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Revision as of 04:01, 7 January 2009 editJimDunning (talk | contribs)Extended confirmed users6,584 edits Plot: delinked Hans Reiser - doubt that after all these years he's going to get a page / if he does, I'm sure the editor will check here for linking← Previous edit Revision as of 04:44, 7 January 2009 edit undoJimDunning (talk | contribs)Extended confirmed users6,584 edits Casting: expanded Hilts character development with sourcesNext edit →
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] had served in the ] during World War II. He was shot down and spent a year in a German prisoner-of-war camp. Screenwriter ] served in the ] and was captured by the Japanese. He was interned in ] and later the notorious ] camp in ]. In an archival interview in the DVD special, Pleasence said the prison camp was sufficiently realistic and that it was upsetting at first. ] was also a real-life World War II prisoner of war, a German soldier captured by the Soviets.{{Fact|date=January 2009}} ] had served in the ] during World War II. He was shot down and spent a year in a German prisoner-of-war camp. Screenwriter ] served in the ] and was captured by the Japanese. He was interned in ] and later the notorious ] camp in ]. In an archival interview in the DVD special, Pleasence said the prison camp was sufficiently realistic and that it was upsetting at first. ] was also a real-life World War II prisoner of war, a German soldier captured by the Soviets.{{Fact|date=January 2009}}


]'s Virgil Hilts, "remains one of the film's most enduring characters, his cooler king having become an icon of cool who continues to inform popular culture."<ref name="Carnevale">{{cite web | last = Carnevale | first = Rob | title = The Great Escape | work = | publisher = Orange Personal Communications Services Limited | date = 2008-04-24 | url = http://film.orange.co.uk/OrangeFilm/the-great-escape/_entry/edbc49caebbcbca1/jsps/fullReview | format = | doi = | accessdate = 2009-01-05}}</ref> The character is based partially on Eric Foster, a seven-time British escapee from German prisoner-of-war-camps. Although Foster did not participate in the storied escape from ] (he convinced camp authorities he was mentally ill and was returned to Britain by the Germans), "his relentless thirst for liberty inspired the Hilts character" and he served as a ] for the film.<ref name="Brown">{{cite web | last = Brown | first = Jonathan | title = Wartime heroism: The real hero of the Great Escape | work = | publisher = The Independent | date = 2006-03-28 | url = http://www.independent.co.uk/news/people/profiles/wartime-heroism-the-real-hero-of-the-great-escape-471769.html | format = | doi = | accessdate = 2009-01-06}}</ref><ref name="Condell">{{cite web | last = Condell | first = Diana | title = Obituary: Squadron Leader Eric Foster | work = | publisher = Guardian News and Media Limited | date = 2006-05-11 | url = http://www.guardian.co.uk/news/2006/may/11/guardianobituaries.secondworldwar | format = | doi = | accessdate = 2009-01-06}}</ref> McQueen agreed to join the cast if a motorbike sequence was added to the film so he could show off his riding skills (there was no such occurrence during the actual escape).<ref name="Carnevale" /> An expert ], McQueen did most of his own motorbike ], but some of the more dangerous stunts required a double. ], a friend and fellow motorbike enthusiast, happened to resemble McQueen sufficiently from a distance to do the stunts without detecting the double. Ekins was only on-screen for a few seconds and his few shots were edited with the many individual shots of McQueen riding alongside and between the fences. Ekins performed the 60-foot (≈18&nbsp;m) jump over the inner ]n/] border fence. He also did the scene sliding his bike into the outer fence. According to the DVD extra, McQueen did much of the bike work, even doubling twice-once as one of his own helmeted German pursuers-and once as the "rider" whom Hilts hijacks to get the motorcycle. Ekins also later doubled for McQueen in '']''.{{Fact|date=January 2009}}
]'s Virgil Hilts, "remains one of the film's most enduring characters, his cooler king having become an icon of cool who continues to inform popular culture."<ref name="Carnevale">{{cite web | last = Carnevale | first = Rob | title = The Great Escape | work = | publisher = Orange Personal Communications Services Limited | date = 2008-04-24 | url = http://film.orange.co.uk/OrangeFilm/the-great-escape/_entry/edbc49caebbcbca1/jsps/fullReview | format = | doi = | accessdate = 2009-01-05}}</ref>
McQueen agreed to join the cast if a motorbike sequence was added to the film so he could show off his riding skills (there was no such occurrence during the actual escape).<ref name="Carnevale" /> An expert ], McQueen did most of his own motorbike ], but some of the more dangerous stunts required a double. ], a friend and fellow motorbike enthusiast, happened to resemble McQueen sufficiently from a distance to do the stunts without detecting the double. Ekins was only on-screen for a few seconds and his few shots were edited with the many individual shots of McQueen riding alongside and between the fences. Ekins performed the 60-foot (≈18&nbsp;m) jump over the inner ]n/] border fence. He also did the scene sliding his bike into the outer fence. According to the DVD extra, McQueen did much of the bike work, even doubling twice-once as one of his own helmeted German pursuers-and once as the "rider" whom Hilts hijacks to get the motorcycle. Ekins also later doubled for McQueen in '']''.{{Fact|date=January 2009}}


