电影战场

战场

影片信息

  • 片名:战场
  • 状态:正片
  • 主演:范·强生/约翰·霍迪亚克/里卡多·蒙特尔班/
  • 导演:威廉·A·韦尔曼/
  • 年份:1950
  • 地区:美国
  • 类型:剧情/
  • 时长:内详
  • 上映:未知
  • 语言:英语
  • 更新:2021-11-03 01:06
  • 简介:This is not a large scale multi-million dollar epic of World War Two. No thousands of extras, no wide panoramic sweep of battle scenes. This says more about The Battle of the Bulge than the movie of the same name. It's just an ordinary black and white M.G.M. production. What it lacks in size and scope it makes up for in impact.A simple story very well told, of a squad of GI's of the 101st Airborne Division, thrown into the maelstrom that was the German offensive in the Ardennes in December of 1944 against the Allied ground forces. It's hard to believe that this film was not shot on location; but on a Metro sound stage. And Metro's Culver City was turned into the only outdoor location for the snow-covered, rubble-strewn town of Bastogne under siege, which was tenaciously held by the 101st, under the command of Brig. General Anthony McAuliffe. With the exception of Van Johnson as Pvt. Holly who was high profile on the Metro lot in his time, and George Murphy as Pvt. Stazak, the rest of the cast were character-type actors who filled their roles perfectly. James Whitmore as Sgt. Kinnie is drilling the squad in the opening scenes. The squad members talk of an enjoyable furlough in Paris which is suddenly cut short by the German breakthrough in the Ardenne. Ptv. Stazak hopes of going home are dashed because his authorised documents have not come through before the squad moves up front. Douglas Fowley as Pvt. Kippton seems to be the best in the squad at bellyaching.Maybe it's his dentures that make him a sourpuss. But Fowley's dentures turn into a class act; clicking away to the old song, "I Surrender Dear," through the courtesy of a German propaganda broadcast heard over the radio in a Sherman tank. Denise Darcel comes as a welcome relief of feminine pleasure; not out of place in the town of Bastogne itself. In an indoor scene, Pvt. Holly's eyeballs go into left-to-right overdrive as he stares at Denise's buxom rear end descending a flight of stairs. Then there's Holly again, nursing stolen newly-laid eggs, as valuable as gold nuggets. He's about to scramble them over a fire when the squad is told to saddle up and move out. Not for the first time does Johnson (Pvt. Holly) yell, "oh no!" A expression he's used in past movies also. The broken eggs in his upturned helmet are now a problem. In the end it's disaster. The German artillery scramble the eggs for Holly. Problem solved! On a three man patrol, Holly, Hodiak as Janness, Montalban as Rodriguez, intercept and force a jeep carrying a Major and two sergeants to stop and identify themselves. The knowledge that Germans are infiltrating in GI uniforms has made the patrol suspicious so the Major is asked how the Dodgers made out in 1944. The Major hesitates,but the Sergeant in the rear seat asks Holly who Betty Grable is married to. Montalban shouts back, "Cesar Romero". The Major says Romero is out. "Betty Grable is married to Harry James". The tense atmosphere relaxes. The patrol is convinced they're friendly. What is displayed authentically on this studio sound stage is the icy, bone-chilling atmosphere of the battlefield. The men hunkered down; the deeper the better, in their foxholes. Throughout nearly all this movie there is the constant rise and fall in the background of continuous artillery fire, like a rolling thunder. It never seems to cease. Sometimes it's close, sometimes distant. That, along with the freezing fog hanging like a thick whitish-grey blanket in the air, enveloping everything, gives off an atmosphere of crisis; a feeling of fearful tension. The men endeavour to dispel the fear with humour. Waiting and wondering when the enemy will appear ghost-like out of the mist-shrouded forest. Near the end of the movie, Leon Ames gives a good performance as a Army Chaplain. Trying to explain the reason for this necessary trip to Europe, to kill off a murderous political system that has already killed off millions. Before the end, the tables turn in the Allies favour. Sergeant Kinnie notices his shadow against the snow. The sun is breaking through and the mist rises. Allied tactical air power is back in business again with a vengeance. Veteran director William Wellman was not found wanting when he directed this movie. He had already proved himself with, "The Story of GI Joe", in 1945. Antiwar film? Any war film well made and convincing can be antiwar, and you do not need blood all over the silver screen to prove it. Antiwar or not, World War Two was a "popular" war. The reasons stuck out a mile. The Army Chaplain said so in so many words. The Ardennes offensive caught the Allies unawares. By late 1944, battered the German forces may have been. But they still had a few nasty shots in their locker to scare the living daylights out of the Allied Command. We thought the Germans had run out of fighting steam, but old Field Marshal Gerd Von Rundstedt thought different.
  • 扫一扫用手机访问

 立即播放 樱花云三

选择来源

  • 樱花云三
9.0
网友评分
  • 很差
  • 较差
  • 还行
  • 推荐
  • 力荐
640次评分
9.0
网友评分
  • 很差
  • 较差
  • 还行
  • 推荐
  • 力荐
640次评分
给影片打分《战场》
  • 很差
  • 较差
  • 还行
  • 推荐
  • 力荐
我也要给影片打分

