A Walk in the Sun -- The Definitive Restoration (1945) | Dana Andrews, John Ireland | WWII Classic

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  • Опубликовано: 23 авг 2024
  • American soldiers hit the beach at Salerno and begin their trek across the countryside toward the Nazi-occupied farmhouse they've been ordered to destroy. These are infantrymen who aren’t thinking about fighting bravely enough to become officers...just living long enough to become civilians! During the World War II Allied invasion of Italy, the film stars Dana Andrews as Sgt. Tyne, one of the officers leading an attack on a farmhouse in the Italian countryside which functions as a German stronghold. When the ranking officers are killed soon after the platoon lands on the beach, Tyne must take over. The film is noted for its attempt to portray the infantryman’s experience realistically, in particular the banter and mid-1940s slang. This WWII film was the first to use a ballad as a thematic element, a practice which, after HIGH NOON, would become a cliché of the 1950s. One of the best WWII films, A WALK IN THE SUN combines documentary-like sequences with a sharp awareness of the isolation of each soldier in the midst of battle. Included in the Library of Congress’ National Film Registry. One of the National Board of Reviews' "Ten Best" of 1945, this realistic look at men in war was directed by the legendary Lewis Milestone (All Quiet on the Western Front).
    Director: Lewis Milestone
    Stars: Dana Andrews, Richard Conte, George Tyne, John Ireland, Lloyd Bridges
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Комментарии • 414

  • @ericjohnson3746
    @ericjohnson3746 Год назад +288

    My dad survived Tunisia, Sicily, Salerno and Anzio. But at Cisterna his battalion was wiped out with only a handful of survivors. He was one. Thank you for this movie. Incidentally the only thing he told my mom about his experience was that a stray dog followed them for a while. Dog didn't know English but one guy from NY knew Italian. Dog would listen to him. They kidded each other that the dog was so smart he knew Italian but the guys didn't. Told Mom nothing else. But in 1950's he had terrible nightmares and would wake up screaming. Drank too. I have nothing but respect for him. Passed in1989.

    • @ericjohnson3746
      @ericjohnson3746 Год назад +11

      @@therichestmaninbabylon7942 My dad passed away in 1989. Thank you for your thank you. Here in the US nobody knows anything about the Italian campaign. Your recognition touched my heart.

    • @markescartin1915
      @markescartin1915 Год назад +13

      Just so you know your father wasn't the only one who suffered! My brother's godfather was trained as a commando during the second world war. All the theatrics you saw in "The dirty dozen" he actually lived. Three3 years after the war while still garrisoned in Germany he suffered a devastating nervous breakdown that landed him in hospital. My father told me that after he was discharged he spent an entire year locked in his room at home. I think he had to be committed?

    • @DelvingEye
      @DelvingEye Год назад +17

      My father-in-law flew 30+ missions over Berlin as a navigator on a B-24 Liberator out of London, UK, in 1943. He was originally tapped as gunner, but when he saw planes come back from missions and the gunner's well was hosed out of the dead gunner's blood and guts, he begged his CO for another position. The CO told him if he could learn Morse Code in 2 weeks, the navigator job was his. He learned, and how.
      His crew was told that 30 missions meant they were done, but when they hit 30, they were told 6 more were necessary. The crew did those 6 and my FIL survived, but he required R&R at a hospital for a nervous breakdown. He was 19.
      After the war, he ran his own mechanic shop, then bought a dairy farm outside Albany, NY, which he kept expanding until he died in 1994. And he flew his own plane.

    • @donniedickerson8077
      @donniedickerson8077 Год назад +7

      God Bless Him and your family,, 🇺🇸

    • @deweymartin678
      @deweymartin678 Год назад +9

      Rip your father Eric. This film tells about a couple squads in Salerno and they went into the killing valley in this film just like your father

  • @buckspero4691
    @buckspero4691 Год назад +42

    I was born in 1947. My Dad led an armored infantry platoon in France, Belgium, Holland, and finally Germany. He always said this was the best film of the era regarding tanks and soldiers. Watched it every time it was on tv. Like most, his war experiences were not spoken of, except for a couple of sort of entertaining incidents. A great man, he came home with a Purple Heart, a Bronze Star, and the love and respect of his men, who wrote to him for years after the war. Passed in 1967 of pancreatic cancer. RIP 1st Lt. Harold L. Spero.

    • @Paul-lm5gv
      @Paul-lm5gv 10 месяцев назад +5

      A wonderful tribute to your dad! The Greatest Generation!

    • @user-ul8ju4iy3f
      @user-ul8ju4iy3f 6 месяцев назад

      독일군
      ​@@Paul-lm5gv

    • @tomdooley4226
      @tomdooley4226 3 месяца назад +1

      ​@@Paul-lm5gvAmen, to both!

