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The Dirty Dozen (1967)
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Overview
User Rating:
Director:
Writers:
Release Date:
15 June 1967 (USA)
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Tagline:
Train them! Excite them! Arm them!...Then turn them loose on the Nazis!
Plot:
A US Army Major is assigned a dozen convicted murderers to train and lead them into a mass assassination mission of German officers in World War II. full summary | full synopsis
Plot Keywords:
Awards:
Won Oscar.
Another 5 wins
&
6 nominations
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NewsDesk:
(17 articles)
Walter Hill: The Hollywood Interview
(From The Hollywood Interview. 9 September 2009, 12:07 AM, PDT)
The Pleasures of Putting a Team Together
(From IFC. 18 August 2009, 12:28 PM, PDT)
(From The Hollywood Interview. 9 September 2009, 12:07 AM, PDT)
The Pleasures of Putting a Team Together
(From IFC. 18 August 2009, 12:28 PM, PDT)
User Reviews:
Splendidly Produced; a Tough and Tough-Minded Film
more (111 total)
Cast
(Cast overview, first billed only)| Lee Marvin | ... | Major Reisman | |
| Ernest Borgnine | ... | General Worden | |
| Charles Bronson | ... | Joseph Wladislaw | |
| Jim Brown | ... | Robert Jefferson | |
| John Cassavetes | ... | Victor Franko | |
| Richard Jaeckel | ... | Sergeant Bowren | |
| George Kennedy | ... | Major Max Armbruster | |
| Trini López | ... | Pedro Jiminez (as Trini Lopez) | |
| Ralph Meeker | ... | Captain Stuart Kinder | |
| Robert Ryan | ... | Col. Everett Dasher Breed | |
| Telly Savalas | ... | Archer Maggott | |
| Donald Sutherland | ... | Vernon Pinkley | |
| Clint Walker | ... | Samson Posey | |
| Robert Webber | ... | General Denton | |
| Tom Busby | ... | Milo Vladek |
Additional Details
Also Known As:
Dirty Dozen (International: English title) (informal title)
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Parents Guide:
Runtime:
150 min
Color:
Color (Metrocolor)
Aspect Ratio:
1.75 : 1 more
Sound Mix:
Stereo |
70 mm 6-Track (70 mm prints)
Certification:
USA:Approved (certificate #20802) |
Iceland:16 |
UK:12 (2006) |
West Germany:16 (f) |
Netherlands:12 |
Argentina:13 |
Australia:M (DVD rating) |
Australia:PG (cable rating) |
Finland:K-16 |
Norway:15 |
Norway:16 (1968) |
Singapore:PG |
Sweden:15 |
UK:15 (video rating) (1986) |
UK:X (original rating)
Filming Locations:
Fun Stuff
Trivia:
John Wayne was first offered the part of Maj. John Reisman, but he declined and went on to star in and direct another war film (The Green Berets (1968)). The part was then offered to Lee Marvin, who took it.
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Goofs:
Factual errors: General Worden's barracks cap has gold braid on the visor, incorrect for the World War II period. Douglas MacArthur was the only U.S. Army general who wore a cap (of his own design) with unauthorized gold-braid on the visor during WWII.
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Quotes:
Major John Reisman:
Which one of you guys wants to be a general?
[to Pinkley]
Major John Reisman: Pinkley?
Pinkley: What kind of general, sir?
Major John Reisman: Just a plain, ordinary, every day, home-lovin' American general.
Pinkley: I'd rather be a civilian, sir.
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[to Pinkley]
Major John Reisman: Pinkley?
Pinkley: What kind of general, sir?
Major John Reisman: Just a plain, ordinary, every day, home-lovin' American general.
Pinkley: I'd rather be a civilian, sir.
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Movie Connections:
Referenced in The Dirty Dozen: Next Mission (1985) (TV)
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Soundtrack:
National Emblem
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FAQ
This FAQ is empty. Add the first question.more (111 total)
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Many viewers of film, myself include, rate this as one of the most exciting "mission"'' stories of all time. Adapted from an intelligent but Freudian source novel, the plot theme is a subtle one for a movie; it's about convicted men in WWII being given odds for life in the form of a suicide mission that may wipe their slates clean-- or perhaps not... its main theme is self-assertion, set against its opposite, enforced repression. The key to every action men undertake in this very tough and and tough-minded Nunnnally Johnason and Lukas Heller script is: "Is that person dealing with the reality of the world of and his/her own responsibility to act?" From convict Telly Savalas' character, mystical murderer of women who claims a divine calling to punish their sexuality, to Charles Bronson and Jim Brown who reacted to persecutions and are innocent by reason of self-defense, to their leader, the mission's architect, Major Reisman, who wants his plan to go forward his way despite resistance from brass, every man of the outfit is tried against the same standard. Jimenez is climbing a rope and says he can't make the tower; Franco refuses to shave because the officers have hot water and he does not, Posey can't control his temper, control-freak Col. Breed hates any man who does not go by the book; etc. As a production, Robert Aldrich's direction is probably his masterpiece; the acting is far above average, especially Lee Marvin, Charles Bronson, Donald Sutherland, Clint Walker, Robert Webber, energetic John Cassevetes and Al Mancini; the inspired casting of powerful top-sergeant-level Ernest Borgnine as an obviously far-beyond-his element general works brilliantly. The art direction, special effects, sets, and music (by Frank de Vol) all complement a taut script filled with memorable terse dialogue. Entire sequences such as the selection interviews for the mission team, the building of the camp, a visit to Breed's hq, Breed's invasion of the camp, the training regimen, the "graduation party", Reisman's verbal defense of his men, the war games' challenge, preparing for the mission, the early invasion steps, Maggot's adlib, the attack by Reisman's team, the escape and the hospital climax and denouement--all these sections are made memorable to many admirers of this beautifully made and unusual story. As officers attached to the mission, George Kennedy, Richard Jaene-too-subtle secondary theme of the film is: the wrongness of arbitrary power in anyone's hands, including Nazis, US army officers or their brutal agents (such as Breed's men who beat up Charles Bronson for information). The film is about individuals who when they harm no one else and are effective human beings, men who can always get the job done, always control themselves. who need to be free to operate. Such men the film says are "heroes"--men with an unusual ability to create results on Earth; the sort of men films ought to be made about in a nation that talks individualism and claims to value capability. This is a great adventure, of enduring artistry, occasional brutality and intelligently-developed dialogue. It has logical actions, and spectacular physical performances and This is a strong and well-thought-out adventure film, one of the richest of its genre, to be watched many times.