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Anzio

Original title: Lo sbarco di Anzio
  • 1968
  • PG-13
  • 1h 57m
IMDb RATING
6.0/10
4.2K
YOUR RATING
Anzio (1968)
Anzio: one of WWII's bloodiest battles as the Allies smash through the German lines which have enclosed the Anzio beachhead--four months and 30,000 casualties before the Allies finally march to Rome.
Play trailer1:12
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38 Photos
DramaHistoryWar

A war correspondent witnesses errors made at Allied Command after he and a unit of US Army Rangers land unopposed at Anzio, Italy, but later become trapped behind German lines during one of ... Read allA war correspondent witnesses errors made at Allied Command after he and a unit of US Army Rangers land unopposed at Anzio, Italy, but later become trapped behind German lines during one of the bloodiest battles of WWII.A war correspondent witnesses errors made at Allied Command after he and a unit of US Army Rangers land unopposed at Anzio, Italy, but later become trapped behind German lines during one of the bloodiest battles of WWII.

  • Directors
    • Edward Dmytryk
    • Duilio Coletti
  • Writers
    • H.A.L. Craig
    • Wynford Vaughan-Thomas
    • Frank De Felitta
  • Stars
    • Robert Mitchum
    • Peter Falk
    • Robert Ryan
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.0/10
    4.2K
    YOUR RATING
    • Directors
      • Edward Dmytryk
      • Duilio Coletti
    • Writers
      • H.A.L. Craig
      • Wynford Vaughan-Thomas
      • Frank De Felitta
    • Stars
      • Robert Mitchum
      • Peter Falk
      • Robert Ryan
    • 54User reviews
    • 16Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

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    Trailer 1:12
    Trailer

    Photos38

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    Top cast34

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    Robert Mitchum
    Robert Mitchum
    • Dick Ennis (war correspondent, International Press)
    Peter Falk
    Peter Falk
    • Cpl. Jack Rabinoff
    Robert Ryan
    Robert Ryan
    • General Carson
    Earl Holliman
    Earl Holliman
    • Platoon Sgt. Abe Stimmler
    Mark Damon
    Mark Damon
    • Wally Richardson
    Arthur Kennedy
    Arthur Kennedy
    • Maj. Gen. Jack Lesley
    Reni Santoni
    Reni Santoni
    • Pvt. Movie
    Joseph Walsh
    Joseph Walsh
    • Doyle
    Thomas Hunter
    Thomas Hunter
    • Pvt. Andy
    Giancarlo Giannini
    Giancarlo Giannini
    • Pvt. Cellini
    Anthony Steel
    Anthony Steel
    • Gen. Marsh
    Patrick Magee
    Patrick Magee
    • Gen. Starkey
    Arthur Franz
    Arthur Franz
    • Maj. Gen. Luke Howard
    Tonio Selwart
    Tonio Selwart
    • Gen. Van MacKensen
    Elsa Albani
    Elsa Albani
    • Emilia
    Wayde Preston
    Wayde Preston
    • Col. Hendricks
    Venantino Venantini
    Venantino Venantini
    • Capt. Burns
    Annabella Andreoli
    • Anna
    • Directors
      • Edward Dmytryk
      • Duilio Coletti
    • Writers
      • H.A.L. Craig
      • Wynford Vaughan-Thomas
      • Frank De Felitta
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews54

    6.04.1K
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    Featured reviews

    4RIO-15

    Unconvincing war movie

    The Allied invasion of Anzio,which took the Germans totally by surprise,is the background for this war movie.Because of extreme caution on the part of the Allied commander (Arthur Kennedy)the invasion became a big military failure. The plot concentrates on a small group of men trying to survive behind enemy lines after their platoon had been almost totally wiped out by the Germans.

    A totally unconvincing war movie,which is surprising considering the people involved in it. The acting is bad.Robert Mitchum seems to utter his lines as if he was reading a boring book.The dialogue is childish and typical macho-stuff,but there are a few action scenes that are well staged.
    6smatysia

    A missed opportunity by the film makers.

    This is an okay war film. Robert Mitchum does his usual good job as a long-time war correspondent, and Peter Falk as a Ranger corporal at the Anzio invasion is creditable. There just doesn't seem to be a lot there. This goes down as a missed opportunity by the film makers.
    5cpurvis

    Too bad

    It's a shame that the makers of a movie made about one of the bloodiest battles of WWII chose to make a semi-fictional work. The real story is far more gripping than this movie. Anzio was a four month struggle, which for the Allies, had no rear area. There was nowhere an Allied soldier could go that was out of range of German artillery and planes.

