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The Dirty Dozen

The Dirty Dozen is a 1967 American war film directed by Robert Aldrich and starring Lee Marvin with an ensemble supporting cast including Ernest Borgnine, Charles Bronson, Jim Brown, John Cassavetes, Richard Jaeckel, George Kennedy, Ralph Meeker, Robert Ryan, Trini Lopez, Telly Savalas, Donald Sutherland, Clint Walker and Robert Webber. Set in 1944 during World War II, the film follows the titular penal military unit of twelve convicts as they are trained as commandos by the Allies for a suicide mission ahead of the Normandy landings.

The Dirty Dozen
Theatrical release poster by Frank McCarthy
Directed byRobert Aldrich
Screenplay by
Based onThe Dirty Dozen
1965 novel
by E. M. Nathanson
Produced byKenneth Hyman
Starring
CinematographyEdward Scaife
Edited byMichael Luciano
Music byFrank De Vol
Production
company
Kenneth Hyman Production
Distributed byMetro-Goldwyn-Mayer
Release date
  • June 15, 1967 (1967-06-15)
Running time
150 minutes
CountriesUnited States
United Kingdom
Languages
  • English
  • German
  • French
Budget$5.4 million[1]
Box office$45.3 million[2]

The Dirty Dozen was filmed in England at MGM-British Studios and released by MGM. The screenplay is based on the 1965 bestseller of the same name by E. M. Nathanson, which itself was inspired by a real-life WWII unit of behind-the-lines demolition specialists from the 101st Airborne Division named the "Filthy Thirteen". Another possible inspiration was the public offer to President Franklin D. Roosevelt by 44 prisoners serving life sentences at the Oklahoma State Penitentiary to serve in the Pacific War on suicide missions against the Japanese.[3]

The film was a box office success and won the Academy Award for Best Sound Editing at the 40th Academy Awards in 1968. In 2001, the American Film Institute placed it at number 65 on their 100 Years... 100 Thrills list. The film spawned a few television film sequels in the 1980s: The Dirty Dozen: Next Mission in 1985, The Dirty Dozen: The Deadly Mission in 1987, and The Dirty Dozen: The Fatal Mission in 1988. A remake was announced in 2019 by Warner Bros.

Plot edit

In March 1944, OSS officer Major John Reisman is ordered by the commander of ADSEC in Britain, Major General Sam Worden, to undertake "Project Amnesty", a top secret mission to train some of the U.S. Army's worst convicts into highly-skilled commandos to eliminate Wehrmacht officers at a château near Rennes, disrupting the German chain of command in northern France ahead of D-Day. If any of the convicts survive, they will be pardoned.

Reisman meets the twelve convicts at a military prison operated by the Military Police Corps. Five are condemned to death while the others face lengthy sentences including hard labor. Reisman quickly establishes his authority. Overseen by MPs led by Sergeant Bowren, the convicts gradually learn to operate together when they are forced to build their own training camp. However, when an act of insubordination is instigated by convict Franko, all shaving and wash kits are withheld as punishment, which leads to their nickname, the "Dirty Dozen". During their training, the convicts are psychoanalyzed by Captain Kinder, who warns Reisman that they would all likely kill him if given the chance, and that Maggott, a psychopathic rapist and murderer, is by far the most dangerous.

With their commando training almost complete, the Dirty Dozen are sent for parachute training at a facility commanded by Reisman's nemesis, Colonel Everett Dasher Breed of the 101st Airborne Division. However, Breed is not briefed about Project Amnesty. When Breed makes several attempts to discover Reisman's mission, including infiltration of the Dirty Dozen's camp, Reisman kicks Breed and his men out of the camp. Later, Breed's testimony combined with Reisman rewarding the Dirty Dozen with prostitutes at the end of their training, prompts the ADSEC staff to consider terminating the project and sending the men back for execution of sentence. Reisman defends the convicts' training and agrees to have them compete against Breed's men in war games to test their mettle. To the surprise of Colonel Breed, the Dirty Dozen successfully capture his headquarters and Major General Worden allows Reisman to resume his mission.

Upon parachuting into northern France, one of the prisoners, Jiminez, breaks his neck during the jump. With a man down, the mission proceeds with German-speaking convict Wladislaw and Reisman infiltrating the chateau disguised as German officers. However, all surprise is lost when Maggott breaks cover before he is killed. The sound of gunfire makes the Wehrmacht officers and their companions retreat to a locked underground bomb shelter, but the unit pours gasoline and throws grenades into the shelter through ventilation shafts, killing the officers and their civilian guests.

After a firefight, only Reisman, Bowren, and Wladislaw escape alive. Back in the United Kingdom, a voiceover from Armbruster confirms that Major General Worden exonerated the sole surviving member of the Dirty Dozen and communicated to the next of kin of the rest that "they lost their lives in the line of duty".

Cast edit

Production edit

Writing edit

Although Robert Aldrich had failed to buy the rights to E. M. Nathanson's novel The Dirty Dozen while it was just an outline, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer succeeded in May 1963. On publication, the novel became a best-seller in 1965. It was adapted to the screen by veteran scriptwriter and producer Nunnally Johnson, and Lukas Heller. A repeated rhyme was written into the script where the twelve actors verbally recite the details of the attack in a rhyming chant to help them remember their roles while approaching the mission target:

  1. Down to the road block, we've just begun.
  2. The guards are through.
  3. The Major's men are on a spree.
  4. Major and Wladislaw go through the door.
  5. Pinkley stays out in the drive.
  6. The Major gives the rope a fix.
  7. Wladislaw throws the hook to heaven.
  8. Jiminez has got a date.
  9. The other guys go up the line.
  10. Sawyer and Gilpin are in the pen.
  11. Posey guards Points Five and Seven.
  12. Wladislaw and the Major go down to delve.
  13. Franko goes up without being seen.
  14. Zero Hour: Jiminez cuts the cable; Franko cuts the phone.
  15. Franko goes in where the others have been.
  16. We all come out like it's Halloween.

Casting edit

The cast included many American World War II veterans including Lee Marvin, Robert Webber and Robert Ryan (U.S. Marine Corps); Telly Savalas and George Kennedy (U.S. Army); Charles Bronson (U.S. Army Air Forces); Ernest Borgnine (U.S. Navy); and Robert Jaeckl and Clint Walker (U.S. Merchant Marine).

