't pay the box guy the paltry hundred grand that he asked for! That right there demonstrated what a creep Efraim was, when he stood to rake in millions on the contract. Besides the fact he was going to screw his partner. And then he only got a four year prison sentence while Dave Packouz got merely a seven month house arrest! Just goes to show, if you want to screw the government and pretty much get away with it, do it in as big a way as possible.
4 out of 6 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
Somewhat Funny, but Riddled with Clichés
tjgoalie1323 August 2016
War Dogs seems like a film with a ton of potential, because of the people involved in it, but lacks the spark to make it anything other than okay. The problem seems to be that the crew wanted to tell a true story and make the audience laugh but didn't fully understand, given the source material, how to do that. War Dogs is intermittently funny, but relies too much on clichés, and fails to pack any kind of a punch. If you're trying to figure out what kind of a movie this is, picture The Big Short with a slightly lesser known crew.

War Dogs did have a lot going for it, namely the talents of Miles Teller and Jonah Hill, as well as the direction of Todd Phillips (The Hangover Trilogy.) Above that the trailers for this film looked fairly funny, but note that almost all of the genuinely funny parts of the movie are contained in the trailer. That being said the film often tries to take a more dramatic approach, and fails to ever generate a hilarious moment. That being said both Miles Teller and Jonah Hill's performances are great in this film.

While Teller and Hill are great in this film it really feels too familiar, as if you've seen it before. That shouldn't be the case with a film about two men in their twenties running guns in the Iraq War. That being said it ends up making it's characters into clichés, and tells an overdone storyline about rags to riches idiots, and betrayal of best friends. It really is a shame because, as I mentioned before, this film could've been very original and interesting, but ends up being like most other films of today, more recycled than anything else.

Above that the film fails, at what it ultimately wants to do, which is pack a punch. It seems self evident watching it, that the director and writers wanted to expose a scary problem in America, and at the same time generate a few laughs. In that sense it's a lot like The Big Short, however War Dogs fails to ever do what it strives to do. Where The Big Short was informational, funny, and in the end terrifyingly honest, War Dogs is not. This movie may have a moment or two, but seems to miss it's intended mark on both ends, in that it's not as funny as it'd like to be nor is it as damning.

In the end War Dogs feels like more of an average film, which is disappointing because it had the potential to do everything wanted to. If you expect a great comedy, it's not really that, if you're expecting a great look at true and terrifying events that led to two young immature men running guns for America, it's not really that either. War Dogs is funny, well acted, and has a story to tell, but relies on clichés, stereotypes, and doesn't offer very much thought provoking material. This is a good film if you want a few chuckles but it doesn't supply a ton of laughs.
8 out of 16 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
a well made war comedy
seshasai-tris16 August 2016
Todd Philips has done a fine job in creating a nice War Comedy. There haven't been many decent war comedies in the recent times.

War dogs is about two young kids who exploit the not-so-good government initiative in becoming arms dealers, in the process getting greedy and in trouble. Based on a real life story of David Packouz and Efraim Diveroli, who won a $300 million contract from the Pentagon to arm America's allies in Afghanistan, the director has done a great job in converting a dry story into an entertaining movie.

Jonah Hill keeps up the comedy of the film through out. Miles Teller, an under rated actor proves yet again that he can be a great actor in this one. Bradley Cooper's character is well crafted and is entertaining till the end.

The supporting characters have done a decent job.

This wouldn't be on top movies but sure is a fun watch in summer.

my rating 7/10
6 out of 12 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Wolf of wall street meets Lord Of war
monismilan0627 August 2016
If you like wolf of wall street, I believe you are gonna like this movie too, even though it not have all the funny moments. The plot is similar a nice guy (Teller) find a way to make money doing stuff located on the line of legal and illegal. The music was well chosen for every scene, acting (specially from Hill and Cooper) was outstanding. On the contrary if you though that Wolf.. didn't show enough all the people who suffer from their actions, and that the movie glorifies bad actions and the eternal search for money, you will not like this movie. It all depends in the end of your personal standards of what can be made fun of, and what subjects are too controversial (in this case, war, guns and arms dealers) to have a good time with.
109 out of 141 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
selling weapons is not nice kids business
dromasca26 August 2016
'War Dogs' is the second movie 'inspired by a true story' that I have seen in the last 24 hours, and is actually the one that I liked better (the other one being 'The Infiltrator'). Its film-making style (director Todd Phillips) and its comic thriller approach fit well the month of August. If I am to chose one easier entertainment with no super-heroes or space-ships, and yet a film that raises serious issues this summer, I will recommend it (but of course, I did not see them all).

