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Drama Thriller TV series War

The Day After (1983)

The effects of a devastating nuclear holocaust on small-town residents of eastern Kansas!

No matter how poorly the effects or the acting, or how graphic and extravagant the visuals were all these films serve one purpose. To educate us on the value we have as creatures that not only have control over our individual destinies but the destiny of our world and the lesser species. To show us what the cost would be, no matter how graphic and obscene. The Day After, Threads, Testament, The War Game, Failsafe, Wargames, and all the other media programming that has shown us the horror of nuclear war. Each has its strengths and flaws, its highs and lows, but the message inherrently remains the same.

Directed by Nicholas Meyer
Starring: Jason Robards, JoBeth Williams, Steve Guttenberg

Categories
Action Adventure War

White Ghost (1988)

Rambo clone!

When the American soldiers went home from Viet Nam (that’s how they spell it) in 1969, not everyone got out in time. The highly skilled soldier Steve Shepard aka “White Ghost” (William Katt) has lived out in the jungle for 15 years, and has even made a nice tree-house for himself and his Asian girlfriend Thi (Rosalind Chao), who is pregnant with his child. After all this time, the Americans discover that he’s still out there, and decide to send out a team of mercenaries to finally rescue him and learn what he knows from his stay in the jungle for all those years – he had gathered a large amount of dead American soldier’s dog-tags, and now their families will finally know what happened to their missing relatives.

Directed by BJ Davis
Starring: William Katt, Rosalind Chao, Martin Hewitt

Categories
Adventure Drama War

The Fall of The Roman Empire (1964)

A great civilization is not conquered from without until it has destroyed itself from within!

In the year 180 A.D., the emperor Marcus Aurelius, who led his Roman legions against the Germanic tribes along the Danube frontier, has been at war for 17 years and lived under very difficult conditions…

Now he invited every governor, every consul and every prince in the whole empire for one particular purpose… All responded to his call coming from the deserts of Egypt, from the mountains of Armenia, from the forest of Gaul and the prairies of Spain…

Action-packed look at the beginnings of the fall of the Roman Empire. Here is the glory, the greed and grandeur that was Rome. Here is the story of personal lust for power, and the shattering effects of that power’s loss. Here is the tale of the plight of a people living on the brink of a political abyss.

Directed by: Anthony Mann
Stars: Sophia Loren, Stephen Boyd, Alec Guinness

Categories
Drama War

North West Frontier (1959)

Original Uncut British Release of one of the best adventure movies

In northwestern India soon after the turn of the 20th Century, Moslem rebels seek to kill a six-year-old Hindu prince to end his family line. Captain Scott of the British Army is ordered to get the prince out of the region safely. Adventure ensues as Scott sneaks the child away, through Moslem-held territory, by train. Also on board are the boy’s American governess, an arms merchant, a cynical reporter, and two upper class Britons.

Directed by: J. Lee Thompson
Starring: Kenneth More, Lauren Bacall, Herbert Lom

Categories
Drama War

The Trench (1999)

A fine and evocative war film with an excellent cast!

Not a conventional war movie but a VERY British close up at the inter-personal relationships during WW1 before the Battle of The Somme. The Battle is known for the senseless sacrifice of such a great number of Irishmen – from the 36th (Ulster) Division and the 16th (Irish) Division. Not much new here that wasn’t in “All Quiet on the Western Front” or “Paths of Glory” or “Gallipoli”, but some lessons need illustrating for new generations.

This moving, heart rendering, eye opening and though provoking directorial debut is a little gem that somehow got hidden away without any publicity and was mostly shown on a satellite movie channels.

Two things seem obvious as cultural distortions in this film. The first is the casual, almost disrespectful attitude and unruliness of the soldiers. This isn’t something that happens just once or twice, but frequently. While all military throughout history likely has had some humor and playful banter among troops at times, it seems to be more of the rule among this platoon of Brits. The second is in the language. Again, all military throughout history likely has had some use of foul or rough language. But here, it seems that this 1916 platoon of British soldiers has adopted early 21st century British street talk (is it really that vulgar among society in England today?). And, I doubt that the British may always have had more vulgar mouths than we Yanks. But, by the standard of this film, the Brits make the service times of my family, from WW II through Vietnam, seem like baby talk.

Written and Directed by William Boyd
Starring: Daniel Craig, Cillian Murphy, Paul Nicholls and Julian Rhind-Tutt

Categories
War

Tornado: The Last Blood (1983)

Better-than-average Pasta taste of the Vietnam War

During the Vietnam war, an army sergeant rebels against his tyrant commanding officer, whilst they are cut off by the enemy in the jungle. Things get worse for all of them after that.

