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The Long Days Dying

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Director
  
Music director
  
Duration
  

Language
  
English

7.2/10
IMDb

Genre
  
Drama, War

Producer
  
Country
  
United Kingdom

The Long Days Dying movie poster

Release date
  
28 May 1968 (1968-05-28)

Based on
  
Novel by Alan White

Writer
  
Alan White (novel), Charles Wood (screenplay)

Cast
  
(John), (Cliff), (Tom Cooper), (Helmut)

Similar movies
  
Related Peter Collinson movies

The long day s dying


The Long Day's Dying is a 1968 British Techniscope war film directed by Peter Collinson and starring David Hemmings. It was listed to compete at the 1968 Cannes Film Festival, but the festival was cancelled due to the events of May 1968 in France.

Contents

The Long Day's Dying wwwgstaticcomtvthumbmovieposters74741p74741

Plot

The Long Day's Dying FreeCoversnet The Long Days Dying 1968 R0 CUSTOM

Three British paratroopers are cut off from their unit and are lost behind enemy lines. Sheltering in a deserted farmhouse, they are awaiting the return of their Sergeant who has ventured out in an attempt to locate their unit. The three soldiers are Tom, a world-weary cynical veteran, John, a middle-class educated thinker who despises war and Cliff, an eager soldier who loves his work. All three are highly trained professional killers who, regardless of their own personal thoughts, do not hesitate to perform their duties.

The Long Day's Dying Long Days Dying movie posters at movie poster warehouse moviepostercom

Two German soldiers approach the farmhouse and the paratroopers dispatch them both. The second of the enemy attackers is stalked by the paratroopers who virtually toy with their victim before John kills him, finishing the man off up close, although the experience renders him sick. As the three men eat a meal, they are surprised and captured by a third German named Helmut, a paratrooper like themselves. The British soon turn the tables and capture Helmut but the latter, who speaks English, manages to manipulate his captors into keeping him alive. The group leave the house in search of their Sergeant whom they eventually find dead in the woods, his throat cut. The men continue on, trying to find their way back to Allied lines. They come across a farmhouse, where a trio of Germans are sheltering. The paratroopers cautiously approach and shoot them, only to find that the Germans are already dead.

The Long Day's Dying Long Days Dying Publicity still of David Hemmings

After spending the night in the house, the group continues their walk back to the British lines, only to run into a German patrol. In the ensuing battle, all of the Germans are killed but Cliff is fatally wounded. John and Tom reach the frontline, taking their prisoner Helmut with them but nearby British troops mistake them all to be German and open fire, mortally wounding Tom. Both injured themselves, John and Helmut take cover in a muddy ditch. There, John decides to kill Helmut with a small skewer he has always carried with him. Delirious with exhaustion and trauma, John staggers into the open, yelling that he is a pacifist before the British troops open fire again, shooting him dead.

Cast

The Long Day's Dying THE LONG DAYS DYING 1968 David Hemmings Rare TV on DVD

  • David Hemmings as John
  • Tony Beckley as Cliff
  • Tom Bell as Tom Cooper
  • Alan Dobie as Helmut
  • Critical reception

    The Long Day's Dying Stojo The Long Days Dying 1968 DVD

    Renata Adler, reviewing the film's release in The New York Times in 1968, disliked it. "There are some excellent scenes....But the screenplay is unendurable. Smug, dimestore Existential....stale, self-important and tough...No characterization...One for the English antiwar cheapshot satire brigade".

    Mark Connelly wrote (in 2003) of The Long Day's Dying. 'Critics hated the film, finding in it much the same faults as they identified in The Charge of the Light Brigade'. (Charles Wood wrote the screenplay for both films) 'They were confused by the fact that it was an anti-war film that celebrated some of the values of war and army life. Wood was showing, as he did in The Charge, that war has a complex hold over the minds and imaginations of humans. That although it is ultimately an awful, destructive, wasteful process, it has inspired men and motivated them intellectually and emotionally'.

    Production

    According to Michael Deeley, he and Peter Yates worked on the first draft of the script but were denied credit. He claims he gave Collinson the job partly to see if he was up to the task of directing The Italian Job (1969).

    References

    The Long Day's Dying Wikipedia
    The Long Days Dying IMDb The Long Days Dying themoviedb.org


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