The Art Of Manliness site has proposed their list of the 10 Greatest War Movies Of All Time.
We refuse to link to it, because they fucked it up. But we will post their list, in order.
And then correct them, with all the tenderness it deserves.
Their list (from their apparent top choice to the last of the ten):
The Bridge On The River Kwai
Allegedly per AoM, "may very well be the best war movie ever made".
Um, no. Maybe "The best war movie David Lean ever made in 1957".
But for even putting this one on the Top Ten list, AoM can start cranking out pushups until I get tired.
The Longest Day
Because it's got a lot of stars. So do the joint Chiefs Of Staff, but they both rate as sucky.
Continue the push-ups, bitchez.
1917
Because Sam Mendes, and one-long-take.
Waitwaitwait. Jarhead Sam Mendes?? The guy who punked and fusterclucked the entire James Bond franchise, and Daniel Craig, with SPECTRE? The one with the least convincing movie villains since Mini-Me and Knickknack?
Switch to mountainclimbers. At doubletime pace.
Patton
Finally, a correct pick. You may rest.
The Thin Red Line
GAAAAAAAAAHHHHHHHHH!!!!! What the actual Fuck?!?!?!? Resume the mountain climbers. With leg weights, and a full pack. In a MOPP suit.
Apocalypse Now
Not just no, but Hell No. Put on your gas mask, and continue the mountain climbers.
Glory
Nope. But we like Denzel, and the movie, though it isn't among the ten best. So you may take off the MOPP gear and mask, and drop your pack. Bends and thrusts. Begin.
Das Boot
Another correct pick. Remove the leg weights. Rest.
The Great Escape
Two in a row! Stand at ease.
Saving Private Ryan
Good, but it still doesn't make the cut, despite the Normandy beach landing scene being among the best scenes ever filmed in motion picture history. Loses out because the rest of the movie, while ranging from good to great, is pure fairytale.
And they say "you can't fix stupid". Ha! You just needed motivation. Three right, out of ten tries. 30%. F+ grade. Get out of my sight, maggots. Go away!
___
Now for the correct list, in the correct order.
1. ZULU!
Period. Origination of the Zulu Rule for community TVs:
If ZULU! comes on, ZULU! stays on. Even if it's a 24-hour ZULU! marathon.
And introducing some new guy named Michael Caine.
2. The Great Escape"What were you doing by the wire?"
"Well, like I told Max...I was trying to cut my way through your wire, because I want to get out."
...
"Ten days isolation, Hiltz."
"Captain Hiltz."
"Twenty days."
"Right. ... Oh, uh, you'll still be here when I get out?"
3. Patton
And it just gets better from there.
4. Lawrence Of Arabia
The actual Best War Movie David Lean Ever Made, Ever.
And probably among the Top Ten Greatest Movies Of All Time.
5. Blackhawk Down
This was when the GWOT started. We just didn't know it yet.
6. Hamburger HillNot bong-fueled dreams from Oliver Stone or the acid flashbacks of Stanley Kubrick.
Just the 'Nam, man.
7. Das Boot
8. Gettysburg
Bonus: Worth it just to see Ted Turner take it in the chest during Pickett's Charge.
9. Braveheart
A much better version of a Cornelius Ryan novel about WWII than The Longest Day. And with more stars too.
We could have picked another twenty not mentioned, and so could you, before having to descend to some of the execrable picks of AoM, and anyone that would pick The Thin Red Line for anything but "Screenwriter Most Deserving A Firing Squad" should be fed to wild hogs while on fire, and then have the pigs nuked from orbit. Just to be sure. Some TV shows are shot in front of a live audience. Some movie directors should be as well.
Nota bene that nothing made in the last twenty years even makes the cut.
And I've lost track of how many defeatist, anti-hero, anti-American, anti-everything-that's-honorable incomprehensible piles of shit pretending to be "epic" films just make me want to infiltrate a sound stage and choke the living shit out of some asshole twentysomething never-served wannabe film producers and directors, and pin their still-beating hearts to a wall with a rusty bayonet.
At least once a year I find myself having to remind myself not to do it, no matter how needful it is, and how deserved it remains.
Bonus: Stars from the above Top Ten flicks who actually served under arms, in combat (not just "did military service"):
Michael Caine
Jack Hawkins
James Garner
Richard Attenborough
Charles Bronson
Donald Pleasence
Alec Guinness
Anthony Quayle
Claude Rains
Denholm Elliot
Dirk Bogarde
53 comments:
Can't argue.