    The real battle for Anzio was a true Allied effort with the British and Americans locking in a duel to the death with the best German troops Hitler could put in Italy. It was supposed to break the deadlock of the Gustav line by flanking but was doomed from the start because it lacked sufficient landing strength. True, the road to the Rome WAS uncontested on D-Day, but Kesselring himself said later he would have easily cut off and destroyed any such small force if it extended itself even to the Alban Hills, let alone Rome.

    The story of the loss of Darby's Rangers is covered in other movies better; of the 767 Rangers sent on a mission, only six returned. It is but one of many stories of horrific sacrifice of young lives. Further south, in a diversionary mission designed to take pressure off the Anzio landing, the US 36th division lost 1600 men in a single night trying to cross the Rapido river. The British took terrible losses, especially in the German offensive of 18-19 Feb 1944, mainly due to their bad luck of being placed in the line in the area in which Hitler personally chose to concentrate the main German offensive, which came within about 1000 yards of breaking the last line of defense.

    Such losses are unimaginable today, yet they were accepted then as the price that must be paid to rid Europe of Hitler.

    There are no films that I know of that do justice to Anzio. One would be better served by reading any of the numerous books about Anzio or even reading the write-up at http://www.army.mil/cmh/brochures/anzio/72-19.htm -- it is infinitely more interesting than this movie.
    7kikiloveslegwarmers

    Mixed Messages

    Anzio is a weird film. Made at the height of the Viet-Nam War, it's clear this Italian film is trying to be anti-war. Robert Mitchuim, who looks like he hadn't slept for a month, and was on a week-long drinking binge, rambles on about the waste of war. He sounds like a drunk at a upscale cocktail party. Yet, the movie also uses the basic Hollywood heroics to attract the viewing public. The sniper shoot-out is done realistically and is somewhat exciting. Aside from that, the film is way to talkative, way too long, and the action in general is dull.

    The best thing about this movie are the performances of Mark Damon and Reni Santoni as two U.S. Army Rangers. Peter Falk was stereotyped with this type of anti-establishment role in the late 1960s and played the exact same role in Castle Keep. Falk also looks beat, drunk, and bored. Arthur Kennedy and Robert Ryan are totally wasted and it's clear they were hired for their names. Earl Holliman gives a modest performance.
    3rmax304823

    Diluted and boring film a clef.

    It's a not-entirely fictional story about the Ango-American landings at Anzio on Italy's west coast. It's diluted because the story behind those landings is far more interesting than what we see on the screen. Names, personalities, and motives are changed around so that hardly any echo of the real characters remains, although we get a lot of information about characters created in the screenplay.

    Basically, Robert Ryan plays General Mark Clark who was in charge of the operation and was in overall command of the Fifth Army. He was an interesting guy for a general -- tall, vain, brave, half-Jewish, a large-featured face like the mask of Tragedy, carrying around a sidearm as a prop. Arthur Kennedy plays General John P. Lewis (modeled after Gen. Lucas), in charge of the landings themselves. Mitchum accuses him of being "timid" (three times) and in a way he was, although it wasn't entirely his fault. Arthur Franz has a small role as General Lucian K. Truscott, the junior general in command of the Third Division (Audie Murphy's division). All the names have been changed to protect the guilty.

    Here, basically, is how it worked. The Allies of half a dozen nationalities were being slaughtered throwing themselves against the German Gustav line, which ran across the Italian boot from sea to sea, commanded by the unconquerable Monte Cassino. The Anzio landings were designed to catch the enemy by surprise from behind and relieve pressure at the Gustav line. Mark Clark (who saw to it that any reference to the Fifth Army in the press appeared as a reference to "Mark Clark's Fifth Army") had supervised similar earlier landings at Salerno. They were successful, but just barely. The landings at Anzio were handed over to Lucas, whose orders included a drive inland, if possible, to the Alban Hills which commanded a perfect view of the beachhead and the main highway to Rome. Lucas had just troops enough to dig in and consolidate or to race pell mell to the Alban Hills, but not enough troops to do both. Lucas was advised by Clark, "Don't stick your neck out like I did at Salerno." (The line is directly quoted in the movie, but is given to Robert Ryan's fictional general.) So Lucas didn't stick his neck out. He went inland seven miles, stopped short of the Alban Hills, and dug in. Clark, who was on the beach, agreed with the decision.

    And Lucas wasn't the cocksure but mistaken strategist played by Arthur Kennedy. The real General Lucas kept a diary and it's full of gloomy forebodings. The Germans, under Kesselring and Mackensen, were caught unprepared. Nothing stood between the allies and the Alban Hills, or Rome for that matter. But Lucas did nothing, and for good reasons. He didn't have the resources to take Rome and hold it. Except for the probe by Rangers, as shown on screen, and others by British troops, everyone dug in and waited for the German reinforcements to deploy, which happened apace. Kesselring was a very efficient tactician and had plenty of time to bring in troops in the stalled Allied beach head.