    • @PatrickJoseph007
      @PatrickJoseph007 Месяц назад

      Heroes like your Dad are a lost generation. Today's snowflakes in WWII would have had us all speaking German today.

  • @chrisoconnell5143
    @chrisoconnell5143 4 месяца назад +11

    Hats off to the people that restore these films without them they would be lost forever

  • @Kevin-lh1zz
    @Kevin-lh1zz 4 месяца назад +6

    Really enjoyed this film. The character development was amazing and it stands out as more of a psychological war movie than an action movie, but man, the dialogues are priceless. Thank you to those who restored this movie and those who posted it too.

  • @chocolatestarfish7053
    @chocolatestarfish7053 Год назад +29

    Aloha greeting from Hawaii I had 3 uncles in the 442 battalion the most decorated WW2 units in history. They just didn’t the recognition because they were Japanese Americans trying to prove their loyalty to our country of America. They liberated many many towns and villages from the hills of Italy to the forest of France

    • @sookie4195
      @sookie4195 4 месяца назад +1

      People have indeed overlooked what the Japanese Americans lost during WW2. Some lost everything including their lives. 💔

    • @gordonmorris6359
      @gordonmorris6359 3 месяца назад +1

      The 1951 Van Johnson movie Go For Broke! was about the 442nd.

  • @davidgladstone6588
    @davidgladstone6588 Год назад +27

    My dad fought in Italy and this was the movie he thought told the story the best. Richard Conti, Lloyd Nolan and all of them are so good in this.

  • @lewispetzold7481
    @lewispetzold7481 Год назад +73

    I was in law school in 1970. I rented a room, my landlord had lived this, he was an infantryman in Italy from Salerno on. He said this was the only war film that really captured what it was like. So leave the nitpicking comments about a few details aside. This is very realistic.

    • @higgsmerino3925
      @higgsmerino3925 Год назад +3

      This film is far, far from realistic, it makes war look clean and manageable. Mostly propaganda.

    • @mercoid
      @mercoid Год назад +4

      It’s a goofy piece of propaganda. The Germans in the farmhouse just raked a few dozen of them with machine guns, many dead and no doubt many arms, legs and faces shot to pieces but still alive, and we see the survivors who made it to the farmhouse relieved and pleased, eating apples and drinking wine. Just ridiculous.

    • @rafacarazo7441
      @rafacarazo7441 Год назад +3

      Me gusta las pelis en inglés por qué a mí me gustaría aprender hablar en inglés no en mi país si no fuera. De mi país en inglaterra

    • @alexanderkaitz1197
      @alexanderkaitz1197 Год назад +8

      Ignore the others, my grandfather landed in France just after D Day and fought across France and Germany, ending the war outside of Pilsen. He also said this was the most realistic movie he ever saw about the war.

    • @ixlr8677
      @ixlr8677 Год назад

      @@mercoid shear hokdum.

  • @amham48
    @amham48 Год назад +28

    One of the greatest war movies ever made...the dialogue, character development, cinematography of closeups and soldier walking/speaking shots. No need of spectacular special effects...just superb movie making!

    • @willthorson4543
      @willthorson4543 Год назад

      No it isn't. Between all of them having their chin straps buttoned which never happened. Yapping way too much about nothing. The entire opening scene, they act more like they are bored and in class. Lol. Landing craft are loud. It had it's moments. You want a war movie that follows a squad or platoon? Battleground is loads better than this .

    • @boudusaved4719
      @boudusaved4719 11 месяцев назад +1

      Agreed. The best part of the film were the conversations among the soldiers about their fears and desires. It made it a more humanistic war film. In fact, I really liked it when we couldn't see the enemy. It made you feel like you were with the soldiers and that increased the fear because you could hear the action but couldn't see it, most of the time.

  • @edhorst7212
    @edhorst7212 Год назад +54

    Glad to see this war film finally restored.. included in ratings of war movies deserving credit.. many returning WWII veterans didn’t talk much after witnessing the horrors of war, know my dad didn’t say much. They came home to restart their lives they left to defend freedom..

    • @markmullin4246
      @markmullin4246 9 месяцев назад

      Since this " restored" be better in color.

  • @kitparker9448
    @kitparker9448 Год назад +67

    The original film material was decomposing, but the UCLA Film and Television archive was able to restored and preserved it just in time. It cost of tens of thousands of dollars and countless hours of work. Funding came from The Film Foundation (Martin Scorsese). Subsequently, we commissioned a 4K digital transfer and performed additional clean up to make the movie look as close to brand new as possible.

    • @byBeauxARTFULIVING
      @byBeauxARTFULIVING Год назад +9

      Thank you for the work to restore and share this timeless treasure

    • @sookie4195
      @sookie4195 4 месяца назад

      Mr. Scorsese did a wonderful thing. He has only won one Oscar which is sad to me. He is my favorite director.

