Five Classic War Movies for the Fourth of July
By Duane Lester • Jul 4th, 2008Happy Fourth of July!
In celebration of our independence, I thought I would embed five great classic war movies, celebrating the fighting spirit that originated when our Founding Fathers signed the Declaration of Independence, ensuring war with Great Britain.
Enjoy!
Von Ryan’s Express
Amazon.com
Forget Indiana Jones. This 1965 high adventure stars Frank Sinatra as the leader of a mass escape from a World War II POW camp in Italy. That mission accomplished, Old Blue Eyes has sundry adventures camouflaging the freed men as German soldiers, trying to fool the Gestapo, and finally doing battle with enemy planes and ground troops while trying to get a hijacked train through a blocked tunnel. Sinatra is in great form and director Mark Robson handles the endless chain of action set-pieces with panache. A great pulse-quickener. –Tom Keogh
Guadalcanal Diary
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One of the greatest war movies of all time, combining action-packed, high-caliber battle sequences with quintessential foxhole-buddy camaraderie. Released in 1943, its authenticity and power remain undiminished.The story follows one squad of Marines through the bloody assaults on the Solomon Islands during the opening stages of the war in the South Pacific. There’s the tough sergeant (Lloyd Nolan), a cab driver from Brooklyn (William Bendix), a Mexican (Anthony Quinn) and a chaplain (Preston Foster). A battle-weary narrator reads from a diary, commenting on the typical grunt’s everyday life, and death. Battles and dates of engagement are named, putting the explosive action into a solid historical context.
Halls Of Montezuma
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Richard Widmark leads an all-star cast of leathernecks (Jack Palance, Robert Wagner, Karl Malden, Richard Boone, and Jack Webb) into battle on a heavily-fortified enemy island. Their objective is a Japanese rocket sit in the island’s interior, and the combat-packed story follows the squad from beachhead to battle, as they pick their way trough enemy-infested jungles. Along the way, Widmark is transformed from a former school teacher into a combat-wizened leader, and his disparate squad of men is forged into a cohesive fighting unit.
The Sand Pebbles
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Following the success of The Sound of Music, director Robert Wise chose to film Robert McKenna’s prize-winning 1962 novel, The Sand Pebbles–an ambitious choice for a director at the peak of his career. Shot in Taiwan and Hong Kong, the film combines historical sweep and intimate human drama in several parallel stories, all revolving around U.S. Navy machinist’s mate Jake Holman (Steve McQueen). Holman is a skillful but fiercely independent sailor who joins the “sand pebble” crew of the U.S.S. San Pablo, a Navy gunboat patrolling the Yangtze River on the eve of the Chinese revolution in 1926. The San Pablo’s inexperienced captain (Richard Crenna) obsessively defends the Navy’s mission–however unnecessary or unwanted–to protect American missionaries and businessmen, blind to the more dangerous implications of American involvement with China’s opposing political factions.
The Longest Day
Amazon.com
The Longest Day is a vivid hour-by-hour recreation of this historic event. Featuring a stellar international cast and told from the perspectives of both sides it is a fascinating look at the massive preparations mistakes and random events that determined the outcome of one of the biggest battles in history. Winner of two 1962 Oscars® (Special Effects and Cinematography) The Longest Day ranks as one of Hollywood’s truly great war films.






