Budget
$4,500,000 (estimated)
Gross US & Canada
$7,206,220
Gross worldwide
$7,206,823
Budget
$4,500,000 (estimated)
Gross US & Canada
$7,206,220
Gross worldwide
$7,206,823
Movie reviews
( 6 )
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By Dayne 2022-12-23 05:55:28
Every war is a collective outing for mental patients
At 80 points, after watching the Red One column, I discovered that at least two places in the "fury" I watched a few days ago are obviously paying tribute to this classic old film. Camouflage of the tank. I watched more war films that focused on one battle. I just watched the first half of the film where the small teams rushed to and fro multiple battlefields. I felt that the film was a bit fragmented and had low fluency, but the second half was relatively much better. It should be said that...
By Lukas 2022-05-02 06:01:02
The work of Samuel Fuller, this man is revered as the godfather of American B-level films. The so-called B-level films are things with a low budget and a large scale. Hollywood is the product of the theater line after 12 o'clock in the evening. Because the audience's age is limited, B-level can often see some pornographic or violent and bloody scenes, relatively speaking, giving the director more creative space. That is to say, you have less resources and less money, but you can play harder to...
By Zelda 2022-05-02 06:01:02
The Red One Column is the title!
In fact, watching this movie was accidental. At that time, the Internet was not popular. I like to use the New Year's money to buy a few DVDs. Well, I only watched war movies. I bought "Field Platoon", "Born on July 4th", and this one. "Red Column", very old picture, but the story is wonderful.
An old captain, after World War I and World War II, brought new recruits to tide over the difficulties. With rich experience, he presents the main battles in North Africa, France, Belgium, and...
By Kameron 2022-05-02 06:01:02
Overall, this movie is good.
In this movie, I saw the plots of many other movies, such as "Saving Private Ryan", such as "My Commander, My Group".
But this movie was shot in the 1980s. It should be said that after the 1980s, the films on the theme of World War II have some plot thinking and rendering derived from this movie.
The timeline of this movie can be regarded as a few familiar battles of the United States against Germany, such as the North African battlefield, the...
By Reyes 2022-05-02 06:01:02
The
veterans of the "Red Column" who participated in World War I, with 4 American boys, galloped on the famous US military battlefields of World War II, North Africa, Italy, Sicily, France, Germany, Czech Republic and other countries. It is really amazing!
In 1938, an American rifle company, led by an unknown sergeant, fought so hard and finally survived, so lucky!
The truth is indisputable, the propaganda is the heaviest, and the aura of the US military is set on a few of...
User comments
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By Demario 2023-09-08 22:52:00
Lee Marvin is very...
By Cyrus 2023-08-26 21:07:15
1. Good luck. According to the barrage, this almost includes the more important battles of World War II? I don't think so. 2. War is the most foolish act of human...
By Jessika 2023-07-29 22:37:46
There are so many classic lines, simple and rude, but every sentence is precious, Samuel Fuller's films are always so exciting! In terms of style, it is humorous but not funny, dark but not depressing, realistic but not cruel. Favorite sentence: We do not murder a enemy, we...
By Aaliyah 2023-07-26 11:29:04
It is a 162-minute reconstructed version. Some of the heavyweight passages are meant to be commented and analyzed for later generations, but in fact, the overall shot is simple and it is full of iron-blooded and tender...
By Brennan 2023-05-30 07:53:23
Old-school World War II movies that aren't well-made and a little rough. But it is a rare film in World War II movies with strong stories and full-bodied characters on both sides. Although the narrative is suspected of running accounts, some classic lines, the blown toilet paper tube, the garland helmet, the tank midwifery, the fanatical admirer of the head of state, the battle of the mental hospital and other magic strokes make this film enough to become a...
[the Sergeant affixes a cloth red '1' to his uniform. The Captain is drinking from a bottle of booze]
The Sergeant: What do you think?
The Captain: What the hell is it?
The Sergeant: It's a "one". First Infantry Division. The Red One; think General Pershing will like it?
The Captain: Oh, sure.
The Sergeant: I got the idea from the cap of a Hun I killed.
The Captain: When?
The Sergeant: About an hour ago
The Captain: Did he yell out anything?
The Sergeant: Oh, the same old Kaiser stuff, you know, "the war's over," all that junk.
[the Captain hands him the bottle]
The Captain: Finish it.
The Sergeant: Sir?
The Captain: Finish it. The Armistice was signed, at eleven o'clock this morning. The war's been over for four hours. You didn't know it was over.
The Sergeant: ...*He* did.
Zab: [narrating] A quarter of a century later that piece of cloth from a dead Hun's hat had become famous all over the world. It was the insignia of the First Infantry Division. The Fightin' First. The Big Red One.
Zab: [narrating] You know how you smoke out a sniper? You send a guy out in the open and you see if he gets shot. They thought that one up at West Point.
Zab: [narrating] By now we'd come to look at all replacements as dead men who temporarily had the use of the arms and legs. The came and went so fast and so regularly that sometimes we didn't even learn their names. Truth is, after a while, we sort of avoided gettin' to know them.