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Old 26-04-2005, 08:40 PM   #21 (permalink)
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From my point of view the worst has to be U571. Not because it's a bad film just for the sheer arrogance of Hollywood rewriting history. I actually had an argument with an American over this who swore blind it ws 'factual' so I told him to have a look at the credits at the end that list the chronological captures of Enigma and ciphers.

'Saving Private Ryan' is quite good (if you can overlook Hollywood dissing the Brits again (Tom Hank's and Ted Danson's conversation about Caen and about Montgomery being over-rated etc).

'The Longest Day' was a damned good attempt to give a balanced picture. Pity they didn't have the technology and budgets available today.

Memphis Belle has to be amongst the best efforts too.

What about the best WW2 Film they haven't made yet? As an Ulsterman I'd suggest 'Colonel Paddy' - an action- bio flick about Blair-Mayne (DSO an 3 bars etc etc) who took over the SAS after Stirling was captured. Then again being from Ulster I'm a bit biased towards him anyway!
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Old 26-04-2005, 08:54 PM   #22 (permalink)
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I voted the "dont care for ww2 films", films like Bridge on the river kwai, the odd great one like Band of Brothers I can sit through.

Generally though I tend to sit through a film going "that never happened", "He was not there at that time" or "hold on until I check that post on ww2talk to see if that correct!"

Factual documentary preferably about the holocaust, ghettos, and so on... thats where my preference lies.

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Old 26-04-2005, 09:49 PM   #23 (permalink)
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I know Major John Gorman - he said that the assault across the river at Nijmegen (a la BTF) was not that far from reality. John Gorman won an MC for 'ramming' a Tiger, was immortalised in front of the 'Victor' and later became head of a public housing agency here.
A gent .. looked a but like Santa without the beard. Hard as nails.
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Best WW2 film? 'The Wooden Horse' is wlays worth an afternoon on the sofa with cuppa and good B&W movie on.
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Old 27-04-2005, 02:54 PM   #24 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally posted by BrianP@Apr 14 2005, 10:16 AM


Guilty Pleasures

- 1941 - Inaccurate and all, but pretty funny

1941 has one point of accuracy: the panic state in Los Angeles right after Pearl Harbor and Lt. Gen. Joseph Stilwell being in command and being calm. The panic was immense. One congressman hysterically called up the White House, saying the Pacific Coast was indefensible, and demanded battle lines be established in the Rockie. Stilwell was in command at the time, before being sent back to China, and his diaries reveal his rage at both the low state of preparedness and the high panic. "What a wild, farcical, bundle of crap G-2 has put out," he wrote at one point. The panic reached its nadir in February 1942, when AA guns defending Los Angeles opened fire on what were thought to be enemy planes. They filled the sky with noise and lead, which set off more AA batteries opening fire, but no Japanese planes raided America that evening. A Japanese submarine did shell Santa Barbara, blasting a fuel pump, and my web page describes another hare-brained scheme to have Lt. Nobuo Fujtia fly a seaplane (from a submarine) over Oregon and drop bombs on forests to start a massive forest fire. This stunt failed, and nobody was hurt. But the panic state remained in California, and ultimately helped fuel the internment of the Nisei.
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Old 27-04-2005, 06:15 PM   #25 (permalink)
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My votes: Patton, Longest Day, Battle of Britain, Das Boot and The Cruel Sea. The Cruel Sea provides a fascinating counterpoint to Das Boot. Das Boot even has a scene which echoes (perhaps deliberately) the terrible moment when Jack Hawkins depth-charges the sailors in the water because there may be a U-Boat underneath.
I don't like Bridge On The River Kwai, primarily because it presents a story which is not a patch on the real one which inspired it, that of Colonel Toosey, who acquired a moral ascendancy over his captors such that one converted to Christianity after the war and wrote to him for forgiveness. It's an amazing tale which is well told in a Timewatch documentary which is sometimes repeated on UK TV History etc. Also the elite commando group spend much of their time moving through the hills on the skyline, as my old dad, a Burma veteran never tired of pointing out.
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Old 24-05-2005, 10:29 PM   #26 (permalink)
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The best war films were, with a few exceptions, those made in the 1950s: Ice Cold in Alex, Sea of Sand, Dambusters, The Cruel Sea, Battle of the River Plate, Wooden Horse et al. Exceptions include Longest Day, Battle of Britain (the aircraft are the stars) and Tora, Tora, Tora. Can't think of anything after Tora that was really worth watching.
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Old 25-05-2005, 03:23 AM   #27 (permalink)
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The "Best" film hasn't been made, I hope. I say that because I'm still hoping somebody is going to make a really first rate film. With all it's faults SPR is probably as close as it has really come. I've spoken to a lot of vets, both of WWII and more current wars, who say it is the one that comes closest to showing what war can really be like.