There are a number of memorable, stand-alone scenes throughout the picture. One, in which the Captain and his cohorts discuss finding Maggio – only to have him jump over their heads with a dirtbike – is simultaneously funny and grim. The discovery of a suicide and subsequent hand-to-hand fight is also very well-constructed.

“Tornado” is an un-original action piece with enough good performances and interesting situations to keep any war film fan engaged, though not on the end of their seat. Worth a look.

Directed by Antonio Margheriti
Starring: Giancarlo Prete, Antonio Marsina, Luciano Pigozzi
Country: Italy

Categories
War

REMEMBERING THE FALLEN (2017)

A French veteran of World War II remembers a particular day of his life…
An immersive and visceral cinematic experience capturing one man’s epic adventure of survival and the extraordinary power of human’s spirit

Remembering The Fallen
Short film Written & Directed by Julien Grincajgier
With Laurent Delay Jean-Pierre Dauphin Anthony Vuignier Marie Legault Alexandre Triaca

Categories
War

A Time of Vultures (2012)

A drifter walks into a saloon to settle a score.

“A Time of Vultures” is a modern Sauerkraut-Western web series produced by Lopta Film Movie Stuff, Camelot Berlin & Movie Do

As of now “A Time of Vultures” is being developed as a web series and “Spare the Bullets not his Life” is the Teaser episode.

Director: Adolfo J. Kolmerer
Writers: William James (story), Adolfo J. Kolmerer (story) (as Adolfo Kolmerer) | 2 more credits »
Stars: Eskindir Tesfay, Erkan Acar, David Masterson

Categories
War

Strike Commando (1987)

Forget Stallone and Arnie, Reb Brown is the King!

While operating behind enemy lines, Sergeant Mike Ransom learns of a Russian presence in North Vietnam. Ordered to obtain proof of this discovery, Ransom returns to enemy territory but is captured and subjected to a variety of tortures. Eventually he escapes to continue his mission despite being hampered by a traitor in his own ranks.

YES!!!!! THE ultimate Commando film!!!! Forget Stallone and Arnie, Reb Brown is the King, “there’s no one who can touch him, not in your whole damn army!” This has all the necessary ingredients for a top notch piece of one man and a lot of weapons against an entire country of soldiers and mercenaries action!! Betrayed and left for dead by his superiors, our Reb sets out to escape from the POW camp and is taken in by some friendly locals who proceed to be brutally murdered by Russian monster Chacuuda!! After and excellent finding the bodies of massacred friends and screaming NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO to the sky scene, our hero sets off on the trail of Chacuuda and manages to kill an entire army before defeating the evil villain in hand to hand combat! This rules!!!! Watch it!!!

Director: Bruno Mattei (as Vincent Dawn)
Starring: Reb Brown, Christopher Connelly, Louise Kamsteeg

Categories
War

Churchill’s Leopards (1970)

Brittish commandos behind Nazi lines

The mission: The Brittish have to carry out a plan hatched by Churchill himself to blow up a French dam, by bringing in commandos led by the twin brother of the German commander.

Director: Maurizio Pradeaux
Stars: Richard Harrison, Klaus Kinski, Pilar Velázquez, Giacomo Rossi Stuart

Categories
War

Casablanca Express (1989)

Casablanca Express assumes an almost historic docu-drama style from its start … but picks up a good intellectual interest and suspense which Hitchcock would savor for its subtle ‘dry’ approach. The plot entails a special American and Allied military intelligence detail escorting PM Winston Churchill to his wartime casablanca Conference with pres. Franklin Roosevelt. Not gimmicky – but highly realistic for its time period-set in French colonial North Africa – then still wavering for & against Vichy France. Good cast with Glenn Ford as an American General in US Army Intelligence; and Donald Pleasance as his British counterpart. Found out from IMDb that the two male actors as the US intelligence agents aboard Churchill’s secret train – Jason Connery & Francesco Quinn .. are the sons of film stars Sean Connery & Anthony Quinn. Directed smoothly in a verismo style & produced/released in 1988 .. the film will hold with suspense & entertain the mind as if an historic archive. Its realism exudes the director’s style as if performed by non-actors (ie. actual agents & military).

Director: Sergio Martino
Stars: Jason Connery, Francesco Quinn, Jinny Steffan

Categories
War

Desert Commandos (1967)

Allies versus Nazis in the sands of Sahara

German commandos are dropped behind enemy lines in the Sahara Desert tasked with getting to Casablanca in an assassination attempt on allied leaders.

