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6,4/10
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MA NOTE
Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueDuring WW2, a platoon of Marines crash-lands on a tiny Pacific island occupied by a small Japanese unit.During WW2, a platoon of Marines crash-lands on a tiny Pacific island occupied by a small Japanese unit.During WW2, a platoon of Marines crash-lands on a tiny Pacific island occupied by a small Japanese unit.
Takeshi Katô
- Sgt. Tamura
- (as Takeshi Kato)
Tôru Ibuki
- Pvt. Arikawa
- (as Toru Ibuki)
Ryûchô Shumpûtei
- Pvt. Okuda
- (as Ryucho Shunputei)
Histoire
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesDuring downtime whilst shooting the picture, Brad Dexter saved Frank Sinatra from drowning when he dived into the ocean and rescued the floundering singer.
- GaffesOne African American belongs to the USMC platoon. At this time, US military was not an integrated military and Blacks were segregated. This black Marine couldn't have been a member of this platoon.
- Citations
Lt. Kuroki: Our island is a little chunk of coral in the Sakhalin archipelago. It is nameless and the Great War beyond its horizons ignores us, for we are the expendables of an amphibious landing, left to God, a forgotten outpost of the Imperial Japanese Army.
- Générique farfeluThe line NOBODY EVER WINS appears in place of "The End" just before the end credits start, which is appropriate given the film's anti-war message.
- Autres versionsSome prints of the film do not include subtitles for any of the Japanese sequences.
- ConnexionsFeatured in Stars of the Silver Screen: Frank Sinatra (2011)
Commentaire en vedette
There's a clumsiness to 1965's "None But The Brave" that you really shouldn't let get in your way of the film. The clumsiness is due to Frank Sinatra's direction -- he was a far, far better actor than a director, and wisely chose never to direct another film -- and it exposes itself most prominently in the film's heavy-handed "flashback" sequences.
Having gotten that out of the way, let's consider the film itself. World War II, a small island in the Pacific: a group of marooned GIs find themselves sharing space with an equally marooned group of Japanese soldiers. Reluctantly, a truce evolves; each side has something the other needs. During that truce, enemies develop -- if not a true friendship -- at least an understanding, an empathy, and a respect for, each other. This truce, of course, cannot endure. The outside world -- and the war -- must impose itself, and each side reacts according to its own sense of honor and duty. Rightly so.
Some reviewers have chosen to label this an 'anti-war' film. Perhaps it is. Myself, I prefer to think of it, rather, as a 'pro-humanity' film, one which recognizes that man will pit himself against man time and time again, and for reasons that may or may not be the best, but that -- in the end -- we can, each of us, even in the midst of the most horrific conflict imaginable, step away, even if only for the briefest of moments (or truces), and deal with each other as human beings.
That's what happens in "None But The Brave."
And if the ending is less than satisfactory, maybe it serves to makes us each wish for a better one . . . and a better world!
Having gotten that out of the way, let's consider the film itself. World War II, a small island in the Pacific: a group of marooned GIs find themselves sharing space with an equally marooned group of Japanese soldiers. Reluctantly, a truce evolves; each side has something the other needs. During that truce, enemies develop -- if not a true friendship -- at least an understanding, an empathy, and a respect for, each other. This truce, of course, cannot endure. The outside world -- and the war -- must impose itself, and each side reacts according to its own sense of honor and duty. Rightly so.
Some reviewers have chosen to label this an 'anti-war' film. Perhaps it is. Myself, I prefer to think of it, rather, as a 'pro-humanity' film, one which recognizes that man will pit himself against man time and time again, and for reasons that may or may not be the best, but that -- in the end -- we can, each of us, even in the midst of the most horrific conflict imaginable, step away, even if only for the briefest of moments (or truces), and deal with each other as human beings.
That's what happens in "None But The Brave."
And if the ending is less than satisfactory, maybe it serves to makes us each wish for a better one . . . and a better world!
- bigpurplebear
- 2 avr. 2002
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Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langues
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- None But the Brave
- Lieux de tournage
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- Durée1 heure 46 minutes
- Rapport de forme
- 2.35 : 1
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By what name was L'île des braves (1965) officially released in India in English?
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