Drame de la seconde guerre mondiale sur la bataille de 1942 en Afrique du Nord à El Alamein entre les Alliés et les forces de l'Axe.Drame de la seconde guerre mondiale sur la bataille de 1942 en Afrique du Nord à El Alamein entre les Alliés et les forces de l'Axe.Drame de la seconde guerre mondiale sur la bataille de 1942 en Afrique du Nord à El Alamein entre les Alliés et les forces de l'Axe.
- Marta
- (as Ira Furstenberg)
- Kapow
- (as Salvatore Borgese)
- Italian Soldier
- (as Max Dean)
Histoire
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThe opening prologue states: "June 1942. As Gen. Erwin Rommel swept toward the Nile, the fall of Egypt and the capture of the Suez Canal seemed inevitable. Italian and German advance units raced toward Alexandria. Benito Mussolini had given explicit orders: The Italians must arrive first!"
- GaffesThe British were using M113 personnel carriers. The M113 personnel carrier was not introduced until some 20 years after the Battle of El Alamein.
- Citations
Gen. Bernard Law Montgomery: [addressing his staff officers] I'm taking over command of the Eighth Army. I had best tell you immediately what I think; they'll be no more retreating. I want all the plans for pulling back prepared by my predecessor to be burned. I want all non-operative vehicles returned to the rear lines. No one will be moving out of here. We're staying on, dead or alive, until Rommel surrenders. That's all for the moment.
- ConnexionsEdited into I diavoli della guerra (1969)
Battle of El Alamein isn't such a film. It's probably the most objective and anti-war film made since ALL QUIET ON THE WESTERN FRONT. While the battle sequences are big and exciting, there's nothing glamorous about fighting this kind of war. The soldiers are all shown as equally miserable, barely eeking out an existence in a network of trenches on the sunbaked deserts of North Africa. While it primarily focuses on the heroics of an Italian division (the real-life Italian army was best known as one of the most poorly-led and low-morale armies at the time), the film doesn't get too preachy and while it villifies no one, only showing how some generals (especially the fictional Schwartz) inevitably swung the battle in their enemy's favor due to their impatience and misguided ideals.
THE BATTLE OF EL ALAMEIN also does a great job of blending fictional characters with nonfictional ones (like Rommel, Montgomery, Von Thoma, and Stumme) in a nonfictional setting. While the battle itself is abridged and perhaps over-simplified to focus on the Italian division, that's perhaps best for the sake of narrative, character development, and making the emotional impact as strong as possible.
Stylistically, the film is done fairly well in late-60's style, with plenty of zoom-lens technique, close-ups, etc. It does drag in spots but only due to the predictability because we KNOW that the axis is gonna lose, but it does a good job keeping the suspense high by showing the Italians taking heavy losses in every engagement. We never know which characters are gonna make it through and which ones aren't.
Despite it's flaws, I doubt a better, larger, or more compelling depiction of the battle of El Alamein shall ever be made.
Meilleurs choix
- How long is The Battle of El Alamein?Alimenté par Alexa
Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- The Battle of El Alamein
- Lieux de tournage
- Cinecittà Studios, Cinecittà, Rome, Lazio, Italie(interiors filmed at)
- Sociétés de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
- Durée1 heure 36 minutes
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 2.35 : 1