A work in constant progress (and occasional regress).
Release Date:
June 26, 1962
Original Title:
Hell Is for Heroes
Genres:
War
Production Companies:
Paramount Pictures
Production Countries:
United States of America
Ratings / Certifications:
BR: 12 FR: 12 IE: PG JP: G US: NR
Runtime: 90
World War II drama where the action centers around a single maneuver by a squad of GIs in retaliation against the force of the German Siegfried line. Reese joins a group of weary GIs unexpectedly ordered back into the line when on their way to a rest area. While most of the men withdraw from their positions facing a German pillbox at the far side of a mine-field, half a dozen men are left to protect a wide front. By various ruses, they manage to convince the Germans that a large force is still holding the position. Then Reese leads two of the men in an unauthorized and unsuccessful attack on the pillbox, in which the other two are killed; and when the main platoon returns, he is threatened with court-martial. Rather that face the disgrace, and in an attempt to show he was right, he makes a one-man attack on the pillbox.
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Art Direction:
Hal Pereira
Howard Richmond
Assistant Director:
William McGarry
Director:
Don Siegel
Director of Photography:
Harold Lipstein
Editor:
Howard A. Smith
Makeup Supervisor:
Wally Westmore
Original Music Composer:
Leonard Rosenman
Producer:
Henry Blanke
Screenplay:
Robert Pirosh
Set Decoration:
Robert R. Benton
Sam Comer
Sound Recordist:
Philip Mitchell
John Wilkinson
Special Effects:
Richard Parker
Still Photographer:
Art Say
Stunt Double:
Loren Janes
Visual Effects:
John P. Fulton
Writer:
Richard Carr
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