    Instead of Anzio rescuing the troops at the Gustav line, the situation was turned around. In the end, some 24,000 American and 9,000 British casualties were evacuated from the beachhead. Clark fired Lucas and gave command to Truscott. When the German resistance finally collapsed, General Clark had an opportunity to drive eastward across the Italian boot and cut off the German troops to the south. He chose instead to forget about capturing the German army and to zip his own troops north along the highway to Rome so that he could "conquer" the open city. You know -- like Julius Caesar? The German army promptly withdrew north to their next massive defense line, where the Allied advance stalled again.

    I leave it to the viewer to decide which story is more engaging, the historical one or the plot we see on the screen, which is mostly the story of seven survivors of the Ranger patrol who try to make their way back to Anzio, a story we've seen many times before. I wish I could at least say that the story presented on screen is well done but the fact is that it's not. This is one of Mitchum's lazier performances. Sometimes he sounds positively drunk. No one else stands out, including Peter Falk, who has the reactivity of a noble gas. Arther Kennedy is the smarmy General Whatever-his-name-is. And some other posters are absolutely right about the score. Whew! A simple-minded would-be catchy love song doesn't turn into a martial theme just because you throw some snare drums behind it and play it as a march.

    What a missed opportunity.

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    Related interests

    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama
    Liam Neeson in Schindler's List (1993)
    History
    Band of Brothers (2001)
    War

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Peter Falk in his 2006 autobiography "Just One More Thing: Stories of My Life" stated that he didn't like the script for this film, finding it hackneyed and full of cliché; he wanted to leave the film for these reasons. However, producer Dino De Laurentiis encouraged him to stay by giving him film-poster name-above-the-title credit as well as choice of writer for his dialogue. Falk stayed on the picture and apparently actually wrote his own dialogue.
    • Goofs
      Toward the beginning of the film, Cpl. Jack Rabinoff (Peter Falk) is in the back of a Red Cross ambulance with three prostitutes and grabs a shoebox-sized box labeled "Hershey's Milk Chocolate Multi Pack" with a "1968 design" of the Hershey logo. One of the prostitutes reaches into the box and pulls out a "1968 design" box of Brach's Milk Chocolate Stars. In addition to the two anachronisms, Hershey's and Brach's are two separate companies.
    • Quotes

      Dick Ennis: [attending to Rabinoff who went into sudden convulsions] Look, fellows, I think he can use the air more then the company, okay? Anything anybody can do?

      Cpl. Jack Rabinoff: No, unless you have a band-aid.

      Dick Ennis: Very funny.

      Cpl. Jack Rabinoff: Oh, it's murder. The stomach, you see? A Japanese grenade ripped my insides. Got medal in there. Under tension it contracts and all hell breaks loose. I must have been tense.

      Dick Ennis: Good thinking. You belong in a hospital, not in a war.

      Cpl. Jack Rabinoff: Yeah, that's what they said when they sent me home.

      Dick Ennis: You mean you got out, then you went to Canada and joined this outfit?

      Cpl. Jack Rabinoff: That's right.

      Dick Ennis: How did you get past the doctors?

      Cpl. Jack Rabinoff: Lied about my age.

      Dick Ennis: You gotta be crazy. Half your guts blown out and you're back here. What for?

      Cpl. Jack Rabinoff: Awkward time for a interview.

      Dick Ennis: You got something better to do? Why did you re-enlist?

      Cpl. Jack Rabinoff: Why? Because I like it, you know. I missed it, Ennis. With all the mud and pain, these clowns giving orders, there's nothing like it. Look, a guy sells shoes for 40 years. I live more in one day, I see more and feel more. I taste more, I think more. I'm more, understand? I'm more. There's more to living than breathing. Capisce?

      Dick Ennis: Capisce.

      Cpl. Jack Rabinoff: You're the same way, that's right. War is part of you. You belong to it and when this one's over, you'll find another and I hope I'm with you.

    • Connections
      Referenced in The Carol Burnett Show: Nanette Fabray and Steve Lawrence (1970)
    • Soundtracks
      This World Is Yours
      Sung by Jack Jones

      Lyrics by Doc Pomus

      Edizioni Musicali "Dino"

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    FAQ14

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • July 24, 1968 (United States)
    • Countries of origin
      • Italy
      • United States
    • Languages
      • English
      • Italian
      • German
    • Also known as
      • Bitva za Antsio
    • Filming locations
      • Royal Palace, Caserta, Campania, Italy(opening scene)
    • Production companies
      • Columbia Pictures
      • Dino de Laurentiis Cinematografica
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 57m(117 min)
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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