    • @tomdooley4226
      @tomdooley4226 3 месяца назад

      Who's "we", please?

    • @kitparker9448
      @kitparker9448 2 месяца назад

      Kit Parker

    • @brithaddenhadden8383
      @brithaddenhadden8383 Месяц назад

      @@kitparker9448 could you restore little egypt 1951, gallant blade 1948, flame of calcutta 1953 and night in paradise 1946

  • @danielcombs3207
    @danielcombs3207 Год назад +41

    This is one of the classic war films with a incredible cast of actors. All of these guys were great character actors .

    • @rufust.firefly4890
      @rufust.firefly4890 Год назад +3

      Dana Andrews was often a leading man.

    • @danielcombs3207
      @danielcombs3207 Год назад +1

      @@rufust.firefly4890 That is very true . He was a leading man and a fine actor.

    • @None-zc5vg
      @None-zc5vg Год назад

      @@danielcombs3207 He was a victim of alcoholism from which he later claimed to have recovered but which may well have led to his dementia in the 1980s.

    • @ThePiratemachine
      @ThePiratemachine Год назад +3

      @@None-zc5vg He wasn't a victim. He was a human being with flaws who despite them brought a lot of joy to his fans in the films he made.

  • @rescuepetsrule6842
    @rescuepetsrule6842 Год назад +13

    A lot of people nowadays don't remember WWII Italy, or maybe only Mussolini. I'm a Texas Veteran and proud to see such a great film. Mark Clark was more interested in being the last man to liberate Rome, which was basically free anyway, than in helping our Tx men. SALUTE, brave men- we never forgot you!

    • @nomadmarauder-dw9re
      @nomadmarauder-dw9re 6 месяцев назад

      Everybody disses Mark Clark. The real culprits were higher ups who thought Italy would be easy.

  • @chrismann4308
    @chrismann4308 Год назад +46

    Very happy to see this movie restored. A great movie with great performances. One of my favorites

    • @lurking0death
      @lurking0death Год назад

      The singing absolutely sucks the big one. Mindless.

    • @bbayerit
      @bbayerit Год назад

      Wholeheartedly agree. This is the essence of being a foot soldier. Great cast.

  • @carpenterbluechicken
    @carpenterbluechicken Год назад +12

    I just love watching old movies I always liked Dana Andrews he was a cool guy

  • @DrinkingStar
    @DrinkingStar 3 месяца назад +2

    I remember seeing this movie several times on TV in the early 1950s. I was and is still a great movie.

  • @user-kf9pe4pu5v
    @user-kf9pe4pu5v 11 месяцев назад +8

    Thankfully, I have never been involved in a war...but this film, to me, concentrated on each character, and their feelings, their confidence, their downfalls/ weaknesses....a great move, thankyou for posting SPROCKET VAULT

  • @michaelwest8311
    @michaelwest8311 Год назад +8

    A very underrated gem of the Silver Screen.

  • @djpass-mi4bi
    @djpass-mi4bi 6 месяцев назад +3

    An excellent movie. There's great dialog between George Tyne and Richard Conte.

  • @lasalleman6792
    @lasalleman6792 Год назад +6

    My uncle was in north Africa, Sicily and Italy. But that's all he ever told me. He generally refused to talk much about his war experiences. I first saw the film when I was about 10. I still remember the armored vehicle ambush, and the farmhouse assault.

  • @gilesfamily2653
    @gilesfamily2653 Год назад +4

    Classic. Some great names in this as well. Always love watching Dana Andrews and Richard Conte.
    26 March 2023

  • @jumpmaster82nd.
    @jumpmaster82nd. Год назад +10

    Always considered it and "Battle Ground" as the most realistic war films ever. Lots of boredom with scattered moments of terror. On the money...

  • @sbl195207
    @sbl195207 4 дня назад

    Thank you very much. No edits , no commercials.

  • @ghendar
    @ghendar Год назад +7

    I don't believe it. I've never seen a copy of this movie that looked even 25% as good as this. Wow!

  • @billywilds1779
    @billywilds1779 Год назад +10

    Dana Andrews a great actor.

  • @ralebeau
    @ralebeau Год назад +12

    This is an excellent movie. The dialog, especially between Richard Conte and George Tyne, sets it apart from more one-dimensional war (or anti-war) scripts.

  • @None-zc5vg
    @None-zc5vg Год назад +54

    Norman Lloyd outlived all the other actors, dying in 2021 aged 106. He was still active not long before his death. He played a Nazi agent in "Saboteur" (1942).

    • @lsmart
      @lsmart Год назад +5

      Wow! So he made it to Tibet after all!

    • @None-zc5vg
      @None-zc5vg Год назад +5

      @@lsmart..there and back!

