IMDb RATING
6.4/10
1.8K
YOUR RATING
Experiences of two Air Force sergeants during the 1948 Berlin Airlift.Experiences of two Air Force sergeants during the 1948 Berlin Airlift.Experiences of two Air Force sergeants during the 1948 Berlin Airlift.
- Awards
- 1 nomination total
Dante V. Morel
- Dante V. Morel
- (as Capt. Dante V. Morel)
John R. Mason
- John R. Mason
- (as Capt. John R. Mason)
Gail R. Plush
- Gail R. Plush
- (as Capt. Gail R. Plush)
Mack Blevins
- Mack Blevins
- (as Capt. Mack Blevins)
William A. Stewart
- William A. Stewart
- (as Capt. William A. Stewart)
Alfred L. Freiburger
- Alfred L. Freiburger
- (as 1st Lt. Alfred L. Freiburger)
Gerald Arons
- Gerald Arons
- (as 1st Lt. Gerald Arons)
James Wilson
- James Wilson
- (as 1st Lt. James Wilson)
Richard A. Kellogg
- Richard A. Kellogg
- (as 1st Lt. Richard A. Kellogg)
Roy R. Steele
- Roy R. Steele
- (as 1st Lt. Roy R. Steele)
James H. Blankenship
- James H. Blankenship
- (as S/Sgt. James H. Blankenship)
Harold E. Bamford
- Harold E. Bamford
- (as S/Sgt. Harold E. Bamford)
D.R. Simmons
- D.R. Simmons
- (as S/Sgt. D.R. Simmons)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe film was made in occupied Germany. All scenes were photographed in the real locations associated with the story, including episodes in the American, French, British and Russian sectors of Berlin.
- GoofsThroughout the film, Montgomery Clift's army uniform has sergeant stripes, then it doesn't, then it does, etc.etc.
- Quotes
Frederica Burkhardt: When you live in a sewer, you soon discover that the sewer rats are best equipped to survive.
- Crazy creditsAt the end of the movie, the "Hollywood" stars (Clift, Douglas etc.), are not credited, however a panoramic coda does credit the principal military service members who portrayed themselves in the film. It shows them standing at attention in front of a C-54, with their names and ranks scrolling across.
- ConnectionsReferenced in Woman on the Run (1950)
Featured review
Found this one recently on DVD at my local market. Have mixed feelings about it. On the negative side there is the picture quality with too high a contrast, plus an abysmal and tinny-sounding soundtrack. Storywise, the first 27 minutes were superfluous and my interest as a spectator was only aroused from minute 28 onwards. I reckon the whole gamut could have been locked into a 1h 35m stint instead of the two hours it took in reality.
On the positive side, however, the film is a very interesting insight into the Berlin under blocade of the 1950's. Filmed on location with the Berliner people, you couldn't ask for a greater dose of realism. Some of the scenes are overlong, notably those within aircraft, which gets boring. What interested me were the character developments of the four main protagonists, plus the "russian spy". I found Montgomery Clift's character too weak and passionless and was more interested by the character portrayed by Paul Douglas, as well as that portrayed by Cornell Borchers ( I was most unpleasantly surprised when I realised what her real intentions were ). A most impressive moment in the film is when Clift confronts Borchers on her past in front of the house in rubble. As he leaves her, disgusted, a great part of wall comes tumbling down ! I don't know whether it was done on purpose, or whether it was just a coincidence during the filming. Whatever the hypothesis, it was most impressive.
My appreciation of the film on balance is definitely positive in relation to its plot and character development but oh how I wish they could have given it a clear stereo soundtrack !!!
On the positive side, however, the film is a very interesting insight into the Berlin under blocade of the 1950's. Filmed on location with the Berliner people, you couldn't ask for a greater dose of realism. Some of the scenes are overlong, notably those within aircraft, which gets boring. What interested me were the character developments of the four main protagonists, plus the "russian spy". I found Montgomery Clift's character too weak and passionless and was more interested by the character portrayed by Paul Douglas, as well as that portrayed by Cornell Borchers ( I was most unpleasantly surprised when I realised what her real intentions were ). A most impressive moment in the film is when Clift confronts Borchers on her past in front of the house in rubble. As he leaves her, disgusted, a great part of wall comes tumbling down ! I don't know whether it was done on purpose, or whether it was just a coincidence during the filming. Whatever the hypothesis, it was most impressive.
My appreciation of the film on balance is definitely positive in relation to its plot and character development but oh how I wish they could have given it a clear stereo soundtrack !!!
- nicholas.rhodes
- Jul 31, 2004
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Details
Box office
- Gross US & Canada
- $1,300,000
- Runtime2 hours
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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