Film Review
A Bridge Too Far is an
ambitious and stirring account of one of the greatest military blunders
of WWII, based on a book by Cornelius Ryan, who also wrote
The Longest Day,
made into a
film by director Ken Annakin.
With a budget of 22 million dollars, a fair chunk of which went on its
star-studded cast, the film is one of the most extravagant war films of
its time, and, on its first release, it was dismissed by many
critics as an overblown festival of self-indulgence. Three
decades on, the film is more highly thought of and can hardly fail to
impress with its stunningly realised action sequences and harrowing
depiction of the carnage that is war at its ugliest.
Richard Attenborough shows considerable directorial flair with this,
his third feature as a director, following his earlier war-time
romp
Oh! What a Lovely War (1969) and arresting biopic
Young Winston (1972). As well as being one of Britain's great
screen actors - most famous for playing the racketeer Pinkie Brown
in the Boulting brothers'
Brighton Rock (1947),
he also received acclaim as a director, notably for
Gandhi (1982).
Although most of the big name actors appear on the screen for barely
more than a few minutes, most of them deliver convincing performances
that have an immediate impact. A few stand out - James Caan as
the sergeant determined to save the life of his young captain, Sean
Connery as the major general who is the first to realise the enormity
of the military failure, Liv Ullmann as a Dutch woman forced to
decorate her front living room with dying soldiers, and so on.
William Goldman's well-crafted screenplay avoids the familiar wartime caricatures
and brings a touch of humanity to offset the grisly horrors of war.
The film has plenty of big scale action scenes to thrill and startle but what are just as
effective, and far more poignant, are the passages of quite reflection
where we can take stock and appreciate the consequences, in human
suffering, of the flawed military escapade. Despite its long run
time and sprawling narrative,
A
Bridge Too Far manages to be both a compelling anti-war drama
and an insightful account of a doomed wartime exploit.
© James Travers 2009
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Richard Attenborough film:
Gandhi (1982)
Film Synopsis
September, 1944. D-Day has come and gone but the allied advance
has slowed to a crawl owing to over-extended supply lines. Field
Marshal Montgomery and General Paton are both confident that they can
win the war with one more decisive push. U.S. President
Eisenhower backs Montgomery's plan - codenamed Operation Market Garden
- to land 35,000 paratroops behind enemy lines to secure half a dozen
bridges in Holland. This will allow the allied troops to sweep
into Germany's industrial heartland and bring about a hasty end to the
war in Europe. Unfortunately, the one thing the military
commanders have overlooked is the strength of German forces in the
region of the Dutch town Arnhem. This oversight is enough to
scupper the entire operation and cost the lives of thousands of men...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.