BY DOUG OSWALD
William
Holden commands a newly formed commando group in “The Devil’s Brigade,â€
available by Kino Lorber on Blu-ray. On the heels of the successful “The Dirty
Dozen†from the previous year, “The Devil’s Brigade†is based on the 1966 book
by Robert H. Adleman and Colonel George Walton. It chronicles the true events
of the 1st Special Service, a joint American and Canadian commando unit
assigned to the United States Fifth Army. Inspired by true events, the movie
follows the standard tropes of this type of action adventure men- at -war movie.
A rag-tag group of soldiers are brought together for a mission, they initially
mistrust each other, get into a fight, train together, get into another fight
this time working together against another group, graduate from their training
and then deploy on their mission to fight the enemy (usually Germans, Italians
or Japanese). I recall seeing this for the first time on American broadcast
television with commercials advertising “The American misfits and the proud
Canadians…†The commando group starts training at an American base where the
two groups learn to work as a single unit. The action switches to German
occupied Italy in the second half as they battle the Germans in close combat
action sequences.
The
movie features a “Hollywood Who’s Who†cast of leading men and character actors:
William Holden as Lt. Colonel Robert T. Frederick, the commander of the unit.
Cliff Robertson as the Canadian commander, Major Alan Crown. Vince Edwards as
the American commander, Major Cliff Bricker. The supporting cast gets even better with the
American misfits and proud Canadians portrayed by: Claude Akins as Private
Rocky Rockman, Richard Jaeckel as Private Omar Creco, Andrew Prine as Private
Theodore Ransom, Richard Dawson as Private Hugh MacDonald, Luke Askew as
Private Hubert Hixon, Tom Troup as Private Al Manella, Jeremy Slate as Sergeant
Pat O’Neill, Jack Watson as Corporal Peacock, Harry Carey Jr. as Captain Rose,
Michael Rennie as Lt. General Mark Clark, Carroll O’Connor as Major General
Maxwell Hunter, Dana Andrews as Brig. General Walter Naylor, Michael Rennie as
Lt. General Mark Clark, stunt man and future director Hal Needham as a sergeant.
I’d be remiss if I didn’t mention Karl-Otto Alberty as the German officer interrogating
Claude Akins. Fans of retro classics will remember him as the German tank
commander in “Kelly’s Heroes†and the German officer who captures Richard
Attenborough in “The Great Escape†and orders, “Hands UP!â€
Holden
give a stoic, yet one-dimensional, performance as the commander. This is a year prior to his iconic performance as Pike in Sam Peckinpah’s classic “The
Wild Bunch†in 1969. While “The Devil’s Brigade†is not as highly regarded as
that movie, or even “The Dirty Dozen,†it stands on its own as a minor classic
in the genre. Richard Jaeckel steals every scene he appears in. Cliff Robertson
is terrific as the Canadian commander, just a year away from his Academy Award-winning
performance in “Charly.†Vince Edwards was transitioning back to the big screen following his run on television in “Ben Caseyâ€
which was a very popular series in the first half of the 1960s. However, the abundant cast makes it difficult
for anyone to really stand out as the face behind this movie, as Lee Marvin did
in “The Dirty Dozen.â€
Directed
by Andrew V. McLaglen, a veteran director of many popular movies, the film
looks and sounds terrific and clocks in at 130 minutes. Released in May 1968 by
United Artists, it was filmed in widescreen Panavision on location in Utah. The
Utah location doubles for the training base during the first half of the film and
some of the action when the brigade get to Italy in the second half. From the
appearance of the buildings, it appears to have been filmed on an active military
base in Utah. The buildings look live in and may have been left standing from
the WWII period, which was not uncommon. Much of the second half was filmed on
location in Italy in actual WWII battle locations, using much of the same
armaments used in countless other WWII-themed movies filmed in the 60s and 70s.
The production value in the location filming really elevates this movie. Look
through the windows in the interior scenes during the first half of the movie
and you’ll notice that McLaglen ensures there is stuff going on outside, making
the location come alive.
Unfortunately,
the movie was not a major hit during its initial release. Subsequent broadcast
television, cable TV and home video releases have elevated its status over the
years as a solid action adventure movie. The film is often compared to “The
Dirty Dozen†which came out the previous year. There are definite similarities
and this may have been part of the movie’s shortfall a the boxoffice. Also, the
Vietnam War was raging and military movies were falling out of favor. It’s hard
to know for certain, as movie audiences can be fickle. However, the “men on an
impossible mission†genre remains popular to this day.
The
Kino Lorber Blu-ray comes with an audio commentary by film historians Steve
Mitchell and Steven Jay Rubin. The commentary is an entertaining trivia and Mitchell and Rubin know their stuff when it comes
to military movies. Rubin is an expert on the various armaments used in the
film and has a knack for identifying Hollywood military weapon sound effects
and the differences between the studio libraries. The audio commentary is
compelling enough to justify watching the Blu-ray twice. The other extras are
the trailer for this and other Kino Lorber Blu-ray titles.
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(For extensive coverage of "The Devil's Brigade", see Cinema Retro's Movie Classics Films of WWII special issue.)