Forrest Gump

The world will never be the same once you've seen it through the eyes of Forrest Gump.

8.5
19942h 22m

Production

Logo for Paramount Pictures

A man with a low IQ has accomplished great things in his life and been present during significant historic events—in each case, far exceeding what anyone imagined he could do. But despite all he has achieved, his one true love eludes him.

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Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: Official 25th Anniversary Trailer

Official 25th Anniversary Trailer

Thumbnail for video: Trailer

Trailer

Thumbnail for video: "Life is Like A Box of Chocolates" Full Scene

"Life is Like A Box of Chocolates" Full Scene

Thumbnail for video: "New Year's Eve Party" Full Scene

"New Year's Eve Party" Full Scene

Thumbnail for video: "Football" Clip

"Football" Clip

Thumbnail for video: "Bubba" Clip

"Bubba" Clip

Thumbnail for video: "Shrimp is the Fruit of the Sea" Clip

"Shrimp is the Fruit of the Sea" Clip

Thumbnail for video: "Momma"Clip

"Momma"Clip

Thumbnail for video: Forrest Gump "Now Playing" (1994) original theatrical trailer [FTD-0339]

Forrest Gump "Now Playing" (1994) original theatrical trailer [FTD-0339]

Thumbnail for video: “Forrest Gump” (1994) Could John Krasinski Love Jenny? | The Recast

“Forrest Gump” (1994) Could John Krasinski Love Jenny? | The Recast

Cast

Photo of Tom Hanks

Tom Hanks

Forrest Gump

Photo of Robin Wright

Robin Wright

Jenny Curran

Photo of Gary Sinise

Gary Sinise

Lieutenant Dan Taylor

Photo of Sally Field

Sally Field

Mrs. Gump

Photo of Michael Conner Humphreys

Michael Conner Humphreys

Young Forrest Gump

Photo of Hanna Hall

Hanna Hall

Young Jenny Curran

Photo of Haley Joel Osment

Haley Joel Osment

Forrest Junior

Photo of Siobhan Fallon Hogan

Siobhan Fallon Hogan

School Bus Driver

Photo of Sam Anderson

Sam Anderson

Principal Hancock

Photo of Peter Dobson

Peter Dobson

Young Elvis Presley

Photo of Elizabeth Hanks

Elizabeth Hanks

School Bus Girl

Photo of Christopher Jones

Christopher Jones

Boy with Cross

Photo of Sonny Shroyer

Sonny Shroyer

Bear Bryant

Photo of Brett Rice

Brett Rice

High School Football Coach

Photo of David Brisbin

David Brisbin

Newscaster

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Reviews

L

llgolden

10/10

Best movie ever.

B

bluedevil667

10/10

This is the best movie ever!

G

CinemaSerf

7/10

"Forrest" (Tom Hanks) isn't the sharpest tool in the box, but he has an heart of gold and an unparalleled sense of human decency. These laudable characteristics are the result of an upbringing by his mother (Sally Field) which has seen him grow from the bullied young boy from Alabama who discovers that he can run a little faster than your average bear, to a sort of national hero. We learn all this from him as he sits at a bus stop chatting to an initially disinterested nurse, and then to a collection of fellow travellers who learn of his drafting to Vietnam. That's where he meets "Lt. Dan" (Gary Sinese) and his new best friend "Bubba" (Mykelti Williamson) and where his innate sense of what's right saves lives and earns him the plaudits of a grateful nation (and gets his butt-ox on television too!). His army days taught him much, but nothing so useful as a skill at table tennis. Soon on the American ping-pong squad in China, he manages to get an endorsement that allows him to reunite with the hippified, now paraplegic and disillusioned "Lt. Dan" and make a mint shrimp fishing, before returning home to face some fairly predicable family trauma. All of this has been happening against a story of a longing for his one true love. "Jenny" (Robin Wright). They've been friends since childhood, but she has a wandering spirit and though his love was requited, it wasn't what he needed. Might there be a future for them, ever? Robert Zemeckis uses a chronology of events in the USA, starting in the 1950s, to create a template for the story of a man who lived through racial tension, war, bullying and emerged the stronger; the more honourable and despite his low IQ was quite capable of putting those more intellectual around him to shame. The photography that cleverly superimposes him into television broadcasts works entertainingly as he gazes bemusedly out onto a audience that is increasingly warming to him. I will admit, I struggled a bit with the running segment towards the end, but Hanks epitomises determination and integrity with Eric Roth's adaptation of the Groom novel allowing plenty of philosophical food for thought whilst having a laugh at scenarios both serious and ridiculous. Like life itself, this film is like a box of chocolates and though I didn't love them all, there were plenty to enjoy and reflect upon.

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