John Wayne was the original choice for Reisman, but he turned down the role because he objected to the adultery present in the original script, which featured the character having a relationship with an Englishwoman whose husband was fighting on the Continent.[4] Jack Palance refused the "Archer Maggot" role when they would not rewrite the script to make his character lose his racism; Telly Savalas took the role instead.[5]

Six of the dozen were experienced American stars, while the "Back Six" were actors resident in the UK: Englishman Colin Maitland, Canadians Donald Sutherland and Tom Busby, and Americans Stuart Cooper, Al Mancini, and Ben Carruthers. According to commentary on The Dirty Dozen: 2-Disc Special Edition, when Trini Lopez left the film early, the death scene of Lopez's character where he blew himself up with the radio tower was given to Busby[6] (in the film, Ben Carruthers' character Glenn Gilpin is given the task of blowing up the radio tower while Busby's character Milo Vladek is shot in front of the château). Lopez's character dies off-camera during the parachute drop that begins the mission.[7] The impersonation of the general scene was to have been done by Clint Walker, but when he thought the scene was demeaning to his character, who was a Native American, Aldrich picked out Sutherland for the bit.[8][9]

Jim Brown, the Cleveland Browns running back, announced his retirement from American football at age thirty during the making of the film.[10][11][12] The owner of the Browns, Art Modell, demanded Brown choose between football and acting. With Brown's considerable accomplishments in the sport (he was already the NFL's all-time leading rusher, was well ahead statistically of the second-leading rusher, and his team had won the 1964 NFL Championship), he chose acting. In Spike Lee's 2002 documentary Jim Brown: All-American Modell admitted he made a huge mistake in forcing Jim Brown to choose between football and Hollywood. He said that if he had it to do over again, he would never have made such a demand. Modell fined Jim Brown the equivalent of over $100 per day, a fine which Brown said that "today wouldn't even buy the doughnuts for a team".[13]

Filming edit

 
Aldbury – scene of the wargame
 
Bradenham Manor – Wargames HQ

The production was filmed in the United Kingdom during the summer of 1966.[14] Interiors and set pieces took place at MGM-British Studios, Borehamwood, where the château set was built under the direction of art director William Hutchinson. It was 720 yards (660 m) wide and 50 feet (15 m) high, surrounded with 5,400 square yards (4,500 m2) of heather, 400 ferns, 450 shrubs, 30 spruce trees and six weeping willows. Construction of the faux château proved problematic. The script required its explosion, but it was so solid that 70 tons of explosives would have been required for the effect. Instead, a cork and plastic section was destroyed.[citation needed]

Exteriors were shot throughout southeast England. The credit scenes at the American military prison – alluded in the movie to be Shepton Mallett – were shot in a courtyard at Ashridge House in Hertfordshire. Co-star Richard Jaeckel recalled that when the introductory lineup scene was first shot, Aldrich, who liked to play pranks on his actors, initially placed 5 ft 8 in (1.73 m) Charles Bronson between 6 ft 6 in (1.98 m) Clint Walker and 6 ft 4 in (1.93 m) Donald Sutherland, which provoked an angry response from Bronson, making Aldrich laugh.[15]

The jump school scene was shot at the former entrance to RAF Hendon in London. The wargame was filmed in and around the village of Aldbury. Bradenham Manor was the Wargames' Headquarters. Beechwood Park School in Markyate was also used as a location during the school's summer term, where the training camp and tower were built and shot in the grounds and the village itself as parts of "Devonshire". The main house was also used, appearing in the film as a military hospital.[16] After filming finished, the training camp huts were relocated and used as sports equipment storage for the school's playing fields. Residents of Chenies, Buckinghamshire complained to MGM when filming caused damage around their village.[14]

While making the film, some of the cast members gave an interview to ABC Film review, in which they contrasted their own real wartime ranks to their officer roles in the film:

George Kennedy: Took me two years to make Private First Class.
Lee Marvin: I didn't even make that in the Marines.
Ernest Borgnine: I was beneath notice in the Navy
For punks, we're doing all right, said Marvin. I wonder how the generals are doing?[17]

Heavy rains throughout the summer caused filming delays of several months, leading to $1 million in overruns and bringing the final cost to $5 million.[14] In the early hours of 21 September 1966 part of the Chateau set burned down prematurely. Night-time film had been stopped at 03:30 due to fog, and the set – which was due to be destroyed during filming – caught fire at 06:29.[18] Principal photography wrapped at MGM-British Studios in September 1966 with post-production to be completed at MGM studios in Culver City, California.[14]

Historical authenticity edit

Nathanson states in the prologue to his novel The Dirty Dozen that, while he heard a legend that such a unit may have existed, he incorrectly heard that they were convicts. He was unable to find any corroboration in the archives of the US Army in Europe. He instead turned his research of convicted felons into the subsequent novel. He does not state where he acquired the name, but Arch Whitehouse coined the name "Dirty Dozen" as the 12 enlisted men of the airborne section that became the "Filthy Thirteen" after the lieutenant joined their ranks. In Arch Whitehouse's article in True Magazine, he claimed that all the enlisted men were full-blood Indians, but in reality only their leader Jake McNeice was one-quarter Choctaw. The parts of the Filthy Thirteen story that carried over into Nathanson's book were not bathing until the jump into Normandy, their disrespect for military authority, and the pre-invasion party. The Filthy Thirteen was actually a demolitions section with a mission to secure bridges over the Douve on D-Day.[19][20]

A unit called the "Filthy Thirteen" was an airborne demolition unit documented in the eponymous book,[21] and this unit's exploits inspired the fictional account. Barbara Maloney, the daughter of John Agnew, a private in the Filthy Thirteen, told the American Valor Quarterly that her father felt that 30 percent of the film's content was historically correct, including a scene where officers are captured. Unlike the Dirty Dozen, the Filthy Thirteen were not convicts; however, they were men prone to drinking and fighting and often spent time in the stockade.[22][23]

Release edit

Theatrical edit

The Dirty Dozen premiered at the Capitol Theatre in New York City on June 15, 1967[14] and opened at the 34th Street East theatre the following day.[24][25] Despite being shot in an aspect ratio of 1.85:1, the film was initially shown in 70 mm which cut off 15% of the film and resulted in a grainy look.[26]

Reception edit

Box office edit

The Dirty Dozen was a massive commercial success. In its first five days in New York, the film grossed $103,849 from 2 theatres.[25] Produced on a budget of $5.4 million, it earned theatrical rentals of $7.5 million in its first five weeks from 1,152 bookings and 625 prints, one of the fastest-grossing films at the time;[27] however, on Variety's weekly box office survey, based on a sample of key city theatres, it only reached number two at the U.S. box office behind You Only Live Twice until it finally reached number one in its sixth week.[28] It eventually earned rentals of $24.2 million in the United States and Canada from a gross of $45.3 million.[29] It was the fourth-highest-grossing film of 1967 and MGM's highest-grossing film of the year. It was also a hit in France, with admissions of 4,672,628.[30]

Critical response edit

Upon release, the film has granted positive reviews from critics. It holds an 81% rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on 52 reviews, with an average rating of 8.00/10. The critical consensus reads, "Amoral on the surface and exuding testosterone, The Dirty Dozen utilizes combat and its staggering cast of likable scoundrels to deliver raucous entertainment."[31] On release, the film was criticized for its level of violence. Roger Ebert, who was in his first year as a film reviewer for the Chicago Sun-Times, wrote sarcastically:

