| Complete credited cast: | |||
| Gregory Peck | ... | Gen. Frank Savage | |
| Hugh Marlowe | ... | Lt. Col. Ben Gately | |
| Gary Merrill | ... | Col. Davenport | |
| Millard Mitchell | ... | General Pritchard | |
| Dean Jagger | ... | Major Stovall | |
| Robert Arthur | ... | Sgt. McIllhenny | |
| Paul Stewart | ... | Maj. 'Doc' Kaiser | |
| John Kellogg | ... | Major Cobb | |
| Robert Patten | ... | Lt. Bishop (as Bob Patten) | |
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Lee MacGregor | ... | Lt. Zimmerman (as Lee Mac Gregor) |
| Sam Edwards | ... | Birdwell | |
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Roger Anderson | ... | Interrogation Officer |
In this story of the early days of daylight bombing raids over Nazi Germany, General Frank Savage must take command of a "hard luck" bomber group. Much of the story deals with his struggle to whip his group into a disciplined fighting unit in spite of heavy losses, and withering attacks by German fighters over their targets. Actual combat footage is used in this tense war drama. Written by KC Hunt <khunt@eng.morgan.edu>
The picture brings back the memories of excitement, terror and relief. Its a picture that the authors bring out. I knew the commanding officer portrayed by Gregory Peck, a Colonel Frank Armstrong, a replacement for Col. Overacker. Gregory Peck was a BG. The only error I saw was in the MGDb write up. Your article sites the planes as B-24 rather than B-17. We were first division originally sent to England to be transferred to North Africa. The 918 Bomb Group in the picture is 3 times 306 = 918 thats how they identified them. We had 87% casualty rate; 287 of us flew to England on Oct 21 1942, 87 survived, and are passing away rapidly now. I was 19 as a bombardier-navigator,flew two tours; the second was a pilot. The picture is my ideal. I have three copies of it and view whenever I feel depressed. Thanks for my connection of the past Im78 and need a boost eversince I gave up drinking and smoking. Horace Corigliano