I am not sure if 'War Dogs' will make it to too many Jewish film festivals, but the two lead characters are Jewish or better say one nice Jewish kid (acted by Miles Teller) and a one Jewish trouble-maker kid (acted by Jonah Hill) who meet about one year after high-school. The bad guy is already in weapons trade and he easily convinces the good guy to become an associate. It's the Bush-Cheney period, the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan need arms, and the government seems to have privatized at least part of the guns and ammo supply chain and opened it to free competition. A golden business opportunity for many, including the couple of young entrepreneurs who start small, win bigger and bigger contracts, break more and more moral rules, laws and trade restrictions, move into bigger offices and houses, and ask themselves less and less questions about what is right and what is wrong to do in such business.

The film is fun to watch. There is no great characters development, the characters are from the start to the end what they seem to be when they show up for the first time, but they are enjoyable, and Jonah Hill at least does here his best role on screen to date. Bradley Cooper also shows up in a small but key supporting role. Story telling has pace and humor, although I could have given up the off-screen story telling which tries to provide the personal and somehow moralizing perspective of the good guy. It seems to be a returning fashion in the American cinema which I frankly dislike. It usually hides lack of skills in setting the contest and telling the story, but it was not the case here.

It's the final titles before the credits, the one that usually relate the characters on screen with the reality of the 'true story' and show the real faces of the 'heroes' that we have seen acted on screen, that made me click. So these guys, who sold lethal weapons that caused death in the battlefields of Iraq or Afghanistan, who tricked the government and the individuals fighting for what they believe is a just cause got a few years in jail (one of them) and a suspended sentence (the other one) and they are now selling their story in books and movies? Something is broken in our justice systems if the 'war dogs' selling illegal weapons to the conflict areas are not punished. This film is not a masterpiece, but at least it causes to some of us to ask the right questions.
7 out of 16 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Great movie
jackspiceporter3 May 2022
I struggle to find movies that are decent nowadays and put off watching this movie. Regret putting it off for so long because it was great. 10/10 is a super high rating for me but I feel it deserves it based on all the different emotions it gave me throughout the movie. War Dogs had it all, some really funny moments, sad moments and I even felt anxious at times which never happens for me during movies. The fact that it's loosely based off a real story makes it that much better. I will strongly recommend this movie, It was very refreshing.
7 out of 7 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
worth watching
mm-3924 August 2016
Warning: Spoilers
Non politically correct, has warts and all. Watching War Dogs is like watching a train wreck. You know the train wreck is going to happen, you just cannot help watch the wreck out of a morbid curiosity. War Dogs has stereotypes, ugly characters, and even nastier real life experiences. War Dogs is a buddy story of, David Packouz and Efraim Diveroli. When someone has a friend who a bad influence you know there is going to be trouble. No matter what the good intentions are you know the bad influence can not help but be himself. Everyone looks bad in War Dogs, governments, people and arms dealers. I felt the slime just ooze out! The moral message of easy money with fast people comes with a price hits hard! A good moral in of family/wife over money. War Dogs is directed at a fast pace, which transitions from sub story to sub story well. The Packouz/Diveroli characters create a synergy which drives a character driven story about decidence and greed. 7 out of 10
3 out of 5 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
"loosely" based on the true story
johnsmithjanuary-2008123 August 2021
Although many of the aspects of this movie are fabricated it's still a interesting look into the workings of the government, military, and privatized arms dealers.
7 out of 7 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
War is a funny business
coreyjdenford27 August 2016
This is my review of War Dogs (spoiler free).

