Cast overview, first billed only: | |||
Steve McQueen | ... | Hilts 'The Cooler King' | |
James Garner | ... | Hendley 'The Scrounger' | |
Richard Attenborough | ... | Bartlett 'Big X' | |
James Donald | ... | Ramsey 'The SBO' | |
Charles Bronson | ... | Danny 'Tunnel King' | |
Donald Pleasence | ... | Blythe 'The Forger' | |
James Coburn | ... | Sedgwick 'Manufacturer' | |
Hannes Messemer | ... | Von Luger 'The Kommandant' | |
David McCallum | ... | Ashley-Pitt 'Dispersal' | |
Gordon Jackson | ... | MacDonald 'Intelligence' | |
John Leyton | ... | Willie 'Tunnel King' | |
Angus Lennie | ... | Ives 'The Mole' | |
Nigel Stock | ... | Cavendish 'The Surveyor' | |
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Robert Graf | ... | Werner 'The Ferret' |
Jud Taylor | ... | Goff |
Based on a true story, a group of allied escape artist-type prisoners-of-war are all put in an "escape proof" camp. Their leader decides to try to take out several hundred all at once. The first half of the movie is played for comedy, as the prisoners mostly outwit their jailers to dig the escape tunnel. The second half is high adventure as they use planes, trains, and boats to get out of occupied Europe. Written by John Vogel <jlvogel@comcast.net>
"The Great Escape" is a rousing blend of suspense, action and ultimately tragedy, bolstered by an all-star cast, terrific music and beautiful European locations. A few fellow reviewers have cited the unbelievably "pristine" prison conditions, but the German authorities did try to uphold the Geneva Convention for Western Allied POWs. The characters in this film left their well-run 'stalag' anyway, and many paid the ultimate price. While entertaining its viewers, "The Great Escape" effectively depicted the tragic consequences.
-Tony