===Location and set design=== ===Location and set design===

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Template:FilmUS film
The Great Escape
original movie poster by Frank McCarthy
Directed byJohn Sturges
Written byBook:
Paul Brickhill
Screenplay:
James Clavell
W.R. Burnett
Walter Newman (uncredited)
Screenplay byJames Clavell
Produced byJohn Sturges
StarringSteve McQueen
James Garner
Richard Attenborough
James Donald
Charles Bronson
Donald Pleasence
James Coburn
CinematographyDaniel L. Fapp
Edited byFerris Webster
Music byElmer Bernstein
Distributed byUnited Artists
Release date4 July Template:Fy
Running time172 minutes
CountryTemplate:FilmUS
LanguageTransclusion error: {{En}} is only for use in File namespace. Use {{langx|en}} or {{in lang|en}} instead.
Budget$4,000,000
Box office$5,500,000 (US)

The Great Escape is a Template:Fy film made by MGM Studios and produced and directed by John Sturges. Based on a novel by Paul Brickhill, it tells the real-life story of an attempt by Allied prisoners of war to execute a mass escape from a German POW camp during World War II. Brickhill had been a prisoner of the camp with his friend George Harsh and would later base the book on their memories of the experience. The film stars many well-known actors of the time, including Steve McQueen, James Garner, Richard Attenborough, James Donald, Charles Bronson, Donald Pleasence, James Coburn, Gordon Jackson, and David McCallum.

Plot

Upset by the soldiers and resources wasted in recapturing escaped Allied prisoners of war (POWs), the German High Command concentrates the most-determined and successful of these prisoners to a new, high-security prisoner of war camp that the commandant, Luftwaffe Colonel von Luger (Hannes Messemer), proclaims escape-proof.

On the day of arrival, some of the prisoners make on-the-spure escape attempts which are all foiled by the sharp-eyed German "ferrets" or guards. As the POWs settle into their new camp, the Gestapo and the SS delivers who they consider to be the most dangerous POW of all: "Big X", Squadron Leader Roger Bartlett (Richard Attenborough), who is the prime organiser of most of the escape attempts made by Allied prisoners in Germany. Gestapo agent Kuhn (Hans Reiser) warns the Briton that he will be shot should he ever escape again. Locked up with "every escape artist in Germany", Bartlett immediately plans the greatest escape attempted—a tunnel system for exfiltrating 250 prisoners of war.

Teams of men are organized to survey, dig, hide soil, manufacture civilian clothing, forge documents, provide security and distractions, and procure contraband materials. The prisoners work on three escape tunnels ("Tom", "Dick", and "Harry") simultaneously. The worst of the work noise is covered from the men choir singing, and dirt from the tunnels is concealed in the men's trousers and emptied in the gardens. Flight Lieutenant Hendley (James Garner), an American of the RAF Eagle Squadron is "the scrounger" who finds ingeniously devious ways to get whatever the others need, from a camera to identity cards. Australian Flying Officer Louis Sedgwick (James Coburn), "the manufacturer", makes many of the tools they need, such as picks for digging and bellows for pumping breathable air into the tunnels. Flight Lieutenant Danny Velinski (Charles Bronson), a former Polish Air Force officer who fled to the RAF, is "the tunnel king", in charge of digging, despite being claustrophobic. Forgery is handled by Flight Lieutenant Colin Blythe (Donald Pleasence), who becomes nearly blind from the highly intricate work by candlelight (progressive myopia); Hendley takes it upon himself to be Blythe's guide in the escape.

Meanwhile, USAAF Captain Virgil Hilts (Steve McQueen), "The Cooler King", irritates the guards with frequent escapes and irreverent behaviour. His first escape attempt, conceived whilst in the cooler, is a short tunnel with RAF Flying Officer Archibald Ives (Angus Lennie); they are caught and returned to the cooler.

