John Doe’s 12 Neglected War Gems for Memorial Day
12 Lesser Discussed War Visualizations
Celebrating those who yanked the pin out of the grenade, pulled the trigger, attached bayonets or lit the fuse on cannonballs, Memorial Day is this weekend in the US and it seems like a good time to discuss some lesser seen combat films that achieved there aims admirably.
JD has been reluctant to ever do a list of “favourite war films”, because, well, the problem begins with inappropriate use of the word “favourite” to describe mass carnage. It makes him feel like Phil Hartman in Small Soldiers. Beyond that though the genre itself is tough to define, is a war film only in combat? Does it include the aftermath, can it contain films that take place in an era of war on the home front?
This list is “lesser discussed” which means that accepted classics like Apocalypse Now, MASH, The Big Red One, The Thin Red Line, Platoon, All’s Quiet on the Western Front etc are respected by JD but have no place on this post.
Putting the cross hairs on battles America has fought, (after all it is there Holiday), below is a dirty dozen flicks that made an impression on JD. Movies he seldom here’s mentioned when the topic of "medal of honour" worthy cinematic excursions are raised:
Ride With The Devil (1999) – The Civil War
Director Ang Lee has since earned a reputation as a consummate filmmaker, but upon release this realistic Civil War drama was completely ignored. Painting a bleak reality the story explores the social upheaval and conflicted ideals at the core of the conflict.
The Steel Helmet (1951) – Korea
Never shying away from stark realism, as a Korean War veteran Director Sam Fuller (The Big Red One, Fixed Bayonets, Merrill’s Marauders) injects an ahead of its time rawness dictated by his own experiences.
The Ugly American (1963) – Vietnam
Set in a fictional Southeast Asian country named Sarkan, Marlon Brando stars as a headstrong U.S. Ambassador faced with the ugly truth about fighting an ideological menace on foreign soil.
Johnny Got His Gun (1971) – WW1
Written and Directed by the independent thinking Dalton Trumbo (Papillion, Spartacus) this nightmare unfolds inside the head of a soldier who has lost his arms, legs, ears, nose and mouth to a mortar shell on the last day of WWI.
The DVD trailer for Johnny Got His Gun
The Americanization of Emily (1964) – WWII
Considered by veteran turned actor James Garner as his best film, this black comedy vocalizes that before peace can prevail nations need to stop building monuments and hailing those who die for senseless political causes.
Attack (1956) – WWII
When the name Robert Alderich arises many immediately turn to The Dirty Dozen as his definitive combat moment but Attack truly deserves to be mentioned in the same breath. Covering similar ground to Kubrick’s Paths of Glory and Peckinpah’s Cross of Iron this Jack Palance (Shane) entry tackles the corrupted chain of command and those who risk the lives of their men for personal glory and gain.
Hell in the Pacific (1968) – WWII
Toshiro Mifune (Seven Samurai) is a loyal Japanese soldier and Lee Marvin is a pilot shot down during WWII who are stranded on a desert island together. Refusing to yield they continue their own senseless fight instead of uniting to survive. The film is directed by John Boorman (Deliverance).
Welcome to Sarajevo (1997) - Bosnia
This Michael Winterbottom film centers on journalists in the early stages of the Bosnian conflict. Woody Harrelson discovers his humanity when faced with the children as casualties of war.
Over There (2005) – Iraq
Breaking the rules, this is actually a TV series not a movie. While Generation Kill is widely seen as the definitive Iraq War small screen entry and JD won’t argue, this equally impressive Steven Bochco created dramatization offers many merits for watching.
The Dogs of War (1980) – Mercenary War
The politics and corporate agendas of combat are highlighted in this soldiers of fortune action drama starring Christopher Walken as a man hired to cause upheaval in a small South African country.
Lord of War (2005) – Arms Dealing
In this dark satire Nicholas Cage plays Yuri Orlov an international arms trader who has no problem being the source for death on a massive scale. Again money rules the individual and those with violent desires are readily provided weapons if it serves a political or financial objective.
Buffalo Soldiers (2001) – War Comedy
Directed by Aussie Gregor Jordan (Two Hands) and starring Joaquin Phoenix, Ed Harris, Scott Glen and Anna Paquin the tagline says it all, “War is hell…but peace is fucking boring." A comedy set in a West German U.S base where destruction is a self inflicted wound.










