Splendid plot idea, but a little more work on it might have made the difference: some scenes are just too simplistic; when they enter the house of the French officer’s mistress, it doesn’t ring “true”. The desert scenes are nice but a little more camera and light work might have made them beautiful. WW II movie directors who use modern hardware are killing me: for obvious financial reasons, he probably rented the equipment on the site from the Moroccan army: the aircraft, a Max Holste Broussard, was designed in the fifties; there wasn’t a single WWII vintage tank: they were either Creusot-Loire AMX-13 or Panhard armored vehicles, designed in the fifties.

Director: Umberto Lenzi
Stars: Ken Clark, Horst Frank, Jeanne Valérie

Categories
War

Sink The Bismarck (1960)

Sink The Bismarck (1960) is one of the best war time epic movie

It was a movie, and despite whatever pro-British, anti-German bias and historical flaws it had, it was one of the best post-war movies in many other respects. It depicted the Admiralty War Room planning and chess game as well as could be expected, the personal sub-plots were perfect and not so overblown as to dominate the film, and the casting, acting direction, depiction of battle scenes were superb. If you want an anti-war war movie, this isn’t it (try The Enemy Below from the same time frame or Gallipoli or Breaker Morant, from a later one). As for the history, well… you’re rarely going to get unbiased truth in anything like a theatrical film and not even in many documentaries. If you cast this movie into the crapper because it smacks of propaganda, I guess you hated Casablanca as well.?

Gripping wartime British naval drama

Note that in 1960, the War was still fresh in the minds of those who fought it. and unlike the USA, Britain was directly attacked, her cities bombed, her civilians killed. while I too protest the strongly anti-Nazi Kriegsmarine being portrayed as another fanatically loyal Nazi sect, recall that the British were fighting for their very lives at this point in the war: it was before the USSR and the USA got involved, and the U-boats were taking a massive toll on British supplies. it’s also an issue of how Propaganda sticks in the historical memory of a population: even in the face of actual facts, the sheer volume of propaganda produced during wartime, as well as the popularity of major films, can still influence impressions of actual events.

Cast and Crew:

Directed by: Lewis Gilbert
Writers: Edmund H. North
Starring: Kenneth More, Dana Wynter, Carl Möhner

Categories
War

The Red Baron (2008)

Plot:

The Red Baron is a film about Manfred von Richthofen, the most feared and celebrated pilot of the German air force in World War I. To him and his companions, air combats are events of sporty nature, technical challenge and honorable acting, ignoring the terrible extent of war. But after falling in love with the nurse Käte, Manfred realizes he is only used for propaganda means. Caught between his disgust for the war, and the responsibility for his fighter wing, von Richthofen sets out to fly again.

The Red Baron (2008) review

The film itself is not a flat action/history flick, it has a message to tell and that comes across really well. The relationship between the baron and his girl is told in a very subtle way, no cheesy romance-scenes. It all happens during WW1, there was simply no time for big emotions. So we don’t see a “Pearl Harbour” Hollywood flick, but a picture that shows how it really might have been – flying a plane during war. There are no clichés, just a portrait of a hero that did not even want to be one. And the cruelty and absurdity of war itself, as even the main protagonist has to learn. The ending is also well done and not cheesy or over the top. Apart from that the film did not really grab me, I enjoyed watching but was seldomly thrilled or emotionally moved. Maybe some of the characters were simply a little too flat. Also the film jumps at times and leaves out some interesting battle scenes, I had the impression they did it to keep the VFX work down…

Written and Director by: Nikolai Müllerschön
Stars: Matthias Schweighöfer, Lena Headey, Til Schweiger

Categories
War

Hell in the Pacific (1968)

Plot:

Hell in the Pacific is set during World War II, a shot-down American pilot and a marooned Japanese navy captain find themselves stranded on the same small uninhabited island in the Pacific Ocean. Following war logic, each time the crafty Japanese devises something useful, he guards it to deny its use to the Yank, who then steals it, its proceeds or the idea and/or ruins it. Yet each gets his chance to kill and/or capture the other, but neither pushes this to the end.

Both Lee Marvin and Toshirô Mifune actually served in the Pacific during World War II, of course on opposing sides. Marvin’s a US Marine. He was wounded during the war and received the Purple Heart during the Battle of Saipan in 1943. Mifune served in the Imperial Japanese Army Air Service.

Hell in the Pacific (1968) is Cast Away on Steroids

Isolation in extreme conditions allows for very telling studies of human beings, and potentially unpleasant philosophical conclusions. Marooning a character on an island will get you some dramatic results, and the only way to take it a step further is to maroon that character’s worst possible enemy with him. That’s what Hell in The Pacific proposes.

Directed by John Boorman
Starring: Lee Marvin, Toshirô Mifune

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