I'm glad the Chicago Police Censor Board forgot about that part of the local censorship law where it says films shall not depict the burning of the human body. If you have to censor, stick to censoring sex, I say... but leave in the mutilation, leave in the sadism and by all means leave in the human beings burning to death. It's not obscene as long as they burn to death with their clothes on.[32]

In another contemporaneous review, Bosley Crowther called it "an astonishingly wanton war film" and a "studied indulgence of sadism that is morbid and disgusting beyond words"; he also noted:

It is not simply that this violent picture of an American military venture is based on a fictional supposition that is silly and irresponsible. ... But to have this bunch of felons a totally incorrigible lot, some of them psychopathic, and to try to make us believe that they would be committed by any American general to carry out an exceedingly important raid that a regular commando group could do with equal efficiency—and certainly with greater dependability—is downright preposterous.[24]

Crowther called some of the portrayals "bizarre and bold":

Marvin's taut, pugnacious playing of the major ... is tough and terrifying. John Cassavetes is wormy and noxious as a psychopath condemned to death, and Telly Savalas is swinish and maniacal as a religious fanatic and sex degenerate. Charles Bronson as an alienated murderer, Richard Jaeckel as a hard-boiled military policeman, and Jim Brown as a white-hating Negro stand out in the animalistic group.[24]

Art Murphy of Variety was more positive, calling it "an exciting World War II pre-D-Day drama" with an "excellent cast" and a "very good screenplay" with "a ring of authenticity to it".[26]

The Time Out Film Guide notes that over the years, "The Dirty Dozen has taken its place alongside that other commercial classic, The Magnificent Seven". The review then states:

The violence which liberal critics found so offensive has survived intact. Aldrich sets up dispensable characters with no past and no future, as Marvin reprieves a bunch of death row prisoners, forges them into a tough fighting unit, and leads them on a suicide mission into Nazi France. Apart from the values of team spirit, cudgeled by Marvin into his dropout group, Aldrich appears to be against everything: anti-military, anti-Establishment, anti-women, anti-religion, anti-culture, anti-life. Overriding such nihilism is the super-crudity of Aldrich's energy and his humour, sufficiently cynical to suggest that the whole thing is a game anyway, a spectacle that demands an audience.[33]

Accolades edit

Award Category Nominee(s) Result
Academy Awards[34] Best Supporting Actor John Cassavetes Nominated
Best Film Editing Michael Luciano Nominated
Best Sound Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studio Sound Department Nominated
Best Sound Effects John Poyner Won
American Cinema Editors Awards Best Edited Feature Film Michael Luciano Won
Directors Guild of America Awards Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Motion Pictures Robert Aldrich Nominated
Golden Globe Awards Best Supporting Actor – Motion Picture John Cassavetes Nominated
Laurel Awards Top Action-Drama Nominated
Top Action Performance Lee Marvin Won
Top Male Supporting Performance Jim Brown Nominated
John Cassavetes Nominated
Photoplay Awards Gold Medal Won

Year-end lists edit

Also, the film is recognized by American Film Institute in these lists:

Other media edit

Parody, unofficial sequels and remake edit

In 1967, the same year that The Dirty Dozen was released, a parody film titled The Pogi Dozen (lit.'The Handsome Dozen') was released in the Philippines, starring the comedian Chiquito.

Three years after The Dirty Dozen was released, Too Late the Hero, a film also directed by Aldrich, was described as a "kind of sequel to The Dirty Dozen".[36] The 1969 Michael Caine film Play Dirty follows a similar theme of convicts recruited as soldiers. The 1977 Italian war film directed by Enzo G. Castellari, The Inglorious Bastards, is a loose remake of The Dirty Dozen.[37] Quentin Tarantino's 2009 Inglourious Basterds was derived from the English-language title of the Castellari film.[38][39]

Comic books edit

Dell Comics published a comic The Dirty Dozen in October 1967.[40][41]

In 1972 Marvel Comics launched Combat Kelly and the Deadly Dozen inspired by the movie. While the series began as a spinoff from Marvel's more popular Sgt. Fury and his Howling Commandos and several characters from that series crossed over, Combat Kelly (as it was known in the indicia) only lasted nine issues.

DC Comics in the 1980s revived their Silver Age comic team known as the Suicide Squad with a similar premise, only using supervillains instead of military convicts. The success of this incarnation over the following years saw incarnations of the team appear in various media including television and movies (both live-action and animation) as well as video games.

Sequels edit

A few TV films were produced in the mid-to-late 1980s which capitalized on the popularity of the first film. Lee Marvin, Richard Jaeckel and Ernest Borgnine reprised their roles for The Dirty Dozen: Next Mission in 1985, leading a group of military convicts in a mission to kill a German general who was plotting to assassinate Adolf Hitler.[42][unreliable source?] In The Dirty Dozen: The Deadly Mission (1987), Telly Savalas, who had played the role of the psychotic Maggot in the original film, assumed the different role of Major Wright, an officer who leads a group of military convicts to extract a group of German scientists who are being forced to make a deadly nerve gas.[43] Ernest Borgnine again reprised his role of General Worden. The Dirty Dozen: The Fatal Mission (1988) depicts Savalas's Wright character and a group of renegade soldiers attempting to prevent a group of extreme German generals from starting a Fourth Reich, with Erik Estrada co-starring and Ernest Borgnine again playing the role of General Worden.[44] In 1988, Fox aired a short-lived television series starring Ben Murphy. Among the cast was John Slattery, who played Private Leeds in eight of the show's 11 episodes.[45][unreliable source?]

Toys edit

Some of the surviving cast members of the original film provided the voices of the toy soldiers in Joe Dante's Small Soldiers.[citation needed]

In popular culture edit

In 2014, Warner Bros. announced that director David Ayer would be the director of a live-action adaptation of the DC Comics property Suicide Squad, and Ayer has gone on to say that the film is "the Dirty Dozen with super villains", citing the original film as inspiration.