While the three Americans in camp (Hendley, Hilts, and Goff) are celebrating American Independence Day with the other (mainly British) POWs, the guards discover tunnel "Tom". The depressed Ives snaps, and in a futile attempt to escape, climbs the barbed wire fence in full view of the tower guards. Hilts notices and runs to stop him, but is too late as Ives is machine-gunned dead on the wire. The prisoners abandon the second tunnel and put all their efforts into completing the third.

Bartlett persuades Hilts to reconnoiter the immediate vicinity of the POW camp during one of his escapes, then allow his recapture, allowing the cartographers to create guide maps of the local area, including the nearest town and railway station.

The last part of the tunnel is completed on the night of the escape, but is found to be twenty feet short of the woods that would provide cover. Nevertheless, 76 men escape before one is finally spotted coming out of the tunnel.

After various attempts to reach neutral Switzerland, Sweden, and Spain, almost all of the escaped POWs are recaptured or killed: Hendley and Blythe steal a Luftwaffe trainer aeroplane, intending to fly over the Swiss border; the engine fails and they are forced to crash-land en route. Soldiers arrive at the crash site, shooting Blythe dead while Hendley surrenders. Flight Lieutenant Cavendish (Nigel Stock), having hitched a lift in a truck, is captured at a checkpoint, discovering another fellow POW, Haynes, captured in his German soldier disguise.

Bartlett and MacDonald (Gordon Jackson), are recognised at a railroad station by Gestapo agent Kuhn, but manage to slip away after fellow POW, Fleet Air Arm Lieutenant Commander Eric Ashley-Pitt (David McCallum), sacrifices himself by killing Kuhn and letting himself be chased and killed by soldiers, while running away from Bartlett and MacDonald. Bartlett and MacDonald attempt to board a bus in the town, but MacDonald is tricked into revealing his nationality with the same trick he had warned Haynes about before the escape—a German speaks to him in English and he responds in his native tongue. They both flee, but MacDonald is caught shortly afterwards; Bartlett escapes over rooftops. However, after Bartlett fools some pursuing Gestapo, he is recognised by his previous captors. Lastly, Hilts attempts to jump the barbed wire Swiss-German border fence with a stolen Wehrmacht motorcycle, but his petrol tank is hit and he becomes entangled in the wire.

Only three POWs evade capture and make it to safety. Velinski and Flight Lieutenant Willy Dickes (the tunnel kings) steal a rowboat and proceed downriver to the Baltic coast, where they successfully board a Swedish merchant ship. Sedgewick hides in a boxcar and makes it all the way to France, and while resting in a café the local Resistance stages a drive-by shooting of some German officers. After realising he is an Allied POW, the Resistance enlist the help of a guide to get Sedgewick into Spain.

As for the others, 48 of the re-captured POWs, including Bartlett, MacDonald, Cavendish, and Haynes, are executed by the Gestapo and SS after they are told to get out of the truck transporting them and "stretch their legs" in a field - this brings the total of those shot dead to 50 (including Ashley-Pitt and Blythe). Meanwhile, Hendley and Sorren and a small group of others are returned to the stalag. The Senior British Officer, Group Captain Ramsey (James Donald) hears of the massacre of the 50 dead from von Luger, who has been relieved of command and is swiftly driven away by the SS to face the consequences of failing to stop the breakout.

Hilts is brought back alone to the camp, and subsequently to the cooler. His fellow American officer, USAAF 1st Lt Goff, throws him his baseball and glove as he walks into solitary confinement. As the Luftwaffe guard locks him in his cell and walks away, he hears the familiar sound of Hilts bouncing his baseball against the cell walls. The film ends with this scene under the caption "This picture is dedicated to the 50."