扫一扫用手机访问

播放列表

 当前资源来源樱花云三 - 在线播放,无需安装播放器
 倒序

剧情简介

This is not a large scale multi-million dollar epic of World War Two. No thousands of extras, no wide panoramic sweep of battle scenes. This says more about The Battle of the Bulge than the movie of the same name. It's just an ordinary black and white M.G.M. production. What it lacks in size and scope it makes up for in impact.A simple story very well told, of a squad of GI's of the 101st Airborne Division, thrown into the maelstrom that was the German offensive in the Ardennes in December of 1944 against the Allied ground forces. It's hard to believe that this film was not shot on location; but on a Metro sound stage. And Metro's Culver City was turned into the only outdoor location for the snow-covered, rubble-strewn town of Bastogne under siege, which was tenaciously held by the 101st, under the command of Brig. General Anthony McAuliffe. With the exception of Van Johnson as Pvt. Holly who was high profile on the Metro lot in his time, and George Murphy as Pvt. Stazak, the rest of the cast were character-type actors who filled their roles perfectly. James Whitmore as Sgt. Kinnie is drilling the squad in the opening scenes. The squad members talk of an enjoyable furlough in Paris which is suddenly cut short by the German breakthrough in the Ardenne. Ptv. Stazak hopes of going home are dashed because his authorised documents have not come through before the squad moves up front. Douglas Fowley as Pvt. Kippton seems to be the best in the squad at bellyaching.Maybe it's his dentures that make him a sourpuss. But Fowley's dentures turn into a class act; clicking away to the old song, "I Surrender Dear," through the courtesy of a German propaganda broadcast heard over the radio in a Sherman tank. Denise Darcel comes as a welcome relief of feminine pleasure; not out of place in the town of Bastogne itself. In an indoor scene, Pvt. Holly's eyeballs go into left-to-right overdrive as he stares at Denise's buxom rear end descending a flight of stairs. Then there's Holly again, nursing stolen newly-laid eggs, as valuable as gold nuggets. He's about to scramble them over a fire when the squad is told to saddle up and move out. Not for the first time does Johnson (Pvt. Holly) yell, "oh no!" A expression he's used in past movies also. The broken eggs in his upturned helmet are now a problem. In the end it's disaster. The German artillery scramble the eggs for Holly. Problem solved! On a three man patrol, Holly, Hodiak as Janness, Montalban as Rodriguez, intercept and force a jeep carrying a Major and two sergeants to stop and identify themselves. The knowledge that Germans are infiltrating in GI uniforms has made the patrol suspicious so the Major is asked how the Dodgers made out in 1944. The Major hesitates,but the Sergeant in the rear seat asks Holly who Betty Grable is married to. Montalban shouts back, "Cesar Romero". The Major says Romero is out. "Betty Grable is married to Harry James". The tense atmosphere relaxes. The patrol is convinced they're friendly. What is displayed authentically on this studio sound stage is the icy, bone-chilling atmosphere of the battlefield. The men hunkered down; the deeper the better, in their foxholes. Throughout nearly all this movie there is the constant rise and fall in the background of continuous artillery fire, like a rolling thunder. It never seems to cease. Sometimes it's close, sometimes distant. That, along with the freezing fog hanging like a thick whitish-grey blanket in the air, enveloping everything, gives off an atmosphere of crisis; a feeling of fearful tension. The men endeavour to dispel the fear with humour. Waiting and wondering when the enemy will appear ghost-like out of the mist-shrouded forest. Near the end of the movie, Leon Ames gives a good performance as a Army Chaplain. Trying to explain the reason for this necessary trip to Europe, to kill off a murderous political system that has already killed off millions. Before the end, the tables turn in the Allies favour. Sergeant Kinnie notices his shadow against the snow. The sun is breaking through and the mist rises. Allied tactical air power is back in business again with a vengeance. Veteran director William Wellman was not found wanting when he directed this movie. He had already proved himself with, "The Story of GI Joe", in 1945. Antiwar film? Any war film well made and convincing can be antiwar, and you do not need blood all over the silver screen to prove it. Antiwar or not, World War Two was a "popular" war. The reasons stuck out a mile. The Army Chaplain said so in so many words. The Ardennes offensive caught the Allies unawares. By late 1944, battered the German forces may have been. But they still had a few nasty shots in their locker to scare the living daylights out of the Allied Command. We thought the Germans had run out of fighting steam, but old Field Marshal Gerd Von Rundstedt thought different.