Remake edit

In December 2019 Warner Bros. announced it was developing a remake with David Ayer set to direct.[46]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Silver, Alain; Ursini, James (1995). Whatever Happened to Robert Aldrich?. Hal Leonard. p. 269. ISBN 978-0879101855. from the original on 20 April 2021. Retrieved 6 February 2020.
  2. ^ "The Dirty Dozen, Box Office Information". The Numbers. from the original on 3 December 2013. Retrieved 8 March 2012.
  3. ^ "44 Life-Termers Ask to Fight Japs as Suicide Squad" (PDF). PM, May 3, 1942
  4. ^ Roberts, Randy; Olsen, James Stuart (1997). John Wayne: American. Omaha: University of Nebraska Press. p. 537.
  5. ^ "Actor Jack Palance Won't Play Racist for $141,000". Jet. XXIX (22): 59. 10 March 1966. from the original on 15 March 2020. Retrieved 6 February 2020.
  6. ^ Commentary The Dirty Dozen: 2-Disc Special Edition
  7. ^ Film The Dirty Dozen: 2-Disc Special Edition
  8. ^ Patterson, John (3 September 2005). "Total recall". The Guardian. London. from the original on 29 August 2013. Retrieved 25 May 2010.
  9. ^ "These World War II Heroes Were Dirtier by the 'Dozen'". LA Times. 19 May 2000. from the original on 3 June 2021. Retrieved 16 May 2020.
  10. ^ "Jim Brown announces retirement; Collier plans to readjust offense". Youngstown Vindicator. (Ohio). Associated Press. 14 July 1966. p. 31.
  11. ^ "Jim Brown retires from pro football". Free Lance-Star. (Fredericksburg, Virginia). Associated Press. 14 July 1966. p. 16.
  12. ^ "Jim Brown gives up football". Pittsburgh Press. UPI. 14 July 1966. p. 34.
  13. ^ Cortes, Ryan (13 July 2016). "Jim Brown retires while on the set of 'The Dirty Dozen'". Andscape. from the original on 26 December 2019. Retrieved 15 March 2020.
  14. ^ a b c d e "The Dirty Dozen (1967)". www.catalog.afi.com. from the original on 29 October 2019. Retrieved 16 May 2020.
  15. ^ Freese, Gene (2016). Richard Jaeckel, Hollywood's Man of Character. McFarland. p. 88. ISBN 978-14-76662-10-7.
  16. ^ "The Dirty Dozen (1967) Filming Locations". www.themoviedistrict.com. from the original on 10 July 2020. Retrieved 15 May 2020.
  17. ^ "WHAT LEE MARVIN REALLY THOUGHT OF THE DIRTY DOZEN". www.pointblankbook.com. 16 June 2017. from the original on 26 September 2020. Retrieved 16 May 2020.
  18. ^ Hull Daily Mail', 21 September 1966, page 1
  19. ^ Yardley, William (13 February 2013). "Jake McNiece, Who Led Incorrigible D-Day Unit, Is Dead at 93". The New York Times. from the original on 12 March 2016. Retrieved 8 April 2016.
  20. ^ "World War II soldier John (Jack) Agnew, whose unit inspired 'Dirty Dozen,' dies at 88". New York Daily News. Associated Press. 12 April 2010. from the original on 5 April 2016. Retrieved 8 April 2016.
  21. ^ Killblane, Richard; McNiece, Jake (19 May 2003). The Filthy Thirteen: From the Dustbowl to Hitler's Eagle's Nest: The True Story of the 101st Airborne's Most Legendary Squad of Combat Paratroopers. Casemate. ISBN 978-1935149811. from the original on 20 April 2021. Retrieved 6 February 2020.
  22. ^ "Associated Press, April 11, 2010". from the original on 18 April 2010. Retrieved 15 January 2017.
  23. ^ The Filthy Thirteen: The U.S. Army's Real "Dirty Dozen" American Valor Quarterly. Winter 2008–09. Retrieved April 10, 2010. April 7, 2010, at the Wayback Machine
  24. ^ a b c Crowther, Bosley (16 June 1967). . The New York Times. Archived from the original on 3 June 2021. Retrieved 29 March 2010.
  25. ^ a b "'Heat of Night' Scores With Crix; Quick B.O. Pace". Variety. 9 August 1967. p. 3.
  26. ^ a b Murphy, A. D. (21 June 1967). "Film Reviews: The Dirty Dozen". Variety. p. 6. Archived from the original on 5 February 2013. Retrieved 29 March 2010.
  27. ^ "'Dirty Dozen' Nabs $7.5-Mil. In 5 Wks". Variety. 9 August 1967. p. 3.
  28. ^ "National Boxoffice Survey". Variety. 9 August 1967. p. 4.
  29. ^ "Big Rental Films of 1967". Variety. 3 January 1968. p. 25.
  30. ^ Soyer, Renaud (July 14, 2013) "Robert Aldrich Box Office" May 11, 2020, at the Wayback Machine. Box Office Story (in French).
  31. ^ "The Dirty Dozen". Rotten Tomatoes. from the original on 27 April 2011. Retrieved 8 June 2022.
  32. ^ Ebert, Roger (26 July 1967). . Chicago Sun-Times. Archived from the original on 23 September 2012. Retrieved 29 March 2010.
  33. ^ "The Dirty Dozen". Time Out. from the original on 7 June 2017. Retrieved 13 June 2017.
  34. ^ "The 40th Academy Awards (1968) Nominees and Winners". oscars.org. from the original on 2 April 2015. Retrieved 25 August 2011.
  35. ^ "AFI's 100 Years...100 Thrills" (PDF). American Film Institute. 2002. (PDF) from the original on 6 February 2020. Retrieved 20 August 2016.
  36. ^ "Cinema: Jungle Rot". Time. 8 June 1970. Archived from the original on 4 February 2013. Retrieved 29 March 2010. War may be getting a bad name, but it still pays at the box office. Ask Director Robert Aldrich. His 1967 film The Dirty Dozen made millions by drafting a gang of incorrigible convicts into a mission behind enemy lines. Too Late the Hero is a kind of sequel to The Dirty Dozen, based once again on a World War II suicide mission.
  37. ^ "Inglourious Basterds Has Inglorious Beginnings". FlickDirect. 13 August 209. from the original on 8 December 2015. Retrieved 1 December 2015.
  38. ^ . CBC News. 21 August 2009. Archived from the original on 26 August 2009. Retrieved 18 January 2010.
  39. ^ Wise, Damon (15 August 2009). . The Guardian. London. Archived from the original on 17 August 2009. Retrieved 19 January 2010.
  40. ^ Dell Movie Classic: The Dirty Dozen at the Grand Comics Database
  41. ^ at the Comic Book DB (archived from the original)
  42. ^ The Dirty Dozen: Next Mission at IMDb  
  43. ^ The Dirty Dozen: The Deadly Mission at the TCM Movie Database
  44. ^ The Dirty Dozen: The Fatal Mission at the TCM Movie Database
  45. ^ Dirty Dozen: The Series at IMDb  
  46. ^ "Dirty Dozen Movie Remake Recruits Suicide Squad Director David Ayer". ScreenRant. from the original on 17 December 2019. Retrieved 17 December 2019.