Others bests films are:

The Great Escape
Patton, also flawed but very good.
Das Boot
The Longest Day
Battleground
The Cruel Sea
Twelve O'Clock High
Battle of Britain

Guilty pleasures. (I like who thought of this, it's a good category)

Kelly's Heroes, see my signature line
Operation Petticoat. More based on fact than many people give it credit for. For instance the bit about sinking the truck kind of happened.
The Dirty Dozen
1941. also based very much on fact, see Kiwiwriters post. Plus the M3 Lee is one of my favorite tanks.


NO redeeming social value at all.

Pearl Harbor
U-571
Escape. That's the POW soccer game one. Michael Caine should be ashamed of himself for being in that POS.
The Thin Red Line. One of the very few war movies I've never been able to sit all the way through.
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Old 29-05-2005, 11:23 AM   #28 (permalink)
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Great subject.....Many great personal opinions show the diversity of preference just among this group.

The best for me was/is:


Real Life:

The "World at War" Docmentary

On Land:

The Desert Rats (Richard Burton)
Hell to Eternity (Jeffrey Hunter)

On Sea:

Cruel Sea
San Demetrio, London (Mervyn Johns & a young Gordon Jackson)
The Enemy Below (Robert Mitchum / Curt Jurgens)

Intrigue/Covert:

Where Eagles Dare
The Man Who Never Was.

In The Air:

Tora Tora Tora
Dambusters


Geoff
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-------------------------------------------------------
My Avatar is the memorial to the 22 Commonwealth Coastwatchers at the Temakin Cemetery on Betio (Tarawa Atoll) who were beheaded by the Japanese on 15th October 1942. http://www.dva.gov.au/media/publicat...mem_beito.html

"You were given the choice between war and dishonor.
You chose dishonor and you will have war."

(Winston Churchill made this prophetic pronouncement in a House of Commons speech in 1938, just after Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain signed the Munich agreement with Hitler. Chamberlain returned from Germany with the signed agreement in hand, proclaiming that "peace in our time" had been achieved. Churchill attacked Chamberlain's "politics of appeasement" in this and many other speeches.)

What did the Australians do in ww2 and other conflicts? Check out this site:
http://www.diggerhistory.info/00-pag...ster-index.htm
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Old 03-06-2005, 12:32 AM   #29 (permalink)
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Please check my comments/review of the film Hope and Glory in the Uk Home Front section.
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Old 03-06-2005, 03:40 PM   #30 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally posted by halfyank@May 24 2005, 10:23 PM


Operation Petticoat. More based on fact than many people give it credit for. For instance the bit about sinking the truck kind of happened.

The USS Bowfin was one of a number of submarins that "sank" a land vehicle. It torpedoed a pier with a crane and a bus sitting on it and smashed all three. Her victory total includes the crane, pier, and bus. I believe USS Wahoo also fired a torpedo in the Philippines that shot up on land and blasted open a truck, which was the cause of this incident. The actual "Petticoat" evacuation took place in the Solomon Islands, and involved USS Nautilus.
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"We shall fight on the beaches, we shall fight on the landing grounds, we shall fight in the fields and in the streets, we shall fight in the hills; we shall never surrender." -- Winston Churchill.

"I am not a hero. The heroes are all dead. I am a survivor." -- Sgt. William Guarnere, Easy Company, 506th Parachute Regiment, 101st Airborne Division.

Check out my little contributions to World War II history at my web pages:

World War II Plus 55

or

http://davidhlippman.wildbillguarnere.com
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