  • @allandavis8201
    @allandavis8201 Год назад +26

    I fully understand that this movie really is not about the war, it’s more focused on the personalities inside their uniforms and their interactions with each other, and from that point of view it is an excellent portrait of what they became through their combat and the events that they were involved in, however, from a purely military perspective it really sucked, absolutely no semblance of the military tactics and operating procedures, coming in as a secondary story, but it does not detract from the film directors and screenwriters vision, and it certainly worked, really interesting,entertaining and thought provoking for us viewers, thanks for sharing it with us all.

    • @Willysmb44
      @Willysmb44 Год назад +3

      Agreed. I USED TO think this was an accurate movie until I served in the Army (decades after WW2, of course). Now I see it as the common type of 'stream of consciousness' movies that were common in this era. Soldiers probably didn't even talk like that in WW2; they sure don't today. That and the truly awful singing in the background...

    • @gordonfrickers5592
      @gordonfrickers5592 Год назад +2

      "from a purely military perspective it really sucked, absolutely no semblance of the military tactics and operating procedures".

    • @lsmart
      @lsmart Год назад +1

      Well, since you served, could you explain one basic thing to me that bothered me throughout the movie. If there were allied planes flying overhead, why in the world would they expend the lives of dozens of infantrymen instead of just sending a plane to blow the farmhouse to Kingdom Come? Am I missing something obvious?

    • @allandavis8201
      @allandavis8201 Год назад

      @@gordonfrickers5592 correct

    • @allandavis8201
      @allandavis8201 Год назад +1

      @@lsmart probably because they didn’t have communications with the forward air controllers or the original intelligence did not put the building as high priority or heavily defended.

  • @jultolentino7515
    @jultolentino7515 Год назад +2

    This is a great movie .at 70 i think its a rare opportunity to see this movie again.alhamdulilla

    • @jultolentino7515
      @jultolentino7515 Год назад +1

      Thank you & God bless

    • @OmmerSyssel
      @OmmerSyssel Год назад

      Keep your lame religious beliefs to yourself.. 🐖💨🧕🏾

  • @Paul-lm5gv
    @Paul-lm5gv 10 месяцев назад +3

    A quality cast with great dialogue and story.

  • @AlexCBrandon
    @AlexCBrandon Год назад +7

    This is an absolutely stellar remaster. Thank you!

    • @kitparker9448
      @kitparker9448 Год назад +1

      Thanks...it took a lot of work from a lot of good people.

  • @tonyladokguy8985
    @tonyladokguy8985 Год назад +48

    Brilliant film. You can see the influence on the TV series "Combat!," and Spielberg's "Saving Private Ryan" and "Band of Brothers." WWII was won by the citizen soldier, not the pumped-up professional elites as portrayed in modern war movies.

    • @389383
      @389383 Год назад +3

      In Combat one grenade takes out the armored car, not twenty!

    • @tonyladokguy8985
      @tonyladokguy8985 Год назад +4

      @@389383 guess they had a smaller budget.

    • @tonyromano6220
      @tonyromano6220 Год назад

      What modern movies?

    • @ixlr8677
      @ixlr8677 Год назад

      @@389383 then kirby would check it out.

  • @DmPmRr1959
    @DmPmRr1959 Год назад +25

    This is a great film because it focuses on the characters as everyday people. Very realistic dialogue. The war itself is almost secondary.

  • @earsplitingloud
    @earsplitingloud Год назад +4

    My father landed in Africa, then they were sent to a small island off of the coast of Italy. They were bombed there by the Germans. Then they were sent ashore at Salerno. He survived the war. He would not talk about it until I was in my teens. Night fighter squadron.

  • @garrettdavis6500
    @garrettdavis6500 Год назад +2

    FINALLY !!!! A GOOD PRINT OF THIS MOVIE ON RUclips !!!!!

  • @bsr8255
    @bsr8255 Год назад +14

    Any war to happen is bad for both sides as many families will be destroyed and famished. But we must remember and salute the soldiers for their sacrifice and bravery. Good movie

  • @christopherreardon7170
    @christopherreardon7170 Год назад +5

    I'm 65 years old and have been watching this movie my whole life and it has always been a great movie!!!!!1 I'm from jersey city and channel 5 and 9 were great movie channels way before over priced cable stations which cost a fortune and increase their fees every year. And you get less show's and have to pay premium such a joke .STREAM !!!!!!! THIS WAS THE GREATEST GENERATION!!!!!LET'S TRY AND REMEMBER WHAT THE WORLD WAS LIKE BEFORE BLUE HAIR COLLEGE STUDENTS.

    • @PogueMahone1
      @PogueMahone1 Год назад

      You seem angry...did someone's dog chit on your lawn?

