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The Thin Red Line

 
Movies:

The Thin Red Line

 
  • Director: Andrew Marton
  • AMG Rating: starstar
  • Genre: War
  • Movie Type: War Epic, War Drama
  • Themes: Great Battles
  • Main Cast: Keir Dullea, Jack Warden, James Philbrook, Ray Daley, Bob Kanter
  • Release Year: 1964
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 180 minutes

Plot

Set during the Allied invasion of the island of Guadalcanal in the Pacific theater during WWII, this film is based on the novel by James Jones. Keir Dullea is Private Doll, who dreads the invasion and steals a pistol to help him protect himself. Sergeant Welsh (Jack Warden), a caustic, battle-scarred veteran, hates Doll, whom he considers a coward. In battle, Doll kills a Japanese soldier and is filled with remorse, which further angers the sergeant. The next day, an emboldened Doll wipes out an entire enemy machine gun post and begins to feel as sadistic as Welsh. The two must work together to clear away some mines, but as they do, their platoon is surprised by a Japanese raid. ~ Michael Betzold, All Movie Guide

Review

A much simplified adaptation of James Jones's novel of combat on Guadalcanal, this first screen version does manage to retain some of the essential flavor of Jones's narrative and his ideas about the relationships among men during war. The Bernard Gordon screenplay focuses on two of Jones's characters: the self-preserving Private Doll (Keir Dullea) and the cynical Sergeant Welch (Jack Warden), and if their relationship travels a road familiar to war films (with predictable consequences), director Andrew Marton stages the film's combat scenes with verve. And the film does retain the conflict between Colonel Tall (James Philbrook) and Captain Stone (Ray Daley), with the latter relieved of battle command when it's clear that he values the lives of his men more than achieving the objectives of his superiors. There is a strange dream sequence in which Doll equates making love to his wife with his killing a Japanese soldier with his bare hands; Marton isn't quite in the same league as Luis Bunuel in suggesting the erotic possibilities of murder. Because the film was shot in Spain, the terrain sometimes looks more rocky than South Pacific lush. Nevertheless, the two most harrowing battles-the fight to break through a narrow canyon nicknamed the bowling alley, and an assault on a series of cliffside machine gun nests-benefit from taking place on barren landscapes. Terrence Malick's more comprehensive and contemplative 1998 version was more ambitious and less pat, but there are enough virtues here to make it a worthy companion piece. ~ Tom Wiener, All Movie Guide

Cast

Merlyn Yordan - Judy; Kieron Moore - Lt. Band; Steve Rowland - Pvt. Mazzi; Stephen Levy - Staff Sgt. Stack; John Clarke; Joe Collins; Jim Gillen - Capt. Gaff; Ben Tatar; Mark Johnson - Medic; Gary Lasdun; Gabe Sumner; Charles Stalnaker

Credit

José Alguero - Art Director, Andrew Marton - Director, Derek Parsons - Editor, Malcolm Arnold - Composer (Music Score), Malcolm Arnold - Musical Direction/Supervision, Emilio Puyol - Makeup, Manuel Berenguer - Cinematographer, Sidney Harmon - Producer, Ron Ballanger - Special Effects, Bernard Gordon - Screenwriter, James Jones - Book Author

Similar Movies

Back to Bataan; Between Heaven and Hell; From Here to Eternity; Guadalcanal Diary; Battle of the Bulge; The Longest Day; In Harm's Way; A Walk in the Sun
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Movies. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Movie Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more

 

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