Cast

Actor Role
Steve McQueen Capt Virgil Hilts "The Cooler King", USAAF
James Garner Flt Lt Anthony Hendley "The Scrounger", RAF
Richard Attenborough Sqn Ldr Roger Bartlett "Big X", RAF
James Donald Gp Capt Ramsey "The SBO", RAF
Charles Bronson Flt Lt Danny Velinski "Tunnel King", RAF
Donald Pleasence Flt Lt Colin Blythe "The Forger", RAF
James Coburn Fg Off Louis Sedgwick "The Manufacturer", RAAF
Hannes Messemer Col von Luger "The Kommandant", Luftwaffe
David McCallum Lt Cmdr Eric Ashley-Pitt "Dispersal", RN FAA
Gordon Jackson Flt Lt Sandy MacDonald "Intelligence", RAF
John Leyton Flt Lt William Dickes "Tunnel King", RAF
Angus Lennie Fg Off Archibald Ives "The Mole", RAF
Nigel Stock Fl Lt Denys Cavendish "The Surveyor", RAF
Robert Graf Werner 'The Ferret', Luftwaffe
Jud Taylor 1st Lt Goff, USAAF

Production

Casting

This film shares three of its stars (Steve McQueen, Charles Bronson and James Coburn), its director and producer (John Sturges), its composer (Elmer Bernstein), a screenwriter Walter Newman (uncredited), and its editor (Ferris Webster) with The Magnificent Seven. Both films also feature one of the stars of The Man from U.N.C.L.E.: David McCallum appears in this film while Robert Vaughn appears in the earlier one.

Donald Pleasence had served in the Royal Air Force during World War II. He was shot down and spent a year in a German prisoner-of-war camp. Screenwriter James Clavell served in the Royal Artillery and was captured by the Japanese. He was interned in Java and later the notorious Changi Prison camp in Singapore. In an archival interview in the DVD special, Pleasence said the prison camp was sufficiently realistic and that it was upsetting at first. Hannes Messemer was also a real-life World War II prisoner of war, a German soldier captured by the Soviets.

Steve McQueen's Virgil Hilts, "remains one of the film's most enduring characters, his cooler king having become an icon of cool who continues to inform popular culture." The character is based partially on Eric Foster, a seven-time British escapee from German prisoner-of-war-camps. Although Foster did not participate in the storied escape from Stalag Luft III (he convinced camp authorities he was mentally ill and was returned to Britain by the Germans), "his relentless thirst for liberty inspired the Hilts character" and he served as a technical advisor for the film. McQueen agreed to join the cast if a motorbike sequence was added to the film so he could show off his riding skills (there was no such occurrence during the actual escape). An expert motorbiker, McQueen did most of his own motorbike stunts, but some of the more dangerous stunts required a double. Bud Ekins, a friend and fellow motorbike enthusiast, happened to resemble McQueen sufficiently from a distance to do the stunts without detecting the double. Ekins was only on-screen for a few seconds and his few shots were edited with the many individual shots of McQueen riding alongside and between the fences. Ekins performed the 60-foot (≈18 m) jump over the inner Austrian/Swiss border fence. He also did the scene sliding his bike into the outer fence. According to the DVD extra, McQueen did much of the bike work, even doubling twice-once as one of his own helmeted German pursuers-and once as the "rider" whom Hilts hijacks to get the motorcycle. Ekins also later doubled for McQueen in Bullitt.

Location and set design

As noted by David McCallum in the DVD extra, the "barbed wire" that Hilts (Steve McQueen) crashed into in the scene above was actually made of little strips of rubber tied around normal wire, and was made by the cast and crew during their free time.

Fact and fiction

For more on how the film compared to the real-life Great Escape, see The Great Escape (film) fact versus fiction

Reception

Though the film is considered a classic, it was largely ignored at the 1963 Academy Awards. Ferris Webster's editing received the only nomination, though he lost to Harold F. Kress for How the West Was Won. Upon its theatrical release in 1963, New York Times critic Bosley Crowther was disdainful of it: "But for much longer than is artful or essential, "The Great Escape" grinds out its tormenting story without a peek beneath the surface of any man, without a real sense of human involvement. It's a strictly mechanical adventure with make-believe men." British film critic Leslie Halliwell described it as "pretty good but overlong POW adventure with a tragic ending".

Sequels and remakes

A highly fictionalized, made-for-television sequel, The Great Escape II: The Untold Story, appeared many years later. It starred Christopher Reeve with Donald Pleasence as an SS villain.

The Bollywood film Deewar: Let's Bring Our Heroes Back is based loosely on the same plot, although it involves a prisoner's (Amitabh Bachchan) son (Akshay Khanna) aiding the escape from within.

Several video games were based on the movie, including one in 1986, and one in 2003, which explained more previous escapes of the main prisoners in previous camps and followed the film's main storyline, but altered the prisoner's fates.