External links edit

dirty, dozen, this, article, about, film, other, uses, dirty, dozen, disambiguation, 1967, american, film, directed, robert, aldrich, starring, marvin, with, ensemble, supporting, cast, including, ernest, borgnine, charles, bronson, brown, john, cassavetes, ri. This article is about the film For other uses see Dirty Dozen disambiguation The Dirty Dozen is a 1967 American war film directed by Robert Aldrich and starring Lee Marvin with an ensemble supporting cast including Ernest Borgnine Charles Bronson Jim Brown John Cassavetes Richard Jaeckel George Kennedy Ralph Meeker Robert Ryan Trini Lopez Telly Savalas Donald Sutherland Clint Walker and Robert Webber Set in 1944 during World War II the film follows the titular penal military unit of twelve convicts as they are trained as commandos by the Allies for a suicide mission ahead of the Normandy landings The Dirty DozenTheatrical release poster by Frank McCarthyDirected byRobert AldrichScreenplay byNunnally Johnson Lukas HellerBased onThe Dirty Dozen1965 novelby E M NathansonProduced byKenneth HymanStarringLee Marvin Ernest Borgnine Charles Bronson Jim Brown John Cassavetes Richard Jaeckel George Kennedy Trini Lopez Ralph Meeker Robert Ryan Telly Savalas Clint Walker Robert WebberCinematographyEdward ScaifeEdited byMichael LucianoMusic byFrank De VolProductioncompanyKenneth Hyman ProductionDistributed byMetro Goldwyn MayerRelease dateJune 15 1967 1967 06 15 Running time150 minutesCountriesUnited StatesUnited KingdomLanguagesEnglish German FrenchBudget 5 4 million 1 Box office 45 3 million 2 The Dirty Dozen was filmed in England at MGM British Studios and released by MGM The screenplay is based on the 1965 bestseller of the same name by E M Nathanson which itself was inspired by a real life WWII unit of behind the lines demolition specialists from the 101st Airborne Division named the Filthy Thirteen Another possible inspiration was the public offer to President Franklin D Roosevelt by 44 prisoners serving life sentences at the Oklahoma State Penitentiary to serve in the Pacific War on suicide missions against the Japanese 3 The film was a box office success and won the Academy Award for Best Sound Editing at the 40th Academy Awards in 1968 In 2001 the American Film Institute placed it at number 65 on their 100 Years 100 Thrills list The film spawned a few television film sequels in the 1980s The Dirty Dozen Next Mission in 1985 The Dirty Dozen The Deadly Mission in 1987 and The Dirty Dozen The Fatal Mission in 1988 A remake was announced in 2019 by Warner Bros Contents 1 Plot 2 Cast 3 Production 3 1 Writing 3 2 Casting 3 3 Filming 4 Historical authenticity 5 Release 5 1 Theatrical 6 Reception 6 1 Box office 6 2 Critical response 6 3 Accolades 6 4 Year end lists 7 Other media 7 1 Parody unofficial sequels and remake 7 2 Comic books 7 3 Sequels 7 4 Toys 7 5 In popular culture 7 6 Remake 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksPlot editIn March 1944 OSS officer Major John Reisman is ordered by the commander of ADSEC in Britain Major General Sam Worden to undertake Project Amnesty a top secret mission to train some of the U S Army s worst convicts into highly skilled commandos to eliminate Wehrmacht officers at a chateau near Rennes disrupting the German chain of command in northern France ahead of D Day If any of the convicts survive they will be pardoned Reisman meets the twelve convicts at a military prison operated by the Military Police Corps Five are condemned to death while the others face lengthy sentences including hard labor Reisman quickly establishes his authority Overseen by MPs led by Sergeant Bowren the convicts gradually learn to operate together when they are forced to build their own training camp However when an act of insubordination is instigated by convict Franko all shaving and wash kits are withheld as punishment which leads to their nickname the Dirty Dozen During their training the convicts are psychoanalyzed by Captain Kinder who warns Reisman that they would all likely kill him if given the chance and that Maggott a psychopathic rapist and murderer is by far the most dangerous With their commando training almost complete the Dirty Dozen are sent for parachute training at a facility commanded by Reisman s nemesis Colonel Everett Dasher Breed of the 101st Airborne Division However Breed is not briefed about Project Amnesty When Breed makes several attempts to discover Reisman s mission including infiltration of the Dirty Dozen s camp Reisman kicks Breed and his men out of the camp Later Breed s testimony combined with Reisman rewarding the Dirty Dozen with prostitutes at the end of their training prompts the ADSEC staff to consider terminating the project and sending the men back for execution of sentence Reisman defends the convicts training and agrees to have them compete against Breed s men in war games to test their mettle To the surprise of Colonel Breed the Dirty Dozen successfully capture his headquarters and Major General Worden allows Reisman to resume his mission Upon parachuting into northern France one of the prisoners Jiminez breaks his neck during the jump With a man down the mission proceeds with German speaking convict Wladislaw and Reisman infiltrating the chateau disguised as German officers However all surprise is lost when Maggott breaks cover before he is killed The sound of gunfire makes the Wehrmacht officers and their companions retreat to a locked underground bomb shelter but the unit pours gasoline and throws grenades into the shelter through ventilation shafts killing the officers and their civilian guests After a firefight only Reisman Bowren and Wladislaw escape alive Back in the United Kingdom a voiceover from Armbruster confirms that Major General Worden exonerated the sole surviving member of the Dirty Dozen and communicated to the next of kin of the rest that they lost their lives in the line of duty Cast editLee Marvin as Major John Reisman Ernest Borgnine as Major General Sam Worden Charles Bronson as Joseph Wladislaw prisoner 9 Jim Brown as Robert T Jefferson 3 John Cassavetes as Victor R Franko 11 Richard Jaeckel as Sergeant Clyde Bowren George Kennedy as Major Max Armbruster Trini Lopez as Pedro Jiminez 10 Ralph Meeker as Captain Stuart Kinder Robert Ryan as Colonel Everett Dasher Breed Telly Savalas as Archer J Maggot 8 Donald Sutherland as Vernon L Pinkley 2 Clint Walker as Samson Posey 1 Robert Webber as Brigadier General Denton Tom Busby as Milo Vladek 6 Ben Carruthers as Glenn Gilpin 4 Stuart Cooper as Roscoe Lever 5 Colin Maitland as Seth K Sawyer 7 Al Mancini as Tassos R Bravos 12 Robert Phillips as Corporal Carl Morgan Dora Reisser as German officer s girl George Roubicek as Private Arthur James Gardner Thick Wilson as Major General Worden s aide Gerry Crampton Stunt Coordinator uncredited Ray Austin as Stunt Coordinator uncredited Hildegard Knef as undetermined uncredited Richard Marner as a German sentry uncredited John Hollis as German porter at chateau uncredited Ann Lancaster as a prostitute uncredited Production editWriting edit Although Robert Aldrich had failed to buy the rights to E M Nathanson s novel The Dirty Dozen while it was just an outline Metro Goldwyn Mayer succeeded in May 1963 On publication the novel became a best seller in 1965 It was adapted to the screen by veteran scriptwriter and producer Nunnally Johnson and Lukas Heller A repeated rhyme