*** (3/5) Cast: Jonah Hill, Miles Teller, Ana de Armas, Bradley Cooper.

Plot: Two men who were best friends in high school decide to reunite and become arms dealers, but as their life they get a deal that could possibly be the best deal for them, however this deal could be a big mistake for these two.

War Dogs is sold as a comedy. Yet it is the most serious adult war comedy out there. After director Todd Phillips' made an impact in the comedy world with the Hangover trilogy yes even the clunky, unfunny sequels. This is quite a challenge for him as he tries to create grown-up material without a naked Ken Jeong leaping on one of their faces. Yet he succeed with a sort of funny adult war story that has a few laughs sprouting every now and then but it is mostly serious. David Packouz (Teller, still keeping his master performance from Whiplash in play) is a man who wants more from his life rather than being a salesman of expensive Egyptian sheets and his life as a licensed masseuses, until he sees an old friend from high school Efraim Diveroli (Hill) and they get back together again. David and Efraim are now friends again and Efraim introduces him to his job and he is instantly jealous of his life. Although this feels much like the Wolf of Wall Street especially with the narration this mainly comes from David this makes the whole experience a whole lot better.

As the story goes on the comedy standards get better and funnier and this also makes for fun dialogue, mainly said by the two lead characters. However the two lead actors are both ten years older than the characters they are playing yet with their riveting performances you seem to forget that. It's also filled with pretty good action although not as good as a Scorsese masterpiece but the pacing feels the same in this and the pacing is spaced out to show that the director certainly didn't rush to make this feature. There is pretty good action not much in terms of violence but mainly from the use of guns, and also the funny one liners each of the lead roles come out with. In one scene when the two friends go to Albania a country literally torn by war they have to deliver a ton of ammo in a very short time but as this goes through David has to stay there alone while, Efraim gets drunk and also he does the most sinister thing ever which will probably end their friendship, however Efraim realizes his mistake and tries to make it better, without success. There are even emotional standards in the film. Although filled with masculinity apart from the one woman Ana de Armas' Iz who is David's girlfriend but that is all the femininity that this film has to offer so mostly men. Especially with Bradley Cooper's top arms dealer Henry Girard's random outburst "See this is why I like arms dealing - no women." Although apart from all the funny outbursts this peace of comedy is mostly serious, with a much similar tone to Whiskey Tango Foxtrot another comedy about a war torn country and the lead role goes there to try an sort things out. So essentially based on the Hangover series and yes even the Wolf of Wall Street, this shows to be a film that is based around war time can serious and funny at the same time.

Verdict: Buoyed by riveting performances and pretty action, this proves that Todd Phillips can do grown-up material without a naked Ken Jeong.

6/10 Rude and laugh out loud funny.
4 out of 8 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
4/10
Another disappointing summer movie
Fiurilli22 August 2016
In 'War Dogs' we follow Miles Teller and Jonah Hill as two young men trying to make money from the war in Iraq by selling weapons to the US army. The movie is directed by Todd Phillips who is better known for the 'The Hangover' trilogy.

Right of the bat the movie tries to seem more clever than it actually is. Via a flash-forward that shows one of the main characters in a predicament the movie tries to create a sense of tension that would otherwise have been non-apparent. This quickly fades as the story is very predictable with characters that are not all that interesting considering their motives are never properly explained and very flimsy. Throughout the movie is some narration paired with title cards indicating different chapters. Most of the times the chapters do not seem any different which made these title cards unnecessary and it is clear they were just added afterwards in as a last ditch effort to make the movie more interesting. Halfway trough the movie almost comes to a grinding halt and from thereon out it never really manages to get the viewer's interest back.

The directing was very bland, considering not one scene was shot in a very interesting fashion. Often times it seemed as if the movie does not really know what it wants to be. Sometimes character's respond to a certain situation in a comedic fashion while other times the tone is shifted to a more serious one. Todd Phillips never really tries to mix in some of his own style and with another director the movie would've probably turned out roughly the same.

The only redeeming factor of the movie are the actors themselves as they did a decent job at portraying their characters, though ultimately not one performance was very memorable. In the end 'War Dogs' joins the 2016 collection of disappointing summer movies.

My rating: 4/10
24 out of 52 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
An error has occured. Please try again.

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed