The Longest Day may very well be one of the most expansive film projects
in history. With four directors, five writers, and forty-two billed
international stars, this is an unforgettable movie, and one that used
its many stars to their full advantage.
The 1960's were loaded
with epics where directors took every big name star on the market and
thrust them into a role. It may seem like that's what was done here, but
in fact, the casting was excellent, and no one looked out of place,
especially the lead actors John Wayne, Robert Mitchum, and Henry Fonda.
There
is also an amazing supporting cast, with actors from America, Britain,
France, and Germany, which represented the four countries involved in
the D-Day Invasion of Normandy. It takes a whole paragraph just listing
their names: Eddie Albert, Richard Burton, Red Buttons, Sean Connery,
Jeffrey Hunter, Peter Lawford, Roddy McDowell, Sal Mineo, Kenneth More,
Robert Ryan, George Segal, Rod Steiger, Robert Wagner, and Stuart
Whitman. Singers Paul Anka and Fabian also made appearances as American
soldiers. The cast of Germans and French include Hans Christian Blech,
Richard Munch, Bourvil, Werner Heinz, and Wolfgang Preiss.
Ken
Annakin shot the British scenes, Andrew Marton shot the American scenes,
and Bernhard Wicki shot the German ones. Darryl F. Zanuck produced the
film and is often credited as a fourth director.
What was really
special about this film was the fact that the characters from their
respective countries spoke their native language, and subtitles were
used on-screen. This was very rarely done by Hollywood back then, and
films involving foreign characters were still shot in English, with the
vernacular to be assumed by the audience.
The famous opening shot from "The Longest Day".
The special
effects are also top notch, and the battles scenes and cinematography
were worth the Oscars they won. There are may distance shots of the
battles scenes, with so much going on and this added to the realism of
the movie.
Even with so many stars, this film really does not
belong to anyone in particular. Wayne and Mitchum's scenes were brief
and spread out evenly throughout the course of the movie. Meanwhile,
Henry Fonda recieved less time on screen than any of the top-billed
stars.
It's truly amazing to finish this movie and see the end
credits role and see so many names whose faces you did not recognize.
There are so many small scenes and cameos all around, that it could
almost be made into a game with whoever you are watching this film with,
to try and name who is on screen.
This film would work really
well as a compliment to Saving Private Ryan, which is considered the
definitive D-Day movie, despite it being only one scene at the
beginning. Watching The Longest Day before watching that will help you
to understand what went behind the largest invasion in modern warfare
history. That's why this movie is so great, because it is not just one
big battle, but lots of dialogue explaining every mission involved, no
matter how menial.
I will make my final rating a 9 out of 10,
because I am still impressed at the special effects and star power every
time I sit down to watch it.
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