Kelly's Heroes
Kelly's Heroes is an offbeat 1970 film starring Clint Eastwood and Donald Sutherland about a group of renegade U.S. Army soldiers who attempt to steal a cache of gold from behind the German lines during World War II. The screenplay was written by highly-respected British film and television writer Troy Kennedy Martin.
Related Topics:
1970 - Film - Clint Eastwood - Donald Sutherland - U.S. Army - Soldier - Gold - German - World War II - British - Television - Troy Kennedy Martin
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Tagline: They set out to rob a bank... and damn near won a war instead!
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Directed by Brian G. Hutton, who also directed the 1968 WW II drama Where Eagles Dare, the film is virtually a who's who of Hollywood at that time - in addition to Eastwood and Sutherland, it starred Telly Savalas, Don Rickles, Carroll O'Connor and (Harry) Dean Stanton with a small part by Gavin MacLeod (who would later play Captain Stubing on The Love Boat).
Related Topics:
Brian G. Hutton - Where Eagles Dare - Telly Savalas - Don Rickles - Carroll O'Connor - (Harry) Dean Stanton - Gavin MacLeod - The Love Boat
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It stands out from many earlier and contemporary war films in both its cynical tone and mixed conflict as well as in its technical detail.
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While it's technical realism pales in comparison to Spielberg's Saving Private Ryan, it drew and continues to draw attention for it's props and historical details. At a time when some of the best selling war movies used anachronistic tanks, for example, in Herose the Tiger tanks (which play a key role in the climax of the film) are, if not the real thing, well done mock-ups down to smoke dischargers in the right place and the appearance of anti-magnetic mine paste visible in close ups. The "Tigers" were in fact based on Russian T-34 tanks. Exactly the same thing was done 28 years later to reproduce a Tiger for the filming of Saving Private Ryan.
Related Topics:
Spielberg - Saving Private Ryan - Tiger - T-34
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The film can be said to walk an interesting tightrope. There is a great deal of comedy and satire in the film ranging from a nod to Eastwood's spaghetti westerns in a "High Noon" standoff with a Tiger tank to Carroll O'Connor's satire of Patton. It should not be overlooked that this film was produced and released during the Vietnam War and in the same climate as M*A*S*H, and some see the theme of cynicism as a commentary on the then current American war.
Related Topics:
Spaghetti western - High Noon - Patton - Vietnam War - M*A*S*H
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The Heros are presented as competent, if weary veterans; their motivations are more cynical and self serving than patriotic. That is a central plot line of the film: the Heros are attempting the "perfect crime" while their superiors are both indifferent to the protagonists and mistake thier motivation for patriotic gung ho. Highlighting this theme is the range of antagonists the Heros face. The Heros' antagonists are often men in the same uniform. There are combat scenes with the German enemy to be sure, yet, ultimately, it is in common cause with a man in an SS uniform that the last conflict is resolved.
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This unique film has something of a cult status in the US and it's reputation is helped along by a bevy of readily quotable lines. The more notable being from Sutherland's character, Oddball, a slightly anachronistic "hippie" tank commander in a reprimand to his mechanic "None of these negative waves, Moriarity."
Related Topics:
Anachronistic - Hippie
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The Main theme of the movie is "Burning Bridges", preformed by Mike Curb Congregation.
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