Pendant la Guerre de Corée, un pilote de chasse de la Navy doit lutter contre ses propres sentiments ambigus envers la guerre et la peur de devoir bombarder un ensemble de ponts très protégé... Tout lirePendant la Guerre de Corée, un pilote de chasse de la Navy doit lutter contre ses propres sentiments ambigus envers la guerre et la peur de devoir bombarder un ensemble de ponts très protégés. La tension culmine dans ce sombre film de guerre.Pendant la Guerre de Corée, un pilote de chasse de la Navy doit lutter contre ses propres sentiments ambigus envers la guerre et la peur de devoir bombarder un ensemble de ponts très protégés. La tension culmine dans ce sombre film de guerre.
- Récompensé par 1 Oscar
- 1 victoire et 2 nominations au total
- Capt. Evans
- (as Willis B. Bouchey)
- Pilot
- (non crédité)
- Enlisted Man
- (non crédité)
- Pilot in Meeting
- (non crédité)
- Cathy Brubaker
- (non crédité)
- Pilot
- (non crédité)
- Marine Orderly
- (non crédité)
- Susie Brubaker
- (non crédité)
Histoire
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesFor realistic close-up shots, William Holden learned how to taxi a fighter on the deck of an aircraft carrier.
- GaffesWhile over enemy territory during the photo recon and then the strike missions, the pilots talk a great deal over the radio about their location, preparations to attack and even their intentions to return to base... i.e. "air attack concluded". Now, while it's necessary for the movie plot to have these conversations between the characters while in danger, combat pilots in those days NEVER spoke like that while "feet dry" over enemy territory: the enemy would be listening and taking down every transmission while triangulating their position. There were no encrypted radios aboard aircraft like they have now.
- Citations
[last lines]
RAdm. George Tarrant: Where do we get such men? They leave this ship and they do their job. Then they must find this speck lost somewhere on the sea. When they find it they have to land on its pitching deck. Where do we get such men?
Man on loudspeaker: Launch jets!
- Crédits fousOpening credits prologue: With Task Force 77 U.S. Navy Off the coast of Korea November, 1952
- ConnexionsFeatured in Grace Kelly: The American Princess (1987)
- Bandes originalesJingle Jangle Jingle
Written by Joseph J. Lilley and Frank Loesser
Played in Japan at the bar
(uncredited)
The movie itself remains an A-grade production with some fine aerial photography, shipboard action, and special effects. It's also one of Holden's best understated performances, superior to his Oscar role in Stalag 17. Not to be overlooked is the Mickey Rooney character which remains a revealing one. His buoyant hijinks and rowdy behavior amount to a holdover of a familiar WWII stereotype. Yet the clowning here fails to gel with the prevailing mood, and would vanish from serious treatments by the time Vietnam rolled around. Then too, by the time of the movie's release (1954), audiences were eager to get back to the certainties of WWII, and studios responded with a spate of popular WWII fare, such as, Mr. Roberts (1955), Battle Cry (1955), and Operation Petticoat (1959). Except for a straggler or two, Hollywood would make no more Korean war films. And so, the process of forgetting that "Forgotten War" had begun. But, in retrospect, this was one of the few films of the decade to foreshadow the Vietnam trauma that was to follow, while the final shot of Holden's Captain Brubaker proved to be far more suggestive of war on the Asian mainland than critics could have anticipated (Toko-ri was not well received). It's only now, many years later, that viewers can appreciate the prophetic value of that final image along with the peculiar merits of this 1950's Hollywood oddity.
- dougdoepke
- 31 mars 2010
- Permalien
Meilleurs choix
Détails
Box-office
- Montant brut mondial
- 12 556 $US
- Durée1 heure 42 minutes