Horrorphile
I'm still to review both actually.
Film & TV on DVD
Come and See is certainly fantastic but its not told from the American perspective which was a prerequisite of this memorial day list.
Abstract Magick
Cinema Herald
Don't know if it's from an American perspective but it has a multinational cast.
Film & TV on DVD
I liked Force 10 from Navarone too. Good guilty fun in the vein of Where Eagles Dare and The Wild Geese..
Force 10 is actually a sequel to the wildly successful The Guns of Navarone, one of the most respected war adventure film classics ever. it stars Gregory Peck, Anthony Quinn and David Niven. If you haven't seen it I strongly recommend the original because you dug the follow up so much.
Cool contribution.
20/20 Filmsight
Screen Adventure
I think though that I would hardly call the Ugly American and Buffalo Soldiers neglected (maybe B.S. is a tad neglected though I dont know)
What about Big Red One, Overlord, Merrills Marauders, Verboten, Fixed Bayonets
and yes....'Come And See' is a big one
Screen Adventure
unlucky_ fishermen.com
Angling Fish
Check this out...
Horrorphile
Film & TV on DVD
Thanks for that Matt.....Hell in the Pacific never gets enough love.
Film & TV on DVD
I think though that I would hardly call the Ugly American and Buffalo Soldiers neglected (maybe B.S. is a tad neglected though I dont know)
What about Big Red One, Overlord, Merrills Marauders, Verboten, Fixed Bayonets
and yes....'Come And See' is a big one
sorry- just saw that you did stuff more of those fuller ones in there with Steel Helmet- but Verboten and Overlord are biggies - good to see Dogs Of War in there - and surprised to see Lord Of War - hardly what I would call neglected
Hi Shaun,
As i said to Bryn in any earlier comment (and in the post itself) I was focusing purely on the American perspective as the list was inspired by the USA holiday Memorial Day, which is this weekend. That's why quality stuff like Overlord, Come and See, Verboten and a ton of others are not featured.
So few people even talk about Buffalo Soldiers that I felt it deserved highlighting. As for Ugly American its one I have only heard aficionados of Brando bring up and it seldom enters the War film conversation.
Big Red One is considered a classic and I decided gets enough love plus I mention it in the post as one that is too respected. As for the other Fuller's i didn't want to repeat filmmakers and Steel Helmet is the best of his Korea films IMO.
Lord of War really is neglected in my experience. It is included because most people I speak to didn't like it or thought it was just "ok". Many haven't seen it because of a Nic Cage prejudice. Fewer still seem to appreciate it.
Hope that covers why the list is so refined and why i consider them neglected.
Film & TV on DVD
Hi James,
Best Days of our Lives is an absolute classic for sure, one that does appear on many best war film list...nice choice.
Did you read my review for Dogs of War, I inserted a link to it in the post.
Film & TV on DVD
All good man, seems my verbiage in the post must have been unclear because you and Shaun both made the same oversight
Infognito
Screen Trek
QUOTE ME NO QUOTES!
many I have not seen, however, Hell in the Pacific was fantastic! Lord of War was also great, Cage has been in some bummers of late, and over acting to fury, but this film pointed the finger at the right place.
I remember seeing The Steel Helmet, but saw it on late night TV so long ago can't remember it well, (might have been the libations!).
I must see Johnny got his Gun...
cheers and great post,
fog
Thoughts from a Cinephile
Thoughts from a TV Watcher
Film & TV on DVD
many I have not seen, however, Hell in the Pacific was fantastic! Lord of War was also great, Cage has been in some bummers of late, and over acting to fury, but this film pointed the finger at the right place.
I remember seeing The Steel Helmet, but saw it on late night TV so long ago can't remember it well, (might have been the libations!).
I must see Johnny got his Gun...
cheers and great post,
Glad you liked it and yes Johnny Got His Gun is essential.
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Hi Catherine,
Happy to offer a service with the list and glad you liked it.
I always liked that Dogs of War poster too, i think it is the Japanese Edition, certainly has an international flavor.
Thanks for the visit.