was written into the script where the twelve actors verbally recite the details of the attack in a rhyming chant to help them remember their roles while approaching the mission target Down to the road block we ve just begun The guards are through The Major s men are on a spree Major and Wladislaw go through the door Pinkley stays out in the drive The Major gives the rope a fix Wladislaw throws the hook to heaven Jiminez has got a date The other guys go up the line Sawyer and Gilpin are in the pen Posey guards Points Five and Seven Wladislaw and the Major go down to delve Franko goes up without being seen Zero Hour Jiminez cuts the cable Franko cuts the phone Franko goes in where the others have been We all come out like it s Halloween Casting edit The cast included many American World War II veterans including Lee Marvin Robert Webber and Robert Ryan U S Marine Corps Telly Savalas and George Kennedy U S Army Charles Bronson U S Army Air Forces Ernest Borgnine U S Navy and Robert Jaeckl and Clint Walker U S Merchant Marine John Wayne was the original choice for Reisman but he turned down the role because he objected to the adultery present in the original script which featured the character having a relationship with an Englishwoman whose husband was fighting on the Continent 4 Jack Palance refused the Archer Maggot role when they would not rewrite the script to make his character lose his racism Telly Savalas took the role instead 5 Six of the dozen were experienced American stars while the Back Six were actors resident in the UK Englishman Colin Maitland Canadians Donald Sutherland and Tom Busby and Americans Stuart Cooper Al Mancini and Ben Carruthers According to commentary on The Dirty Dozen 2 Disc Special Edition when Trini Lopez left the film early the death scene of Lopez s character where he blew himself up with the radio tower was given to Busby 6 in the film Ben Carruthers character Glenn Gilpin is given the task of blowing up the radio tower while Busby s character Milo Vladek is shot in front of the chateau Lopez s character dies off camera during the parachute drop that begins the mission 7 The impersonation of the general scene was to have been done by Clint Walker but when he thought the scene was demeaning to his character who was a Native American Aldrich picked out Sutherland for the bit 8 9 Jim Brown the Cleveland Browns running back announced his retirement from American football at age thirty during the making of the film 10 11 12 The owner of the Browns Art Modell demanded Brown choose between football and acting With Brown s considerable accomplishments in the sport he was already the NFL s all time leading rusher was well ahead statistically of the second leading rusher and his team had won the 1964 NFL Championship he chose acting In Spike Lee s 2002 documentary Jim Brown All American Modell admitted he made a huge mistake in forcing Jim Brown to choose between football and Hollywood He said that if he had it to do over again he would never have made such a demand Modell fined Jim Brown the equivalent of over 100 per day a fine which Brown said that today wouldn t even buy the doughnuts for a team 13 Filming edit nbsp Aldbury scene of the wargame nbsp Bradenham Manor Wargames HQ The production was filmed in the United Kingdom during the summer of 1966 14 Interiors and set pieces took place at MGM British Studios Borehamwood where the chateau set was built under the direction of art director William Hutchinson It was 720 yards 660 m wide and 50 feet 15 m high surrounded with 5 400 square yards 4 500 m2 of heather 400 ferns 450 shrubs 30 spruce trees and six weeping willows Construction of the faux chateau proved problematic The script required its explosion but it was so solid that 70 tons of explosives would have been required for the effect Instead a cork and plastic section was destroyed citation needed Exteriors were shot throughout southeast England The credit scenes at the American military prison alluded in the movie to be Shepton Mallett were shot in a courtyard at Ashridge House in Hertfordshire Co star Richard Jaeckel recalled that when the introductory lineup scene was first shot Aldrich who liked to play pranks on his actors initially placed 5 ft 8 in 1 73 m Charles Bronson between 6 ft 6 in 1 98 m Clint Walker and 6 ft 4 in 1 93 m Donald Sutherland which provoked an angry response from Bronson making Aldrich laugh 15 The jump school scene was shot at the former entrance to RAF Hendon in London The wargame was filmed in and around the village of Aldbury Bradenham Manor was the Wargames Headquarters Beechwood Park School in Markyate was also used as a location during the school s summer term where the training camp and tower were built and shot in the grounds and the village itself as parts of Devonshire The main house was also used appearing in the film as a military hospital 16 After filming finished the training camp huts were relocated and used as sports equipment storage for the school s playing fields Residents of Chenies Buckinghamshire complained to MGM when filming caused damage around their village 14 While making the film some of the cast members gave an interview to ABC Film review in which they contrasted their own real wartime ranks to their officer roles in the film George Kennedy Took me two years to make Private First Class Lee Marvin I didn t even make that in the Marines Ernest Borgnine I was beneath notice in the NavyFor punks we re doing all right said Marvin I wonder how the generals are doing 17 Heavy rains throughout the summer caused filming delays of several months leading to 1 million in overruns and bringing the final cost to 5 million 14 In the early hours of 21 September 1966 part of the Chateau set burned down prematurely Night time film had been stopped at 03 30 due to fog and the set which was due to be destroyed during filming caught fire at 06 29 18 Principal photography wrapped at MGM British Studios in September 1966 with post production to be completed at MGM studios in Culver City California 14 Historical authenticity editNathanson states in the prologue to his novel The Dirty Dozen that while he heard a legend that such a unit may have existed he incorrectly heard that they were convicts He was unable to find any corroboration in the archives of the US Army in Europe He instead turned his research of convicted felons into the subsequent novel He does not state where he acquired the name but Arch Whitehouse coined the name Dirty Dozen as the 12 enlisted men of the airborne section that became the Filthy Thirteen after the lieutenant joined their ranks In Arch Whitehouse s article in True Magazine he claimed that all the enlisted men were full blood Indians but in reality only their leader Jake McNeice was one quarter Choctaw The parts of the Filthy Thirteen story that carried over into Nathanson s book were not bathing until the jump into Normandy their disrespect for military authority and the pre invasion party The Filthy Thirteen was actually a demolitions section with a mission to secure bridges over the Douve on D Day 19 20 A unit called the Filthy Thirteen was an airborne demolition unit documented in the eponymous book 21 and this unit s exploits inspired the fictional account Barbara Maloney the daughter of John Agnew a private in the Filthy Thirteen told the American Valor Quarterly that her father felt that 30 percent of the film