Rating
Reviews and Comments
In spite of its feminist politics and the irritating way this movie has of reducing legitimate concerns to babble that can be refuted with simple, eloquent one-liners, G. I. Jane is a thoughtful, entertaining study of women in the military. It is directed by Ridley Scott, who hasn't let up on his feminist tirades since 1991's Thelma & Louise, but at least now he's back to making good movies.
The plot involves an experiment, set in motion by a senator advocating women in the military, to let a woman enroll in Navy SEALS training, the toughest and most rigorous of the U.S. military training programs. The movie handles some complex issues that this situation implies -- dissention in the ranks and interference by politics and the media among them -- and it handles them very well. I'm not normally a fan of Demi Moore, but here she created a compelling character and was perfectly believable in a role few other actresses could have pulled off.