The Big Red One

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The Big Red One

The Big Red One DVD cover
Directed by Samuel Fuller
Produced by Gene Corman
Written by Samuel Fuller
Starring Lee Marvin
Mark Hamill
Robert Carradine
Bobby Di Cicco
Kelly Ward
Siegfried Rauch
Marthe Villalonga
Music by Dana Kaproff
Cinematography Adam Greenberg
Editing by Morton Tubor
Distributed by United Artists
Warner Bros. (DVD)
Release date(s) July 18, 1980 U.S. release
Running time 113 min.
USA:158 min. (reconstructed version)
Language English
All Movie Guide profile
IMDb profile

The Big Red One is a 1980 war film written and directed by Samuel Fuller. The film portrays the horrors of war as it affects the men on the front lines. It was heavily cut on its original release, but a restored version was premiered at the Cannes Film Festival in 2004, seven years after Fuller's death.

Contents

[edit] Background

Fuller saw a great deal of action in World War II as a member of the US First Infantry Division, which was nicknamed The Big Red One for the red "1" on the Division's shoulder patch.

Patch of the United States Army 1st Infantry Division.
Patch of the United States Army 1st Infantry Division.

[edit] Synopsis

The film starts at the end of the First World War with the Sergeant fighting a German. As he fights with the man, the camera moves away from the action and towards a life-size wooden crucifix in the background. As we get closer we see that while the soldiers are fighting, Christ is rotting.

When the Sergeant returns victorious to his company's headquarters he is told that the war ended hours ago and that the German was trying to surrender when Lee attacked him. Killing versus murder is a theme that repeats throughout the film.

The film cuts to the Sergeant decades later as he leads a squad of men through North Africa, Sicily, then on to the D-Day landings, where The Big Red One lands on Omaha Beach at the start of the Battle of Normandy. The squad then treks though Europe, ending up at the liberation of Falkenau concentration camp (a subcamp of Flossenbürg) in Czechoslovakia. The story's focus is on the four enlisted men (and the Sergeant) who survive the war from beginning to end with their sergeant, becoming known as "The Sergeant's Four Horsemen."

Midway though the film the Sergeant crosses the same field where he stabbed the German decades before, but now contains a memorial:

Johnson: Would you look at how fast they put the names of all our guys who got killed?
The Sergeant: That's a World War One memorial.
Johnson: But the names are the same.
The Sergeant: They always are.

[edit] Characters

  • Sergeant "Possum" (Lee Marvin) - The Squad leader, he calls his squad "wet noses" and was captured during the battle at Kasserine Pass.
  • Pvt. Griff, 1st Squad (Mark Hamill) - He's a skilled marksman who detests shooting at Frenchman in North Africa.
  • Pvt. Zab, 1st Squad (Robert Carradine) - He's an author of "The Dark Deadline". He's also the narrator.
  • Pvt. Vinci, 1st Squad (Bobby Di Cicco) - He's a Sicilian.
  • Pvt. Johnson, 1st Squad (Kelly Ward) - He's a farmer and is knowledgeable in first aid.
  • Schroeder (Siegfried Rauch) - He's a Nazi and a counterpart to the Sergeant.
  • Pvt. Shep (Joseph Clark) - He dislikes Italians.
  • Pvt. Lemchek (Ken Campbell) - he wanted to swap with Vinci at the Bangalore relay
  • Pvt. Switolski (Doug Werner) - Thinks not all Germans are Nazis
  • Pvt. Kaiser (Perry Lang) - he liked the book written by Zab.
  • Pvt. Smitty (Howard Delman) - soldier who trips mine in Sicily.

[edit] Trivia

  • Lee Marvin, (who was wounded and almost killed while fighting in the Pacific during WWII[citation needed]), plays "Sergeant" who while his name is unknown does refer to himself once as "Sergeant Possum".[citation needed]
  • The battle scenes were generally considered realistic, though some technical details are incorrect, such as the German Panzers actually being Israeli Sherman tanks painted with German insignia, and the low budget and Israeli location is especially evident in the film's portrayal of the Normandy landings.[citation needed]
  • Sam Fuller, who wrote and directed the film, served in the 1st infantry division in World War II, and was present at the liberation of Falkenau concentration camp.[citation needed]

[edit] Suggested reading

  • The Fighting First: The Untold Story of The Big Red One on D-Day by Flint Whitlock - 2004. ISBN 0-8133-4218-X
  • The Big Red One (novel version) by Samuel Fuller - 1980; republished in 2004.

[edit] External links