为你推荐

 换一换
  • HD
    2.0高捷/蔡振南/太保/喜翔/龙天翔/王识贤/夏靖庭/孙鹏/黄腾浩/张怀秋/黄尚禾/郑人硕/张再兴/唐振刚/吴震亚/黄冠智/林真亦/陈万号/白吉胜/李铭忠/崔浩然/黄镫辉/吴念轩/是元介/瑞玛·席丹/王阳明/陆明君/曾珮瑜/荒山亮/林道禹/隆宸翰/邱永腾/游安顺/伊正/王自强/孙国豪/草爷/
  • TC
    9.0 休·杰克曼/凯特·哈德森/迈克尔·因佩里奥利/费舍·史蒂芬斯/詹姆斯·贝鲁什/艾拉·安德森/金·普安公主/穆斯塔法·沙基尔/Bob Roseman/杰森·华纳·史密斯/罗伯特·约翰·加拉格尔/Eva Kaminsky/Beth Malone/马特·戈尔斯基/Sean Allan Krill/T. Oliver Reid/Tom O'Keefe/鲍里斯·伦敦/Johnny Olmez/Faye Tamasa/
  • HD
    1.0 路易斯·赫拉尔多·门德斯/Memo Villegas/克里斯蒂安·塔潘/
  • HD
    10.0蔡祥燕/李康希/靳圣通/韦陆兵/
  • HD
    10.0陈冰清/王瀚博/
  • HD
    5.0景珂/宇桐非/苏一龙/郑龙/李华/张绮烟/孟靖豪/
  • HD
    1.0布莱恩·布朗/卢克·布雷西/尼古拉斯·哈蒙德/
  • HD
    8.0姜武/王志文/李乃文/林子烨/孙茜/冯文娟/温碧霞/李善玉/张琪/李彧/乌兰托雅·朵/平田康之/小野巽/佐藤匠/徐光宇/
  • HD国语
    7.0黄柏钧/张沙沙/郑晓民/
  • HD
    3.0亨特·杜汉/山姆·贾格/凡妮莎·肖/
  • HD国语
    3.0李恰/于莫凡/李博/吕晨/
  • HD
    6.0 本尼迪克特·康伯巴奇/大卫·休里斯/萨姆·斯普卢尔//杰西·卡芙/雯叶特·罗宾逊/蒂姆·/普莱斯特/里奥·比尔/亚当·巴兹尔/加里·库珀/埃里克·兰帕特/皮埃尔·伯格曼/麦克斯·波特/德万内·沃尔科特/乔基姆·斯卡利/Lesley Molony/Nandi Bhebhe/Rimca Karmakar/Matthew John Wright/亨利·博克索尔/理查德·博克索尔/
  • HD
    9.0反町隆史/栗山千明/龙星凉/吹越满/椎名桔平/正名仆蔵/国广富之/波冈一喜/
  • HD
    4.0 安东尼·巴容/阿尔芭·贝露琪/亚历克西斯·曼蒂/塞尔希·洛佩斯/洛朗·吕卡/大卫·穆尔贾/杰基·贝约尔/碧翠斯·黛尔/梅拉妮·杜泰/卢巴纳·阿兹巴尔/Robyn Fischetti/纪尧姆·迪赫姆/费利克斯·马利陶德/Epona Guillaume/Alain Bellot/Ga?l Maleux/Sarah Grosjean/Joséphine Darcy-Hopkins/Lou Deleuze/Jana?na Halloy Fokan/Lili-Jane D'Hoop/
  • HD
    7.0马浚伟/吴毅将/吴绮莉/
  • HD
    4.0梁艺龄/许秋怡/黎耀祥/胡越山/罗乐林/吴咏红/关菁/梁钦棋/柳影红/龙方/李家鼎/廖骏雄/方萍/劉美珊/何洁珊/
  • HD
    4.0余文乐/李灿森/董敏莉/
  • HD
    8.0嘉玲/南红/谢贤/
  • HD
    7.0江华/伍咏薇/魏骏杰/
  • HD
    4.0刘德华/古天乐/谭耀文/关秀媚/黄秋生/刘锡贤/鲍起静/尹天照/万绮雯/
  • HD
    10.0桑伟淋/赵子龙/倪景阳/
  • HD
    2.0张兆辉/刘青云/郭富城/Aaron/Kwok/林文龙/Frankie/Lam/麦翠娴/姚正箐/刘兆铭/
  • HD
    10.0艾迪/冯爱慈/金兴贤/嘉伦/刘雅丽/
  • HD
    7.0丁莹/朱江/张英才/林彬/
  • HD
    4.0周星驰/周慧敏/成奎安/陈惠敏/关海山/黄子扬/李修贤/张家辉/李子雄/
  • HD
    鲍起静/陈丽云/梁进龙/陈玉莲/高志森/陈丽卿/
  • HD中字
    9.0马丽/惠英红/朱亚文/王祖蓝/薛凯琪/谢天华/潘斌龙/袁富华/江美仪/太保/张达明/姜大卫/鲍起静/方平/谷德昭/黄德斌/余安安/秦煌/卢惠光/龚慈恩/车婉婉/张达伦/易天雄/陈奂仁/宝珮如/林珊珊/林晓峰/吴志雄/王敏奕/冯文娟/雅玫/黄璐/杨青/黄楚桐/赵润南/王佳怡/林恺铃/
  • HD
    3.0王菲/林保怡/文雪儿/
  • HD
    7.0刘德华/叶德娴/仙杜拉/秦沛/罗烈/杨泽霖/
  • HD
    1.0洪金宝/刘家荣/林建明/白彪/李海生/麦嘉/石天/林正英/

最新资讯

更多

评论

共 0 条评论