Al Weisel

The 10 Essential World War II Films
By Al Weisel
CDNOW Senior Editor, Movies

If Vietnam was the first television war, World War II was the first movie war. Movie industries around the world mobilized their resources to aid in the war effort. Today the war continues to be a favorite topic. World War II was not only the defining event of the 20th Century, it was a touchstone in film history as well.

Documentary filmmakers reached new levels of realism as they documented battles on the spot -- and also discovered how the form could be manipulated for sometimes less-than-truthful propaganda. (For the best of these films, visit CDNOW's 10 Essential World War II Documentaries.) The lack of resources in post-war Italy led to the Italian neo-realist movement, featuring on-location shooting (since the studios had been bombed), which transformed the way films are made.

One can trace developments in film history by looking how the movies dealt with the war. The war provided black-and-white heroes and villains that fit perfectly into the Hollywood formula in such early films about the war as The Sands of Iwo Jima and such action movies as The Guns of Navarone. But changes in attitudes during the Vietnam War led to more morally ambiguous films about the war such as Kelly's Heroes, The Dirty Dozen, and Catch-22. And as the Baby Boomers revisit the past in light of their own aging, they have begun to look back at the accomplishments of the "Greatest Generation" in such films as Saving Private Ryan and The Thin Red Line.


1. Best Years of Our Lives (1946)
No film has so well summed up the hopes, dreams, and disappointments of a generation as this one. After defeating the most heinous threat of the 20th century, the men and women who accomplished this extraordinary task try to go back to their ordinary, everyday lives. But they discover that they, and the world around them, have changed irreparably. This powerful, classic film won seven Oscars, including Best Picture, Best Director for William Wyler, and Best Supporting Actor for Harold Russell, who not only plays a disabled man, but was an actual veteran who lost his own hands in the war -- as he reveals in one of the film's most moving scenes.
Best Years Of Our Lives
2. A Man Escaped (1956)
One of the most intense and thrilling films ever made, the premise of director Robert Bresson's A Man Escaped is deceptively simple. A French resistance fighter, who has been locked up by the Gestapo and condemned to death, plots his escape. We see him execute his plan in minute, painstaking detail to the point that we feel that we are in the cell with him. The tension is agonizing as he struggles to free himself and avoid detection. It's absolutely riveting.
Man Escaped
3. Schindler's List(1993)
The Holocaust was such an unfathomably horrific event that few filmmakers have been able -- or even dared -- to render it on film. Steven Spielberg succeeds where few have ventured by stripping away every manipulative trick he ever learned and letting the story tell itself. Rather than populate the film with larger-than-life heroic figures, Schindler's List tells the story of a real-life ordinary man, Oskar Schindler (Liam Neeson), who saved hundreds of Jews solely because he believed it was the right thing to do. Even Nazi Amon Goeth (Ralph Fiennes) is not an inhuman monster but a human representation of the banality of evil.
Schindler's List
4. Casablanca (1942)
One of Hollywood's towering achievements, this film has everything you could want from a movie -- crackling, witty dialogue; exceptional performances from such stars as Humphrey Bogart and Ingrid Bergman; an atmospheric setting; gripping action; a suspenseful story; a tragic romance; three-dimensional characters; and a worthy message about the necessity for self-sacrifice in the face of evil. No matter how many bad movies Hollywood makes, we'll always have Casablanca.
Casablanca
5. Open City (1946)
This powerful film -- directed by Roberto Rossellini and co-written by Federico Fellini -- about Italian resistance fighters during World War II was made on actual locations in Rome shortly after the war and launched the style of Italian neo-realist filmmaking. Anna Magnani's performance as the lover of a resistance fighter is one of the most moving in the history of film. Also worth seeing are Rossellini's Paisan, an anthology of stories set around post-war Italy, and Germany Year Zero, set amidst the devastation in Germany.
Open City
6. Bridge on the River Kwai (1957)
David Lean's epic film about British soldiers in a Japanese prisoner of war camp looks at the conflict of cultures and passing of a historical epoch through the prism of richly drawn characters. Alec Guinness won an Oscar for his performance as a British officer who wages a battle of wills with the camp's Japanese commander (Sessue Hayakawa) -- which will end up destroying them both. Lean also co-directed (with Noel Coward) the inspiring In Which We Serve, about men on a British warship.
Bridge On The River Kwai
7. From Here to Eternity (1953)
Set against the backdrop of the attack on Pearl Harbor and based on a book by James Jones, this film won an Oscar for Best Picture and includes one of the most famous scenes in movie history: the beach love scene between Burt Lancaster and Deborah Kerr. With great performances from a cast that also includes Montgomery Clift and Frank Sinatra (in his comeback role), the film climaxes in striking action sequences depicting the Japanese attack. Director Fred Zinnemann also made the exemplary World War II films The Seventh Cross and Julia.
From Here To Eternity
8. Patton (1970)
Based on a screenplay co-written by Francis Ford Coppola (with Edmund North) and directed by Franklin Schaffner, this biopic about General George S. Patton is an unusually complex look at a complicated man. The film doesn't gloss over the more controversial aspects of the life of the tank commander who led American forces in North Africa and Italy. George C. Scott gives a bravura Oscar-winning performance as the general, who was a military genius with a love of poetry and military history as well as a hot-tempered and stubborn man who was eventually relieved of his command.
Patton
9. Saving Private Ryan (1998)
Steven Spielberg's film has the most amazingly realistic war footage ever shot -- the terrifying sequence depicting the invasion at Normandy. While the rest of the film doesn't top this bravura opening, it comes close in the final battle sequence. Unfortunately, the middle of the film is chock-full of World War II clichés, but it's all held together by the moving, humane performance of Tom Hanks.
Saving Private Ryan
10. Story of G.I. Joe (1945)
This grunt's-eye view of the war, directed by William Wellman, was based on the dispatches of the conflict's most famous correspondent, Ernie Pyle (Burgess Meredith). It's a wonderful, deglamorized look at the ordinary men who fought the war, which makes a better case for their quiet heroism than all the romanticized John Wayne war movies put together. Robert Mitchum, in his first major role, is superb as the world-weary captain.
Story Of G.I. Joe

Al Weisel is the co-author, with Larry Frascella, of Live Fast, Die Young: The Wild Ride of Making Rebel Without a Cause, being published in October 2005.

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