My personal honorable mentions, in no particular order:
We Were Soldiers
The Sand Pebbles (probably the least known on the list, but well worth a watch)
Heartbreak Ridge
Anything starring John Wayne
Where Eagles Dare
The Guns of Navarone
Memphis Belle (which I like even better than the next)
12 O'Clock High
Mark D
I'm embarrassed that I've only seen half of this list. I'll be hitting the library for the rest this week. Thanks
Good picks. But I'd like to suggest "Fury" wasn't bad either. Not that I know anything about armored ops.
We were soldiers?
Band of Brothers.
Dirty Dozen bc Telly Savalas.
You Yanks.....everyone knows " The Battle of Britain" should be in there if only for the music and models.
What? No "Tora, Tora, Tora"?
Granted, probably can't break into the top 10 given that illustrious list.
It seems that the sing off before the charge didn't happen which is sad, because it is such an amazing scene.
What'd you think of 'The Outpost'?
The GWOT didn't start in 1993, it started in 1983. In September. In Beirut.
The Big Red One and The Wild Geese would enter my list
Did you see Act of Valor? Released in 2012. Some shootout scenes used actual live ammo, and most of the cast was active duty SEALs.
I'd suggest The Guns of Navarone as a honorable mention.
An epic film becomes an epic over time - it isn't one because the pre release advertising claims it is one.
Correct me if I'm wrong number 10 has Michael Caine as well, and I believe Sean Connery
Forgot to add: AoM doesn't impress me. They try hard but oversell themselves.
I see them more as Metrosexuals trying to be what they think men are without looking into what real are and do.
Gettysburg is just okay in my book. Dialogue increasingly sappy as it goes on, but I will give it credit for some awesome battle sequences.
What about We Were Soldiers? I wouldn't call it Top 10, necessarily, but certainly Top 20.
What? No Cross of Iron?
The first movie I ever saw in which they changed magazines.
The mud, the stink.
Yes, flawed by the scenes with Russian women interludes,
but hey, an actual T-34/85.
Feel free to disagree but "Kelly's Heroes" always had the right "feel" to me for what the real world was like. There was the official goal and there were the goals of the guys - which often coincided. "Lord of War" is another movie that rang home with my experiences along the way. I always had to remind my guys to NEVER do a deal with any of Victor Bout's people.
Good heavens man, you didn't mention:
Sands of Iwo Jima - The Duke!
30 Seconds Over Tokyo
From Here to Eternity
Hell Is For Heroes - okay it's campy but c'mon man it's Hollywood.
Peter O'Toole was robbed from the Best Actor Oscar that year.
Good list.
Excellent!
I am reminded of the (supposed) last words of General Gordon at the battle of Khartoum:
"I say Reggie, the beggars seem to be coming over the walls!"
Rest assured, one and all, almost every one of your suggestions would make the Top Thirty. I've seen them all, and they're found wanting. I could easily go to the Top Fifty. But this list was the Top 10.
And Johnathan H nailed AoM on the first try.
@ASM: Not so much GWOT, as sticking our noses in where we didn't belong. Always a bad idea. Beirut was just gravity, working. And there's no movie of it. ;)
@ Borepatch,
The scene excerpted from ZULU! was from the opening charge, not the final one. No sing off for about another hour or so.
Sand Pebbles needs to be in that list.
These are all good picks. I have no real quibble with any of them. But for me, I pick Das Boot as #1. The reason why is purely personal. I was a submariner, and Das Boot is just about the only movie I've ever seen that even came close to depicting life on a submarine correctly.
What amazes me about military pictures in today's Hollywood is that they no longer even try to get it right. Just having the actors get a haircut would add to the realism.
The Lost Battalion, the Horse Soldiers, the Enemy Below, and Letters from Iwo Jima at least deserve honorable mentions, IMHO.
Lost Battalion, Horse Soldiers, and Letters are based on actual events, even if somewhat loosely.
I put The Enemy Below on this list because of their use of a US WWII destroyer escort to play Robert Mitchum's ship.
Going to open with an apology for ignorance.
Perhaps could someone give me the 4 indicated in the 4 pic set??
Not been an avid movie hunter for WAY too much of my 70 yrs.
Clint Eastwood, Lee Ermey, Arnold Schwarzenegger, Christopher Walken.
The only one I'd argue is Braveheart vs. Band of Brothers (granted it was a TV serial) but it was more realistic, IMHO.
BoB didn't make the cut, because it wasn't a movie.
It's also what Saving Private Ryan could have been if Spielberg had made a movie based on reality, instead of a realistic fictional tale.
Point Aesop. :-)
Aesop, I would not disagree with your list - I think one of the issues with it is that it wsa almost completely WW II focused.