The Great Escape in popular culture

This section is in list format but may read better as prose. You can help by converting this section, if appropriate. Editing help is available. (November 2008)
This section may contain minor, trivial or unrelated fictional references. Trivia or references unimportant to the overall plot of a work of fiction should be edited to explain their importance or deleted. (November 2008)
  • An ad for Shell (Australia) in the early '90s used a Canadian lookalike to reshoot the famous Steve McQueen chase on the motorcycle. Using the music from the movie, and an uncannily well shot sequence, they amended the end as he races to the fence.
  • An ad for beer was made in the early 1990s and shown on British TV. It featured some of McQueen's scenes from the film and included additional surreal footage with Griff Rhys Jones.
  • Some ads for the Hummer H3 in the fall of 2006 played the tune, as the employees of a nondescript company plot a "Great escape" to drive their Hummers, with a parking lot booth attendant mimicking throwing a baseball against the wall like Steve McQueen. The attendant was portrayed by Chad McQueen, who resembles his late father.
  • The animated film Chicken Run (2000) contains many references. The film also references Stalag 17, considered (along with "Escape") to be one of the greatest World War II prisoner-of-war movies.
  • British stand-up comedian Eddie Izzard's 1997 "Dress to Kill" performance included an 8-minute segment about "The Great Escape" in which Izzard humorously questioned the plausibility of the movie's plot and the demoralizing fact that all the British characters ended tragically despite all their cunning and planning while the Americans--notably Steve McQueen--survive. Known for his surrealist, stream-of-consciousness type of stand-up comedy, Izzard would digress often during this particular routine as he tried to remember all the characters and actors. This is exemplified best on the CD version of "Dress To Kill" where Izzard gets heckled by a fan during the Great Escape bit, demanding that Izzard "moves on".
  • The opening scene of Reservoir Dogs features Mr. Brown (Quentin Tarantino) explaining the premise of Madonna's "Like a Virgin" and referring to a man as being similar to Charles Bronson in The Great Escape stating, "he's digging tunnels".
  • In The Parent Trap (1998), Lindsay Lohan's characters are led to an isolated camp cabin with the Great Escape march playing over the scene.
  • In an episode of The Simpsons where Maggie tries twice to escape from a Baby sitter school-the theme music from "The Great Escape" is used. in another scene in the same episode, Maggie is placed in "The Pen" after a failed escape and in shown bouncing a ball off the wall, similar to the cooler scenes in the movie.
  • The video game Metal Gear Solid 3: Snake Eater, which takes place a year after the movie was released, references The Great Escape in a Codec transmission early in the game. Major Zero, who at the time was using the code name Major Tom, discloses in a conversation to Naked Snake that he chose the name based on what he thought was the tunnels from The Great Escape the prisoners used to escape. He later on learned that he chose the wrong one; the tunnel used in the escape was in fact Harry, not Tom.
  • In the episode Precipice from the reimagined series of Battlestar Galactica there is an ending scene where prisoners are loaded off trucks to be shot by a Cylon firing squad, much like a similar sequence in The Great Escape. Audio commentary for the episode revealed that the scene was in fact inspired by The Great Escape.
  • The theme tune is often adopted by football fans, particularly in England, when their team is fighting to avoid relegation against the odds.
  • Steve McQueen and his character "Hilts" have also been referenced several times on the television series "Supernatural", specifically in the episodes "The Usual Suspects" and "Folsom Prison Blues". The Winchester brothers have been known to use the names to indicate an escape from police custody.
  • In the Red Dwarf episode "Queeg", Holly whistle the theme tune as the Cat and Lister are forced to scrub the floor.

References

  1. ^ Carnevale, Rob (2008-04-24). "The Great Escape". Orange Personal Communications Services Limited. Retrieved 2009-01-05.
  2. Brown, Jonathan (2006-03-28). "Wartime heroism: The real hero of the Great Escape". The Independent. Retrieved 2009-01-06.
  3. Condell, Diana (2006-05-11). "Obituary: Squadron Leader Eric Foster". Guardian News and Media Limited. Retrieved 2009-01-06.
  4. Bosley Crowther (1963-08-08). "P.O.W.'s in 'Great Escape':Inmates of Nazi Camp Are Stereotypical – Steve McQueen Leads Snarling Tunnelers". The New York Times. {{cite news}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help); Check date values in: |date= (help)
  5. Walker, John (1997). Halliwell's film and Video Guide. London: HarperCollins. p. 311. ISBN 006387799. {{cite book}}: Check |isbn= value: length (help)

Bibliography

External links


Films directed by John Sturges

Template:American films

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