Paratroop Command | |
---|---|
Directed by | William Witney |
Written by | Stanley Shpetner |
Produced by | Samuel Z. Arkoff James H. Nicholson Stanley Shpetner |
Starring | Richard Bakalyan Ken Lynch |
Cinematography | Gilbert Warrenton |
Edited by | Robert S. Eisen |
Music by | Ronald Stein |
Distributed by | Santa Rosa Productions American International Pictures |
Release dates | February, 1959 (USA) |
Running time | 71 min. |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Paratroop Command is a 1959 American war film directed by William Witney, starring Richard Bakalyan, Ken Lynch and Jack Hogan. American International Pictures originally released the film as a double feature with Submarine Seahawk .
Charlie is a paratrooper that is mistaken for a coward by fellow soldier Ace because he lies still in an attempt to ambush a group of German soldiers. He then suffers the scorn of his unit because he accidentally kills his friend Cowboy, who was wearing a German uniform in an attempt to infiltrate enemy lines, and was apparently holding a gun on the rest of the squad. Ace threatens him, and in subsequent action in Salerno, curses him with his dying breath. Charlie is hanging from a tree in his parachute and carrying a vital generator, with both the Lieutenant and Sergeant wounded, on the wrong side of a road that is mined. Following the Lieutenant's instructions, he clears the mines with hand grenades, but a dud grenade leaves him stranded and short of his destination. Sacrificing his life, he runs the final distance and explodes the remaining mine. . The film is set in World War II in North Africa, Sicily, and Italy.
As appearing in screen credits (main roles identified): [1]
Actor | Role |
---|---|
Richard Bakalyan | Charlie |
Ken Lynch | Lieutenant |
Jack Hogan | 'Ace' Mason |
Jimmy Murphy | Sergeant |
Jeff Morris | Pigpen (as Jeffrey Morris) |
James Beck | Cowboy (as Jim Beck) |
Carolyn Hughes | Gina |
Patricia Huston | Amy, a WAC |
Paul Busch | German Captain |
Sydney Lassick | Interpreter (as Sid Lassick) |
Brad Trumbull (credits as Trumball) | C-47 Pilot |
A full cast and production crew list is too lengthy to include, see: IMDb profile. [1]
Quentin Tarantino, an admirer of Witney's work, considers this film to be among his four best. [2] Tarantino called it "the best of American-International’s WW2 potboilers. But I think it’s even better than that. It contains a realism that sets it apart from most other WW2 movies done in that same era. So much so that it makes a lot of good and similar movies from that same time, Robert Aldrich’s Attack and Don Siegel’s Hell is for Heroes, look theatrical and stagey by comparison." [3]
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