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    The Big Red One
    The Big Red One

    The Big Red One

    "The real glory of war is surviving"

    6.7•May 28, 1980•1h 53m
    DramaWar

    Storyline

    A veteran sergeant of World War I leads a squad in World War II, always in the company of the survivor Pvt. Griff, the writer Pvt. Zab, the Sicilian Pvt. Vinci and Pvt. Johnson, in Vichy French Africa, Sicily, D-Day at Omaha Beach, Belgium and France, and ending in a concentration camp in Czechoslovakia where they face the true horror of war.

    Director
    Samuel Fuller
    Writers
    Samuel Fuller

    Top Cast

    Lee Marvin

    Lee Marvin

    The Sergeant

    Mark Hamill

    Mark Hamill

    Griff

    Robert Carradine

    Robert Carradine

    Zab

    Bobby Di Cicco

    Bobby Di Cicco

    Vinci

    Kelly Ward

    Kelly Ward

    Johnson

    Stéphane Audran

    Stéphane Audran

    Walloon

    Siegfried Rauch

    Siegfried Rauch

    Schroeder

    Serge Marquand

    Serge Marquand

    Rensonnet

    Charles Macaulay

    Charles Macaulay

    General / Captain

    Alain Doutey

    Alain Doutey

    Broban

    Maurice Marsac

    Maurice Marsac

    Vichy Colonel

    Colin Gilbert

    Dog Face POW

    Featured Reviews

    W

    Wuchak

    October 23, 2025
    7 / 10
    **_Sam Fuller’s WW2 tour of North Africa, Sicily and France-to-Czechoslovakia_** Shot in the summer of 1978, this was inspired by Fuller’s experiences in the war with Robert Carradine as Private Zab representing him. It’s a lot to cram into less than 2 hours, and this explains the criticisms that the film comes across as a collection of incidents with little character development. Yet Fuller wanted to include the highlights of his 2.5 years in the war and this delivers as far as that goes. Some say it’s a commentary on how war is an ongoing circle of Hell. The problem with this interpretation is that the war does end when the characters wind up at a concentration camp in Sokolov, which is located a dozen miles from the border of eastern Germany in what is today the Czech Republic. I like the way it focuses on the five protagonists (led by Lee Marvin) with everything happening from their limited point of view. Isn’t that precisely the way it is for foot soldiers in combat? A good example is their landing in Normandy where you don’t get a sense of the mammoth operation, but rather just their costly experience in which they interestingly use a Bangalore torpedo to clear the way. Some bits are so peculiar that they just had to be pulled from real-life, such as a French woman giving birth inside a Panzer tank or the German-held monastery in Belgium being used as an insane asylum. To survive with their sanity intact, the guys develop a kind of levity amidst the life-or-death madness of it all. The four privates don’t talk of “back home” because their lives are just starting whilst the hardened veteran (Marvin) focuses on getting himself and as many of these young men through the combat so they can actually have a future. Neither the past nor the future matters in such extreme warfare, all that matters is fulfilling the current mission and, hopefully, surviving with all your appendages. The second half involves the Normandy landing and fighting through France, Belgium and Germany before making it to the deathcamp. You could say it’s the quickie version of the 11.5 hours “Band of Brothers,” which debuted over two decades later. Some criticize that the movie feels dated and plays more like a WW2 flick from the 1960s. I suppose that’s because it was initially conceived in the late ’50s. Dated or not, it influenced future war flicks, such as “Platoon,” and was the precursor to the aforementioned “Band of Brothers.” No, it’s not on the level of those great war films or others, but it gets the job done and is good enough. Think of it as Lee Marvin’s character from “The Dirty Dozen” leading a group of greenhorns through the Mediterranean and Europe. It runs 1 hour, 53 minutes, but there’s a 2005 director’s cut subtitled “The Reconstruction” that adds about 47 minutes of footage. It was shot in Israel, Ireland and the Sierra Madre Mountains northwest of Los Angeles. GRADE: B/B-

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    Details

    StatusReleased
    LanguageEN
    Budget$4,500,000
    Revenue$7,206,220

    Keywords

    #sicily, italy#africa#concentration camp#world war ii#omaha beach#infantry#us army#d-day#sergeant#hospital#anti war
    IMDb

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