Pearl Harbor at 25: Reconsidering Josh Hartnett's Most Blockbuster Moment
Michael Bay's war epic turns 25 — and Hartnett's performance deserves another look
The Biggest Film of His Early Career
When Pearl Harbor opened in May 2001, it was one of the biggest films in the world. Michael Bay's sweeping war epic had a $140 million budget and two of the most commercially appealing young stars of the era in Ben Affleck and Josh Hartnett. Twenty-five years on, it is worth separating Hartnett's work from the larger critical conversation around the film.
What Hartnett Actually Does
Hartnett plays Danny Walker, best friend and rival of Affleck's Rafe, and the film asks him to carry its emotional weight in the second half. He is warmer and more grounded than the film often gets credit for allowing, finding genuine feeling in scenes the script pushes toward melodrama. The aerial combat sequences — for which he did extensive preparation — crackle with physical authenticity.
The Performance Versus the Film
Pearl Harbor has always been a critical lightning rod and Hartnett's work got caught in the crossfire. Looking back, the performance holds up considerably better than the film's reputation suggests. He was twenty-two years old, opposite a more experienced star, under crushing commercial expectations, and he handled it with real grace.
Worth Reconsidering
With twenty-five years of distance, Pearl Harbor reads as a document of early-2000s Hollywood spectacle at its most extravagant. At its center is a young Josh Hartnett doing his best work with what he was given. As his career enters this extraordinary new chapter, it is worth going back to where it began.
Pearl Harbor at 25: Reconsidering Josh Hartnett's Most Blockbuster Moment
by The Founder
on Saturday
Pea
rl Harbor at 25: Reconsidering Josh Hartnett's Most Blockbuster Moment
Michael Bay's war epic turns 25 — and Hartnett's performance deserves another look
The Biggest Film of His Early Career
When Pearl Harbor opened in May 2001, it was one of the biggest films in the world. Michael Bay's sweeping war epic had a $140 million budget and two of the most commercially appealing young stars of the era in Ben Affleck and Josh Hartnett. Twenty-five years on, it is worth separating Hartnett's work from the larger critical conversation around the film.
What Hartnett Actually Does
Hartnett plays Danny Walker, best friend and rival of Affleck's Rafe, and the film asks him to carry its emotional weight in the second half. He is warmer and more grounded than the film often gets credit for allowing, finding genuine feeling in scenes the script pushes toward melodrama. The aerial combat sequences — for which he did extensive preparation — crackle with physical authenticity.
The Performance Versus the Film
Pearl Harbor has always been a critical lightning rod and Hartnett's work got caught in the crossfire. Looking back, the performance holds up considerably better than the film's reputation suggests. He was twenty-two years old, opposite a more experienced star, under crushing commercial expectations, and he handled it with real grace.
Worth Reconsidering
With twenty-five years of distance, Pearl Harbor reads as a document of early-2000s Hollywood spectacle at its most extravagant. At its center is a young Josh Hartnett doing his best work with what he was given. As his career enters this extraordinary new chapter, it is worth going back to where it began.
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