  • @scomo532
    @scomo532 Год назад +6

    This is one of THE best war movies ever produced. “Twelve o’clock High” 0:02 is another

  • @williamturner1517
    @williamturner1517 Год назад +4

    Filmed the year I was born. First saw this in 1955. Love the C-ration scene. "Sewer" get this stuff in the sewer. I used that line during basic training, 1966.

  • @wessew6185
    @wessew6185 Год назад +4

    This was my Dad's favorite movie although we are Air Force. "Nobody dies." Dad used that phrase for many circumstances life-threatening or not.

  • @johncepelak873
    @johncepelak873 Год назад +11

    Great dialogue in this film. Saw it when I was about 9, not since, but I think it's really well written.

  • @nedludd7622
    @nedludd7622 Год назад +21

    A great film, one of the best war films. I've watched it several times as it is one of my favorites.

  • @irish89055
    @irish89055 Год назад +7

    I knew Squeaky voice was going to get it.. Sterling Holloway

    • @steveclark885
      @steveclark885 Год назад +2

      Sterling Holloway the voice of Winnie the Pooh

  • @bobcuddy853
    @bobcuddy853 Год назад +3

    One of the best war movies ever made.

  • @louislamboley9167
    @louislamboley9167 Год назад +28

    I've watched this movie over and over again and finally at my ripe old age I realized that those guys would not be carrying on such an intimate and quiet conversation on that landing craft. They were loud when that engine was running since they had no mufflers and they bounced around like a cork. These guys are going in circles waiting for all the other boats. In reality they'd be sicker than dogs barfing all over the bottom of the boat and cursing up a storm about their situation. I doubt anyone did any chit chatting. All they wanted was to get on land.

    • @gordonlandreth9550
      @gordonlandreth9550 Год назад +3

      Excellent observation and probably very true .

    • @juliemerritt5144
      @juliemerritt5144 Год назад +4

      Louis Lamboley so. This tells of these brave men who went into combat to free Italy.

    • @louislamboley9167
      @louislamboley9167 Год назад

      @@juliemerritt5144 Yes, an excellent movie. I was knit picking. I'm detail oriented.

    • @colincooper8727
      @colincooper8727 Год назад +3

      There are also several other technical error. A fragmentation hand grenade will not topple an armored car. None of the soldiers are seen carrying the satchel charges they would need to blow the bridge. The Germans have too many machine guns for the size of a squad holding that farmhouse. The Germans are using American 30 cal machine guns instead of their MG 42.

    • @paulsuprono7225
      @paulsuprono7225 Год назад +3

      I concur . . . didn't take more than one hour before my digestive tract became EXPLOSIVE ! 💀 😖 😩 😫

  • @thomasbleming7539
    @thomasbleming7539 Год назад +8

    I've been to Italy 🇮🇹 many, many times.
    I lived there for nearly two years and traveled all over the country.
    On one occasion I happened to come across an old Italian farmhouse which had a stone wall around it.
    The farmhouse was deserted.
    I have often wondered if it was where this picture was filmed.
    I have seen this film many, many times.
    All of those who were in it have passed away.

  • @deweymartin678
    @deweymartin678 Год назад +4

    Cast:
    Dana Andrews as Staff Sergeant Bill Tyne
    Richard Conte as Pvt Rivera
    George Tyne as PFC Jake Friedman
    John Ireland as Pfc Windy Craven
    Lloyd Bridges as Staff SGT “Farmer” Ward
    Sterling Holloway as Pvt Mac “McWilliams”
    Norman Lloyd as Pvt Archimbeau
    Herbert Rudely as Staff Sergeant Edward Porter
    Richard Ben-diet as Pvt Tranella
    Hunts Halls as Pvt Caraway
    George Offer-man Jr as Tinker
    Steve Brodie as Private Judson
    Matt Wills as SGT .Pete Halverosn
    Chris Drake as Pfc Tim Rankin
    Alvin Hammer as Johnson
    Jay Norris as Cousins
    John Kellogg as Riddle
    Bits:
    James Base as Solider
    Harry Cline as Kramer
    Tony Dante as Girgo
    Danny Desmond as Trasker
    George Turner as Driver

  • @user-zi8ux6fy2n
    @user-zi8ux6fy2n 21 день назад

    Back in the 80s I used to stay up late watching the LATE LATE Show on Fridays and Saturdays to watch old movies like this one....they SHO' don't make'em like they used to.... I NEEDS A DREENK 🤙🍺🥃😎

  • @Baskerville22
    @Baskerville22 Год назад +9

    Burgess Meredith is the narrator. Kenneth Spencer sings the songs.
    Notice * at 40.55, the soldier directly behind Dana Andrews, the one who lifts a cigarette to his lips at 41.10 that's Robert Horton of Wagon Train fame. He's 'uncredited' in this film.
    Notice at 39.00, the soldier on the left holding his automatic ..... pointing directly at his pal on the right.
    Seems the Luftwaffe got their hands on a few P - 51s.