Honorable mentions (or at least my own), although they are not all strictly war movies:
Last of the Mohicans
The Patriot
Mosul (Movie about post-Isis Iraq, from the Arab point of view)
Tangerines (Movie about the Abkhazian war through the eyes of a farmer living between the two sides).
Agreed with Lawrence of Arabia.
Four out of ten movies is hardly "almost completely WWII focused". Harumph. :p
I scattered them around historically pretty well, actually.
And I didn't do Honorable Mentions, because as I said, the list would run to 30 or 50 movies, and another handful more on top of that that never were actual movies, but still good.
I stand by my list, and it's far more accurate than the collection of drivel the wussies at AoM foisted upon the 'net. Wankers.
@ Night Driver
"Clint Eastwood, Lee Ermey, Arnold Schwarzenegger, Christopher Walken.
May 28, 2021 at 5:48 PM"
I suspect you wanted the movie titles. I'm not sure, but I think in order:
1. Heartbreak Ridge (?)
2. Full Metal Jacket
3. Commando (?)
4. No idea
Apologies Aesop - I was referring to the original list. WW II heavy.
No worries. :)
Angantyr: 3. Predator 4. Dogs Of War
I did like Turner getting shot in Gettysburg, but Chamberlain's 20th Maine bayonet charges still gives me charge. The music for the movie was fantastic.
No mention of Hacksaw Ridge???
Good. Great, even.
But only ten slots, it didn't make the cut.
Look at the competition, man.
It's like Peter O'Toole never winning a Best Actor Oscar.
Look at the guys who beat him.
Watched Zulu last night. Wow. Just incredible. And instructional. We’ll have to eject a lot more undermining leftards than just the preacher and his daughter.
OMG! Someone who's never seen ZULU!
How extraordinary.
Glad to help complete your cinematic education.
But like Holy Grail or Princess Bride, you have to watch it another 20-50 times to really appreciate it. ;)
I long ago gave up on AoM....they are poseurs/posers...and they can't take criticism...nor post comments that don't agree with them.
I would add "Danger Close, The Battle of Long Tan" to the Top Ten list. It's an Australian movie about Vietnam. One of the best depictions of small unit combat that I've ever seen.
'Good picks. But I'd like to suggest "Fury" wasn't bad either.'
Very overlooked film. I couldn't believe Hellywood could still produce a pro-Christian, pro-brotherhood, fast-paced intelligent action movie. Fury somehow fell through the cracks of the Lost Angeles Crackheads. It doesn't reach for too much but accomplishes everything handily. The It's The Girl's Egg scene was subtle and memorable.
'Good picks. But I'd like to suggest "Fury" wasn't bad either.'
Very overlooked film. I couldn't believe Hellywood could still produce a pro-Christian, pro-brotherhood, fast-paced intelligent action movie. Fury somehow fell through the cracks of the Lost Angeles Crackheads. It doesn't reach for too much but accomplishes everything handily. The It's The Girl's Egg scene was subtle and memorable.
Downfall. A 2004 movie about the last days of the Third Reich. Set entirely in Berlin. The acting is spectacular. The actor that played Hitler, Swiss Bruno Granz, should have gotten the Oscar, except you can't give Hitler an Oscar. The sets are utterly realistic, uniforms and weapons are correct. And, it is done in German. You will be reading sub-titles unless you speak German. Normally, I consider this quite bothersome but, this movie effortlessly reels you in. Best WWII movie of this century.
Zulu Dawn deserves a shot...
The Beast
dir: Kevin Reynolds
Out of commission, become a pillbox
Out of ammo, become a bunker
Out of time, become heroes
In no particular order or rank. The Blue Max. The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly. Stalag 17, which I'm surprised nobody mentioned, unless I missed it. Gallipoli. Casablanca. The Bridge At Remagen. Catch-22. Run Silent, Run Deep.
Aesop,
I haven’t seen The Great Escape either (cue Aesop’s jaw hitting floor). Will watch it tonight with Dad as I’m visiting and Tubi seems to have everything. Will pick up Zulu and a few other DVD’s for long winter evenings at the tiny house
Casablanca! One of the greatest movies of all time no matter what category is being discussed.
I know Kelly's Heroes really couldn't make the list, but there was one exchange in particular that probably summed up well the average soldier's take on the war. At the beginning of the movie they are interrogating a captured German officer, who warns them of an impending German counterattack, to which Telly Savalas responds:
"Look! We’re not worried about the German army, we’ve got enough troubles of our own. To the right General Patton, to the left the British Army, to the rear our own goddamn artillery, and besides all that it’s raining. And the only good thing to say about the weather: it keeps our air corps from blowing us all to Hell because its too lousy to fly, versteh?"
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