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Lo sbarco di Anzio

Lo sbarco di Anzio

1968Movie⏱️ 1h 57mPG-13
DramaHistoryWar
6
IMDB Rating
4,222 votes

A war correspondent witnesses errors made at Allied Command after he and a unit of US Army Rangers land unopposed at Anzio, Italy, but, later, they become trapped behind German lines during one of the bloodiest battles of WWII.

Director
N/A
Writers
H.A.L. Craig, Wynford Vaughan-Thomas, Frank De Felitta
Stars
Robert Mitchum, Peter Falk, Robert Ryan
Release Date
July 24, 1968
Language
English, Italian, German
Country
Italy, United States
💬 54
Reviews
📋 3.1K
Watchlists
📽️ View on IMDB

🎭 Top Cast

Robert Mitchum
Robert Mitchum
as Dick Ennis (war correspondent, International Press)
Peter Falk
Peter Falk
as Cpl. Jack Rabinoff
Robert Ryan
Robert Ryan
as General Carson
Earl Holliman
Earl Holliman
as Platoon Sgt. Abe Stimmler
Mark Damon
Mark Damon
as Wally Richardson
Arthur Kennedy
Arthur Kennedy
as Maj. Gen. Jack Lesley
Reni Santoni
Reni Santoni
as Pvt. Movie
Joseph Walsh
Joseph Walsh
as Doyle
Thomas Hunter
Thomas Hunter
as Pvt. Andy
Giancarlo Giannini
Giancarlo Giannini
as Pvt. Cellini

🎬 Technical Specs

Aspect Ratio
2.35 : 1
Filming Location
Royal Palace, Caserta, Campania, Italy
Production
Columbia Pictures, Dino de Laurentiis Cinematografica

🏷️ Keywords

military operationyear 19441940sbehind enemy linesnazi occupied italy

🎯 Categories

DramaHistoryWar

⭐ Featured Review

Diluted and boring film a clef.
by rmax3048232004-06-17
3/10

"It's a not-entirely fictional story about the Ango-American landings at Anzio on Italy's west coast. It's diluted because the story behind those landings is far more interesting than what we see on the screen. Names, personalities, and motives are changed around so that hardly any echo of the real characters remains, although we get a lot of information about characters created in the screenplay. Basically, Robert Ryan plays General Mark Clark who was in charge of the operation and was in overall command of the Fifth Army. He was an interesting guy for a general -- tall, vain, ..."

💡 Did You Know?

Peter Falk in his 2006 autobiography "Just One More Thing: Stories of My Life" stated that he didn't like the script for this film, finding it hackneyed and full of cliché; he wanted to leave the film for these reasons. However, producer Dino De Laurentiis encouraged him to stay by giving him film-poster name-above-the-title credit as well as choice of writer for his dialogue. Falk stayed on the picture and apparently actually wrote his own dialogue.

📖 Synopsis

A war correspondent witnesses errors made at Allied Command after he and a unit of US Army Rangers land unopposed at Anzio, Italy, but, later, they become trapped behind German lines during one of the bloodiest battles of WWII.