Reviews now on YouTube! | Watch here

Larsen On Film

  • Review Library
  • Subscribe
  • Why I’m Wrong
  • About
  • Books

The Great Santini

 

Robert Duvall’s Bull Meechum—or “The Great Santini,” as he calls himself—marches through life as if he was at war in The Great Santini. The problem is, it’s 1962 and Meechum is stuck training Marine pilots on a South Carolina military base during peacetime. To compensate, Meechum turns his home into a training ground, as well, barking orders at his wife (Blythe Danner) and four children, leaning especially hard on his teen son, Ben (Michael O’Keefe), until something breaks. Based on a Pat Conroy novel and directed by Lewis John Carlino, The Great Santini comes across as clumsy in many of its scenes, especially the attempts to weave in a socially conscious subplot involving a local Black family. Still, you have a literally commanding Duvall at the center of it, wearing that uniform like a second skin. He’s more than willing to play Meechum as a monster of a father, while also giving hints, in small moments, that this is a man who has had tenderness of any kind ground out of him by a macho, mercenary system. 

(3/29/2026)

Recent Reviews

Exit 8 (2026)

Thriller Rated PG-13

“… a thriller in which the space itself is the bad guy.”

Silent Friend (2026)

Drama Rated NR

“… can only be described as botanical: slow, serene, sensuous.”

No Regrets for Our Youth (1946)

Drama Rated NR

“Kurosawa nudged Japan both politically and aesthetically into a new era.”


Search Review Library

Sponsored by the following | become a sponsor



SUBSCRIBE


Sign up to receive emails

Sign up to get new reviews and updates delivered to your inbox!

Please wait...

Thank you for signing up!




FOLLOW ONLINE



All rights reserved. All Content ©2024 J. Larsen
maintained by Big Ocean Studios

TOP