  • @raybame5816
    @raybame5816 Год назад +10

    Thank you TSV for this most excellent presentation of this film. It's one, if not the, best I've ever seen. This film alone rates you a subscription and like. I'm looking forward to your other content. Edit: watched it again, 8/23, noticed Riveria (Richard Conte) has a .45 holster, correct for machine gunner in WW2.

  • @zyral.f.6938
    @zyral.f.6938 Год назад +5

    Mare Nostrum. Another great film I wish someone would share.

  • @iduswelton9567
    @iduswelton9567 Год назад +3

    My Sicilian godfather fought in ww2 in the Army - he survived the first 4 years before he got injured - one of his ankles got badly broken while walking between battles, he was a sniper

  • @bertbinion7420
    @bertbinion7420 Год назад +5

    This is one of the few WWII movies I've watched several times. No propaganda, combat burnout, and no heroes just ordinary men. Our own equipment used by the enemy,,, where were the makers going to get BF109s? If John Wayne could pull a frag pin with his teeth so could everyone else.

    • @flitsertheo
      @flitsertheo Год назад +3

      The aerial combat scenes are stock footage of real ww2 airplanes in combat. As long as movies were shot in black & white these images could rather easily be blended in. That's one of the reasons why still they shot "The Longest Day" (1962) in B/W instead of glorious Technicolor.

  • @bartle6168
    @bartle6168 Год назад +6

    My Grandfather died fighting in Northern Italy,. As far as movies go this was a good one, but the producers should have hired a military adviser because the conduct of the soldiers, their tactics, how they addressed their weapons was simply unrealistic, as for the significant casualties just to take a farm house in daylight was far from realistic. From a German perspective, armed as the Germans were not a single GI should have made it across the open ground. The movie was an enjoyable romp, but as realistic as Star Wars.

  • @marksanders233
    @marksanders233 Год назад +1

    May I say😢 God Bless your father for
    his service,and courage .Men like these are a rare breed oorah

  • @captainbart
    @captainbart Год назад +6

    When a GI platoon lands on the beaches of Italy during World War II, the troops face uncertainty and danger with every step. Those who survive the initial landing, including Sgt. Tyne (Dana Andrews) and Sgt. Ward (Lloyd Bridges), pursue a mission to take control of a farmhouse and blow up a nearby bridge. When the soldiers are not involved in enemy engagements,they pass the time in conversation while marching through the Italian countryside, but they always keep their objectives in mind.

  • @alanrappaport9937
    @alanrappaport9937 10 месяцев назад +1

    I was a infantryman with the First Cavalry Division in Vietnam , so many war movies are just so much fantasy for me. Fantasy and unintentional comedy like the Green Berets which is practically a laugh a minute. But A Walk in the Sun at least for me holds up but Im not sure I can explain why . The tactics shown in the film despite the presence of a Colonel as techincal advisor are not out of the Infantry School but from hunger. A frontal attack and a poorly coordinated diversion . The Battle Hymn of the Republic playing over the attack. But theirs something about it. the performances Dana Andrews , Richard Conte and Richard Benjamin.( you catch on slow Rivera but you catch on good) And John Ireland as windy. I guess it does convey the cynicism of the combat solider. and the dogged determination you need to do the job. Overall i would place it along side Battleground as the best of the 1940s war films

  • @earlytwin
    @earlytwin Год назад +3

    The way they all mass together. One shell, and poef, unit wiped 😮

  • @ghostrider-ek8gu
    @ghostrider-ek8gu Год назад +2

    A great war movie, real and straight forward. On elf my all time favorites!

  • @mikekennedy4572
    @mikekennedy4572 Год назад +11

    Somehow I had never seen this film, but I am glad I did today. Thank you for posting this. Great movie.

  • @randalldunkley1042
    @randalldunkley1042 Год назад +4

    About time they restored this classic. Harry Brown's book and his screenplay is one and the same. Catchy dialogue that few will appreciate today. Lewis Milestone directed this and his two other anti-war films, "All Quiet on the Western Front " and "Porkchop Hill". Realism has to be suspended in this film as everyone has an rifle cartridge belt without any cartridges no matter what weapon they carry.

    • @davediamond7228
      @davediamond7228 Год назад

      ucla has restored hundreds of films and t v programs

  • @usaveteran-retired6464
    @usaveteran-retired6464 Год назад +5

    Thanks for the Movie -- NO THANKS for the 50,000 USELESS COMMERCIALS. 🙂

  • @whaszis
    @whaszis Год назад +4

    Dan ads take away the pleasure of watching anything on yt.

