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Father Sky

The book Father Sky was made into the movie Taps.

Which one did you like better, the book or the movie?  There are 9 votes for the book, and 7 votes for the movie.

Book details for Father Sky

Father Sky was written by Devery Freeman. The book was published in 1979 by William Morrow & Co. More information on the book is available on Amazon.com.

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Movie details for Taps

The movie was released in 1981 and directed by Harold Becker, who also directed The Black Marble (1980), Vision Quest (1985), The Big Town (1987) and Mercury Rising (1998). Taps was produced by 20th Century Fox. More information on the movie is available on Amazon.com and also IMDb.

Actors on this movie include George C. Scott, Timothy Hutton, Ronny Cox, Sean Penn, Tom Cruise, Brendan Ward, Evan Handler, John P. Navin Jr., Billy Van Zandt, Giancarlo Esposito, Donald Kimmel, Tim Wahrer, Tim Riley, Jeff Rochlin, Rusty Jacobs, Wayne Tippit, Jess Osuna, Earl Hindman, James Handy and Steven Ryan.

 

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Memorable mostly as the film that introduced filmgoers to Tom Cruise and Sean Penn, both of whom nearly steal the film from its nominal star, Timothy Hutton. Hutton, fresh from his Oscar for Ordinary People, plays the top cadet at a private military schoo... Read More
Memorable mostly as the film that introduced filmgoers to Tom Cruise and Sean Penn, both of whom nearly steal the film from its nominal star, Timothy Hutton. Hutton, fresh from his Oscar for Ordinary People, plays the top cadet at a private military school run by George C. Scott. When the announcement is made that the school will be closed, the inmates take over the asylum with military precision. Hutton is caught among his sense of duty to mentor Scott, the rabid militarism of cadet Cruise, and the rational arguments of Penn, as Hutton's best friend. Then a cadet kills one of the cops responding to the crisis, and suddenly this game of playing soldiers takes on a warlike atmosphere. But director Harold Becker can't hold it together; Hutton isn't up to carrying the film, and the tension rapidly drains from the Darryl Ponicsan script. --Marshall Fine