s content was historically correct including a scene where officers are captured Unlike the Dirty Dozen the Filthy Thirteen were not convicts however they were men prone to drinking and fighting and often spent time in the stockade 22 23 Release editTheatrical edit The Dirty Dozen premiered at the Capitol Theatre in New York City on June 15 1967 14 and opened at the 34th Street East theatre the following day 24 25 Despite being shot in an aspect ratio of 1 85 1 the film was initially shown in 70 mm which cut off 15 of the film and resulted in a grainy look 26 Reception editBox office edit The Dirty Dozen was a massive commercial success In its first five days in New York the film grossed 103 849 from 2 theatres 25 Produced on a budget of 5 4 million it earned theatrical rentals of 7 5 million in its first five weeks from 1 152 bookings and 625 prints one of the fastest grossing films at the time 27 however on Variety s weekly box office survey based on a sample of key city theatres it only reached number two at the U S box office behind You Only Live Twice until it finally reached number one in its sixth week 28 It eventually earned rentals of 24 2 million in the United States and Canada from a gross of 45 3 million 29 It was the fourth highest grossing film of 1967 and MGM s highest grossing film of the year It was also a hit in France with admissions of 4 672 628 30 Critical response edit Upon release the film has granted positive reviews from critics It holds an 81 rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on 52 reviews with an average rating of 8 00 10 The critical consensus reads Amoral on the surface and exuding testosterone The Dirty Dozen utilizes combat and its staggering cast of likable scoundrels to deliver raucous entertainment 31 On release the film was criticized for its level of violence Roger Ebert who was in his first year as a film reviewer for the Chicago Sun Times wrote sarcastically I m glad the Chicago Police Censor Board forgot about that part of the local censorship law where it says films shall not depict the burning of the human body If you have to censor stick to censoring sex I say but leave in the mutilation leave in the sadism and by all means leave in the human beings burning to death It s not obscene as long as they burn to death with their clothes on 32 In another contemporaneous review Bosley Crowther called it an astonishingly wanton war film and a studied indulgence of sadism that is morbid and disgusting beyond words he also noted It is not simply that this violent picture of an American military venture is based on a fictional supposition that is silly and irresponsible But to have this bunch of felons a totally incorrigible lot some of them psychopathic and to try to make us believe that they would be committed by any American general to carry out an exceedingly important raid that a regular commando group could do with equal efficiency and certainly with greater dependability is downright preposterous 24 Crowther called some of the portrayals bizarre and bold Marvin s taut pugnacious playing of the major is tough and terrifying John Cassavetes is wormy and noxious as a psychopath condemned to death and Telly Savalas is swinish and maniacal as a religious fanatic and sex degenerate Charles Bronson as an alienated murderer Richard Jaeckel as a hard boiled military policeman and Jim Brown as a white hating Negro stand out in the animalistic group 24 Art Murphy of Variety was more positive calling it an exciting World War II pre D Day drama with an excellent cast and a very good screenplay with a ring of authenticity to it 26 The Time Out Film Guide notes that over the years The Dirty Dozen has taken its place alongside that other commercial classic The Magnificent Seven The review then states The violence which liberal critics found so offensive has survived intact Aldrich sets up dispensable characters with no past and no future as Marvin reprieves a bunch of death row prisoners forges them into a tough fighting unit and leads them on a suicide mission into Nazi France Apart from the values of team spirit cudgeled by Marvin into his dropout group Aldrich appears to be against everything anti military anti Establishment anti women anti religion anti culture anti life Overriding such nihilism is the super crudity of Aldrich s energy and his humour sufficiently cynical to suggest that the whole thing is a game anyway a spectacle that demands an audience 33 Accolades edit Award Category Nominee s Result Academy Awards 34 Best Supporting Actor John Cassavetes Nominated Best Film Editing Michael Luciano Nominated Best Sound Metro Goldwyn Mayer Studio Sound Department Nominated Best Sound Effects John Poyner Won American Cinema Editors Awards Best Edited Feature Film Michael Luciano Won Directors Guild of America Awards Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Motion Pictures Robert Aldrich Nominated Golden Globe Awards Best Supporting Actor Motion Picture John Cassavetes Nominated Laurel Awards Top Action Drama Nominated Top Action Performance Lee Marvin Won Top Male Supporting Performance Jim Brown Nominated John Cassavetes Nominated Photoplay Awards Gold Medal Won Year end lists edit Also the film is recognized by American Film Institute in these lists 2001 AFI s 100 Years 100 Thrills No 65 35 Other media editParody unofficial sequels and remake edit In 1967 the same year that The Dirty Dozen was released a parody film titled The Pogi Dozen lit The Handsome Dozen was released in the Philippines starring the comedian Chiquito Three years after The Dirty Dozen was released Too Late the Hero a film also directed by Aldrich was described as a kind of sequel to The Dirty Dozen 36 The 1969 Michael Caine film Play Dirty follows a similar theme of convicts recruited as soldiers The 1977 Italian war film directed by Enzo G Castellari The Inglorious Bastards is a loose remake of The Dirty Dozen 37 Quentin Tarantino s 2009 Inglourious Basterds was derived from the English language title of the Castellari film 38 39 Comic books edit Dell Comics published a comic The Dirty Dozen in October 1967 40 41 In 1972 Marvel Comics launched Combat Kelly and the Deadly Dozen inspired by the movie While the series began as a spinoff from Marvel s more popular Sgt Fury and his Howling Commandos and several characters from that series crossed over Combat Kelly as it was known in the indicia only lasted nine issues DC Comics in the 1980s revived their Silver Age comic team known as the Suicide Squad with a similar premise only using supervillains instead of military convicts The success of this incarnation over the following years saw incarnations of the team appear in various media including television and movies both live action and animation as well as video games Sequels edit Main articles The Dirty Dozen Next Mission The Dirty Dozen The Deadly Mission and The Dirty Dozen The Fatal Mission A few TV films were produced in the mid to late 1980s which capitalized on the popularity of the first film Lee Marvin Richard Jaeckel and Ernest Borgnine reprised their roles for The Dirty Dozen Next Mission in 1985 leading a group of military convicts in a mission to kill a German general who was plotting to assassinate Adolf Hitler 42 unreliable source In The Dirty Dozen The Deadly Mission 1987 Telly Savalas who had played the role of the psychotic Maggot in the original film assumed the