    • @trwhitford65
      @trwhitford65 Год назад

      RUclips Ad Block extension or FF the movie and rewind.... no ads

  • @philtaylor1647
    @philtaylor1647 Год назад +2

    I bought it on DVD. I still enjoy watching it

  • @RonGreeneComedian
    @RonGreeneComedian 9 месяцев назад +1

    Most of the veterans, including my uncle, always described their experiences as "mopping up" after the heavy fighting was completed. It never occurred to me until later that if all they did was mop up, who did the fighting? My uncle was a combat engineer. For those of you who don't know what their job was, it was dangerous. They rebuilt the bridges just destroyed, often under fire. They crawled under the bridges, often under fire, to remove the explosives and booby traps. After you have seen your buddy disintegrate in a blast, or his head shot off by a sniper, it's a wonder they all didn't become alcoholics, as my uncle did.

  • @mikeyj9607
    @mikeyj9607 Год назад +3

    The opening song gets me everytime ,chills

  • @petersanmiguel1164
    @petersanmiguel1164 Год назад +14

    A great movie! That farmhouse scene is a classic! Thank you!

    • @geraldkriss1120
      @geraldkriss1120 Год назад

      Gerald Kriss I saw this movie many years ago. What really me touched me was the physical and psychological toll these men endured. This movie is a classic.

    • @petersanmiguel1164
      @petersanmiguel1164 Год назад

      @@geraldkriss1120 Yes.

  • @colincooper8727
    @colincooper8727 Год назад +8

    Not a big budget film by any measure but that attack on the farmhouse is chilling.

    • @ronmailloux8655
      @ronmailloux8655 Год назад +1

      character development solid acting often are all thats needed . Yes the farm house attack was climatic .

    • @andrewfrancis4462
      @andrewfrancis4462 Год назад +1

      I agree. I was rooting for those men. Unfortunately some did die, but they took it.

  • @Peter-yk8tw
    @Peter-yk8tw 3 дня назад

    Worth saving, thank you for the restoration, was different. God Bless the Veterans

  • @GeneRogers-xl9um
    @GeneRogers-xl9um Год назад +1

    Great movie, but around 1.22 I think I saw Lloyd Bridges pull the grenade pin with his teeth. Not to take anything away from this movie. Greatest generation and great movie. The conversation is very good in the film.

  • @frankroy9423
    @frankroy9423 Год назад +2

    Awsome movie. Thank you for your service

  • @georgiamule
    @georgiamule Год назад +4

    In serious need of a combat experienced technical advisor

  • @JohnMcDonald-ef5gz
    @JohnMcDonald-ef5gz Год назад +1

    The great thing about this movie is how director Lewis Milestone keep the Germans largely unseen until the very end so as to build up the suspense. Brilliant film making.

  • @JosephDent-qd9ih
    @JosephDent-qd9ih 7 месяцев назад +2

    Way to describe the Texas Division, every state members.

  • @lzcontrol
    @lzcontrol Год назад +3

    In a landing craft it's a hell of a lot louder and a good number of the fellows on that boat would be blowing chunks.

  • @robthebold4589
    @robthebold4589 Год назад +3

    "A walk in the sun" is the euphemism drill sergeants give for a 20 mile road march.

  • @yoelfischel6327
    @yoelfischel6327 2 месяца назад

    To answer a question that some of you have, the infantry was given this assignment instead of planes was because the name of the movie is A Walk in the Sun.

  • @tomsmith7742
    @tomsmith7742 Год назад +7

    Also- you can't walk a hundred yards in Italy without passing a farm house or barn or small village. This was made in California farm country where you could still walk a long ways between syphilization, back then, anyways..

  • @Marvinwalker-ud3yo
    @Marvinwalker-ud3yo Год назад +2

    Over the years, I have watched this movie and enjoyed it more and more each time. In my opinion I think it is the best best WWll movie ever made. It is about the men doing the fighting, not a love story, or fat politicians drinking champagne, or generals taking credit for the blood and guts of the man in the trenches.

  • @emilyarte957
    @emilyarte957 7 месяцев назад +1

    Five stars and two thumbs up!

  • @Whitegorillaboy
    @Whitegorillaboy Год назад +1

    Very good movie. Much better than I expected.

  • @OlanwayneT
    @OlanwayneT Год назад +4

    Plane doing the strafing that killed the medic looks like a P51 Mustang.

    • @TricksterDa
      @TricksterDa Год назад

      I saw that, too, but I doubt if there were any unused Messerschmitts or FWs lying around for use in the making of this movie. That Nazi armored car looked more like US made equipment and the burned up tanks were basically mock-ups.

  • @markh3271
    @markh3271 Год назад +4

    Great movie, right up there with Battleground!. As this was released 6 months after "The Story of GI Joe" starring Burgess Meredith, it makes me wonder if the director got Burgess to narrate this movie due to that movie's success? His distinctive voice would instantly be recognized and people would associate the two movies together.

