Film Review
Darryl F. Zanuck's insanely ambitious tribute to the men who fought and
died in the Allied invasion of France is a war film of monolithic
proportions. At a cost of 10 million dollars, it was the most
expensive black and white film to be made (eventually overtaken by
Steven Spielberg's
Schindler's List
thirty years later) and required the services of three directors (Ken
Annakin, Andrew Marton, Bernhard Wicki), 42 big name actors (most of
whom are on screen for just a few seconds) and thousands of unnamed
extras. The film broke new ground with its epic scale,
apocalyptic battle scenes and by having non-English-speaking characters
talk in their own language (French and German) with subtitles.
The film is also unusual in that it tells the story of the Allied
invasion from several different perspectives, including the German
side. Adapted from Cornelius Ryan's authoritative book of
the same title,
The Longest Day offers
a thorough and highly accurate account of what is arguably the single
most important episode in the Second World War.
Although the film has great educational value and is a worthy tribute
to those who participated in the events shown, it would be dishonest to
describe it as a great piece of cinema entertainment. At
three hours,
The Longest Day
is overlong and struggles to maintain its momentum. The
differing styles employed by the three directors make the film feel
painfully disjointed and robs it of any sense of cohesion. None
of the characters is on screen long enough for the spectator to engage
with his or her personal drama, and those sequences where an attempt is
made to interest us in a character prove to be tedious distractions
from the main thrust of the film. You wonder why Zanuck was
prepared to pay John Wayne a quarter of a million dollars (for four
days' work) when he adds so little to the film, whilst other more
talented actors (Richard Burton, Henry Fonda and Jean-Louis Barrault)
get hardly more than a look-in. The film often looks like what it
is - a Hollywood mogul's pet project which has got completely out of
hand.
It's not all bad, though. After a monotonously slow build-up, the
film suddenly wakes up at around the mid-point (like a hyper-active
teenager surfacing after a long lie-in) and redeems itself with a surprising vigour in its last
hour. Whilst it may have none of the gut-wrenching visceral
realism that is offered by Spielberg's
Saving Private Ryan (1998), the
beach landing sequence is stunningly realised and brings home the sheer
scale of the offensive, and its staggering cost in human life.
The spectacle of hundreds of Allied soldiers falling under the
relentless onslaught of German artillery is one that leaves a lasting
impression and makes the spectator genuinely appreciate the sacrifice
that was made on that cold and frenzied day in June 1944.
The Longest Day may be a slog to
get through but it is worth the effort for its graphic action scenes,
which provide a palpable reminder of the debt that we owe to those who
braved Nazi bombs and bullets to preserve the freedoms that we in the
West now take for granted.
© James Travers 2010
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Next Ken Annakin film:
Those Magnificent Men in Their Flying Machines (1965)
Film Synopsis
June, 1944. Thousands of Allied troops assembled in the south of
England impatiently await the go-ahead for a full-scale invasion of
France, the one military manoeuvre that will decisively crush the
resolve of the Axis powers and hasten the end of the war. On the
other side of the Channel, high-ranking German officers anticipate the
Allied invasion but are confident that it will not take place whilst
the weather remains bad. But on June 5th, the decision is taken
by President Eisenhower. D-Day has arrived. Not only will
6th June 1944 be one of the most important days in history, it will
also be the longest, and not everyone who goes into battle on this
auspicious day will live to savour the hard-won victory...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.