different role of Major Wright an officer who leads a group of military convicts to extract a group of German scientists who are being forced to make a deadly nerve gas 43 Ernest Borgnine again reprised his role of General Worden The Dirty Dozen The Fatal Mission 1988 depicts Savalas s Wright character and a group of renegade soldiers attempting to prevent a group of extreme German generals from starting a Fourth Reich with Erik Estrada co starring and Ernest Borgnine again playing the role of General Worden 44 In 1988 Fox aired a short lived television series starring Ben Murphy Among the cast was John Slattery who played Private Leeds in eight of the show s 11 episodes 45 unreliable source Toys edit Some of the surviving cast members of the original film provided the voices of the toy soldiers in Joe Dante s Small Soldiers citation needed In popular culture edit In 2014 Warner Bros announced that director David Ayer would be the director of a live action adaptation of the DC Comics property Suicide Squad and Ayer has gone on to say that the film is the Dirty Dozen with super villains citing the original film as inspiration Remake edit In December 2019 Warner Bros announced it was developing a remake with David Ayer set to direct 46 See also editList of American films of 1967 Silmido a 2003 Korean film about the true story to train convicts as black ops assassins in order to kill North Korean leader Kim Il SungReferences edit Silver Alain Ursini James 1995 Whatever Happened to Robert Aldrich Hal Leonard p 269 ISBN 978 0879101855 Archived from the original on 20 April 2021 Retrieved 6 February 2020 The Dirty Dozen Box Office Information The Numbers Archived from the original on 3 December 2013 Retrieved 8 March 2012 44 Life Termers Ask to Fight Japs as Suicide Squad PDF PM May 3 1942 Roberts Randy Olsen James Stuart 1997 John Wayne American Omaha University of Nebraska Press p 537 Actor Jack Palance Won t Play Racist for 141 000 Jet XXIX 22 59 10 March 1966 Archived from the original on 15 March 2020 Retrieved 6 February 2020 Commentary The Dirty Dozen 2 Disc Special Edition Film The Dirty Dozen 2 Disc Special Edition Patterson John 3 September 2005 Total recall The Guardian London Archived from the original on 29 August 2013 Retrieved 25 May 2010 These World War II Heroes Were Dirtier by the Dozen LA Times 19 May 2000 Archived from the original on 3 June 2021 Retrieved 16 May 2020 Jim Brown announces retirement Collier plans to readjust offense Youngstown Vindicator Ohio Associated Press 14 July 1966 p 31 Jim Brown retires from pro football Free Lance Star Fredericksburg Virginia Associated Press 14 July 1966 p 16 Jim Brown gives up football Pittsburgh Press UPI 14 July 1966 p 34 Cortes Ryan 13 July 2016 Jim Brown retires while on the set of The Dirty Dozen Andscape Archived from the original on 26 December 2019 Retrieved 15 March 2020 a b c d e The Dirty Dozen 1967 www catalog afi com Archived from the original on 29 October 2019 Retrieved 16 May 2020 Freese Gene 2016 Richard Jaeckel Hollywood s Man of Character McFarland p 88 ISBN 978 14 76662 10 7 The Dirty Dozen 1967 Filming Locations www themoviedistrict com Archived from the original on 10 July 2020 Retrieved 15 May 2020 WHAT LEE MARVIN REALLY THOUGHT OF THE DIRTY DOZEN www pointblankbook com 16 June 2017 Archived from the original on 26 September 2020 Retrieved 16 May 2020 Hull Daily Mail 21 September 1966 page 1 Yardley William 13 February 2013 Jake McNiece Who Led Incorrigible D Day Unit Is Dead at 93 The New York Times Archived from the original on 12 March 2016 Retrieved 8 April 2016 World War II soldier John Jack Agnew whose unit inspired Dirty Dozen dies at 88 New York Daily News Associated Press 12 April 2010 Archived from the original on 5 April 2016 Retrieved 8 April 2016 Killblane Richard McNiece Jake 19 May 2003 The Filthy Thirteen From the Dustbowl to Hitler s Eagle s Nest The True Story of the 101st Airborne s Most Legendary Squad of Combat Paratroopers Casemate ISBN 978 1935149811 Archived from the original on 20 April 2021 Retrieved 6 February 2020 Associated Press April 11 2010 Archived from the original on 18 April 2010 Retrieved 15 January 2017 The Filthy Thirteen The U S Army s Real Dirty Dozen American Valor Quarterly Winter 2008 09 Retrieved April 10 2010 Archived April 7 2010 at the Wayback Machine a b c Crowther Bosley 16 June 1967 The Dirty Dozen 1967 The New York Times Archived from the original on 3 June 2021 Retrieved 29 March 2010 a b Heat of Night Scores With Crix Quick B O Pace Variety 9 August 1967 p 3 a b Murphy A D 21 June 1967 Film Reviews The Dirty Dozen Variety p 6 Archived from the original on 5 February 2013 Retrieved 29 March 2010 Dirty Dozen Nabs 7 5 Mil In 5 Wks Variety 9 August 1967 p 3 National Boxoffice Survey Variety 9 August 1967 p 4 Big Rental Films of 1967 Variety 3 January 1968 p 25 Soyer Renaud July 14 2013 Robert Aldrich Box Office Archived May 11 2020 at the Wayback Machine Box Office Story in French The Dirty Dozen Rotten Tomatoes Archived from the original on 27 April 2011 Retrieved 8 June 2022 Ebert Roger 26 July 1967 The Dirty Dozen Chicago Sun Times Archived from the original on 23 September 2012 Retrieved 29 March 2010 The Dirty Dozen Time Out Archived from the original on 7 June 2017 Retrieved 13 June 2017 The 40th Academy Awards 1968 Nominees and Winners oscars org Archived from the original on 2 April 2015 Retrieved 25 August 2011 AFI s 100 Years 100 Thrills PDF American Film Institute 2002 Archived PDF from the original on 6 February 2020 Retrieved 20 August 2016 Cinema Jungle Rot Time 8 June 1970 Archived from the original on 4 February 2013 Retrieved 29 March 2010 War may be getting a bad name but it still pays at the box office Ask Director Robert Aldrich His 1967 film The Dirty Dozen made millions by drafting a gang of incorrigible convicts into a mission behind enemy lines Too Late the Hero is a kind of sequel to The Dirty Dozen based once again on a World War II suicide mission Inglourious Basterds Has Inglorious Beginnings FlickDirect 13 August 209 Archived from the original on 8 December 2015 Retrieved 1 December 2015 Inglourious Basterds Review CBC News 21 August 2009 Archived from the original on 26 August 2009 Retrieved 18 January 2010 Wise Damon 15 August 2009 Inglourious Basterds Guide The Guardian London Archived from the original on 17 August 2009 Retrieved 19 January 2010 Dell Movie Classic The Dirty Dozen at the Grand Comics Database Dell Movie Classic The Dirty Dozen at the Comic Book DB archived from the original The Dirty Dozen Next Mission at IMDb nbsp The Dirty Dozen The Deadly Mission at the TCM Movie Database The Dirty Dozen The Fatal Mission at the TCM Movie Database Dirty Dozen The Series at IMDb nbsp Dirty Dozen Movie Remake Recruits Suicide Squad Director David Ayer ScreenRant Archived from the original on 17 December 2019 Retrieved 17 December 2019 External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to The Dirty Dozen The Dirty Dozen at the AFI Catalog of Feature Films The Dirty Dozen at IMDb nbsp The Dirty Dozen at AllMovie The Dirty Dozen at the TCM Movie Database The Dirty Dozen Behind the Scenes following Lee Marvin and the film s cast during their time in England Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The Dirty Dozen amp oldid 1224528975, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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