    • @enterprisebaby2467
      @enterprisebaby2467 Год назад +1

      This is right up there with The Story of GI Joe. A fine gentleman I worked with was in Italy: 1st Armored Division. Anzio and Monte Cassino.

  • @clevlandblock
    @clevlandblock Год назад +16

    I think I got a few more gray hairs watching this. Wearing their chinstraps was the last thing WW2 GIs would do.

    • @alvinmorris5404
      @alvinmorris5404 Год назад +3

      Yes sir my dad was a tank mechanic and assistant gunner in a Sherman tank crew in WWII Europe was lucky enough to survive an made it up through the battle of the bulge, the Ardennes, right on up to Berlin the only time that chin strap was on his chin was if someone picky about uniforms like general Patton came along soon as he was gone that garrote was off and for the young people who don't know what a garrote is well...let a German get behind you and grab the front of your helmet and pull backwards you'll find out very quickly whenever the chin strap slips backwards and starts crushing your windpipe while he's probably sticking a knife in your back. True stuff passed on from someone who was there and passed it along to his kid. Lot of history dissappears everytime a veteran passes away if they are willing to talk LISTEN and appreciate what they went through. If they were lucky enough to make it home and then if they look grumpy grouchy or sad maybe even crying just take a look at what the people have done to the country they love, my dad said if he would have known how Clinton was going to get in office he'd of never went and that was hard as hell for him to say because he was proud of his time in the service he's been gone since February 1998 🥺😭

  • @CaptainQueue
    @CaptainQueue Год назад +5

    Frontal assault on a farmhouse defended by 3 machine guns? Doubtful this is based on reality.

    • @MrSmegfish
      @MrSmegfish Год назад

      With three machine guns they would never expect a frontal assault. It would be suicide....but it would have the element of complete surprise !

    • @nomadmarauder-dw9re
      @nomadmarauder-dw9re 6 месяцев назад

      It's based on about 1000 realities. We, as a nation, have gotten accustomed to high tech warriors jumping on poor hopped up wogs to the point that such things as seen here have become near mythical and just...stupid.

  • @jennypalmer331
    @jennypalmer331 Год назад

    Great movie. LEST WE FORGET. Thank you

  • @jonathanbair523
    @jonathanbair523 Год назад +1

    My dad told me a story about how his brother was fighting in South Korea.. His brother got a letter saying he had to sign up for selective service. I was told he wrote back "I am out side this town come and get me." My dad was serving state side in the army...... The bit at 53:00 made me think of that story.

  • @razorshark9320
    @razorshark9320 Год назад +6

    This is a great film.

  • @leslierogers3134
    @leslierogers3134 Год назад

    Such great, gritty dialogue.

  • @peterloader974
    @peterloader974 Год назад +9

    Not seen this before. Quite a gem. Thanks.

  • @biglarry325
    @biglarry325 Год назад +6

    Who the hell walks around in enemy territory blowing a whistle?

  • @benjaminrush4443
    @benjaminrush4443 Год назад +2

    Great Flick. Seen a few times - not restored. Thanks.

  • @lloydbotway5930
    @lloydbotway5930 Год назад +5

    The dialogue seems to have been written as a stage play, not a film.

  • @kitparker9448
    @kitparker9448 Год назад +1

    Thank you for your service...and I sincerely mean it.

  • @virgilcain8152
    @virgilcain8152 Год назад +1

    Saw this when I was a kid, was so long ago! Had thought of it a few months ago, I'm glad it was on!

  • @MrKen-mc4bu
    @MrKen-mc4bu Год назад +4

    So, Don Bartzini was a machine gunner in World War II.

  • @neilp192
    @neilp192 Год назад +3

    Are the planes at 56:20 animated? If so, bravo. The scene where the plane kills the medic is really impressive, also.

    • @jonathanbair523
      @jonathanbair523 Год назад

      Naa they just taken real clips from gun cams and what not then spliced them in... Like when the lighting shot down the German plane, it shows a flat metal deck like from a carrier..50:47 film is on a ocean... Tho odds are when this was made most tv's where black and white and like 20 inches for a big living room tv, so doubt they would have noticed...

  • @SmithMrCorona
    @SmithMrCorona 2 месяца назад

    Who knew WWII was so calm? They just rolled up to that beach, as if they were visiting a relative they don't quite get along with.

  • @rhatid
    @rhatid Год назад +1

    This film is Art at its finest. Oh so very good! Incidentally, I saw that they credited the music people but they didn't credit the singer - or did I miss it!

  • @pressureworks
    @pressureworks Год назад +13

    39:08 Sach (Huntz Hall) served in the Army During WW2. Despite this however, the Allies somehow won the War.

  • @Carl-ht7cg
    @Carl-ht7cg Год назад +2

    No Actors died in the making of this movie; Give to the "Wounded Warrior Project"