Top 5: Best Moments From Tomorrow’s TCM Pick
by John NolteA two-fer today: A Top 5 and a pick for tomorrow when TCM airs “The Guns of Navarone” at 2:15pm PST.
Director J. Lee Thompson’s epic 1961 World War II adventure is my favorite Men on a Mission film. “The Great Escape” might have more star power and “The Dirty Dozen,” The Mighty Lee Marvin and The Mighty Chuck Bronson, but “Navarone’s” complex and realistic look at the emotional toll of war, and more specifically, the killing of another human being, on the noble warrior makes it something much more than a series of suspenseful and exciting set pieces. [some spoilers ahead]
Unfortunately, all of these moments aren’t available on YouTube, but here’s the transcript with necessary context:
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1. Gregory Peck plays Capt. Keith Mallory, the leader of a small team assigned to go behind German lines and destroy two massive gun emplacements that make passage through a channel impossible – a passage that will be necessary if thousands of lives are to be saved. One of the men assigned to Mallory is Colonel Andrea Stavros, a somber Greek played by Anthony Quinn. Mallory and Andreas once fought the Germans together as friends and allies, but now they share an uneasy truce. Mallory finally explains:
About a year ago, I gave a German patrol a safe passage to get some of their wounded to a hospital. I guess I still had some romantic notions about fighting a civilized war. Anyway, they wanted Andrea pretty badly, even back then. As soon as they got behind our lines, they shot their casualties, went over to his house, and blew it up. He was out on a job at the time, but his wife and three children were in the house. They were all killed. I helped him to bury them. And then he turned to me and said that as far as he was concerned, it wasn’t the Germans who were responsible, but me. Me and my stupid Anglo-Saxon decency. Then he told me what he was going to do, and when.
What Andreas is going to do is kill Mallory after the war.
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2. David Niven plays Corporal Miller, an explosives expert and cynical smart ass who lords his cool detachment over the rest. This is his way of pretending to keep his hands clean when all he’s really doing is allowing others to do the dirty work.
When a young woman, a member of the underground assigned to help them, is discovered to be a spy, in this brilliant and revealing piece of dialogue, Miller’s true colors finally show themselves. Here, he speaks to Mallory, still angry that the Captain left behind one of their injured comrades to be captured by the Nazis. Knowing the man would be tortured, Mallory gave him misinformation to throw the Nazis off their trail in order “to get the job done.” Miller refuses to see the big picture and Niven has this character speak with pure indignation while his eyes reveal someone slowly coming to terms with the hard decisions required to fight evil:
Now just a minute! If we’re going to get this job done she has got to be killed! And we all know how keen you are about getting the job done! Now I can’t speak for the others but I’ve never killed a woman, traitor or not, and I’m finicky! So why don’t you do it? Let us off for once! Go on, be a pal, be a father to your men! Climb down off that cross of yours, close your eyes, think of England, and pull the trigger! What do you say, Sir?
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3. The woman spy is shot and then, finally, Mallory turns on Miller:
You think you’ve been getting away with it all this time, standing by. Well, son… your bystanding days are over! You’re in it now, up to your neck! They told me that you’re a genius with explosives. Start proving it! [points pistol at Miller] You got me in the mood to use this thing, and by God, if you don’t think of something, I’ll use it on you! I mean it.
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4. Sometimes direct and simple is the most effective way to express a film’s theme: Burdened with the terrible choices that come with leadership, Peck’s Mallory does that here:
The only way to win a war is to be as nasty as the enemy.
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5. Finally, one of the most important parts of the Men on a Mission genre is the explaining of the stakes to the audience. A young up and coming star named Richard Harris was given that task in a delightfully entertaining first act scene. Harris plays British Australian Squadron Leader Barnsby, who’s just returned from an aerial attack on the German guns that proved futile and cost him eighteen men:
As you can plainly see, it was ruddy awful. But we’d love to go back. Wouldn’t we, boys? [The men cheer] Just as soon as we can! BUT – we’ve got one condition. We want the joker who thought this one up to come with us. And when we get there, we’re gonna shove him out at ten thousand feet – without a parachute.
When asked if he’s sure the guns can’t be taken out by air, Barnsby responds:
First, you’ve got that bloody old fortress on top of that bloody cliff. Then you’ve got the bloody cliff overhang. You can’t even see the bloody cave, let alone the bloody guns. And anyway, we haven’t got a bloody bomb big enough to smash that bloody rock. And that’s the bloody truth, sir.
Harris wrings every bit of juice possible from this small role with a wonderful mix of truculence, loyalty, bravado, honor, and masculine humor. Just a few years later, in Sam Peckinpah’s flawed but fascinating “Major Dundee“ (1965), Harris summons the same and more up against Charlton Heston.
So tomorrow, along with a magnificent war film as relevant today as it was nearly fifty years ago, you have the added pleasure of watching a star being born.







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27 Comments
Fighting evil? That is what the Nazis were doing!
I own this movie and LOVE it….one of the best ever made.
One of my all-time favorite films–it’s an annual view for me. I just watched it again with my son this weekend (on VHS no less–I HAVE to get the DVD). The cast is amazing–every time I watch it, I’m blown away at the depth of character development, the complexity of the issues dealth with, and the richness each actor brings to his role.
You list several of my favorite passages, particularly “…I’m finicky” and “You’re in it now–up to your neck!”, but I also really like the dialogue between the Butcher of Barcelona and Mallory. “I’m tired of fighting–I’ve been fighting Germans since 1937. I do my job, but I decided that I won’t do the other if I can avoid it.” “Who gave you the right to make your own peace? We’re all tired.”
It also comes to me each time I watch it–WHY DOESN’T ANYONE MAKE MOVIES LIKE THIS ANYMORE?
Thanks for the excellent post–this blog has become my new addiction.
John,
You’ve got me today. Where do I begin with the place I have in in my heart and my life for ‘The Guns of Navarone’?
I believe the seeds of my dream of becoming an actor, were planted back in 1961, when as an 8 year old boy, I sat in the darkness of the Coolidge Theatre and watched these magnificent actors in this wonderful adventure up there on the silver screen.
Pure magic.
I remember how my mother gave me the money (I think it was seventy five cents) to see this movie at the matinee showing *every afternoon* during the Christmas school vacation.
Five days straight. Some days with a friend…a few days alone.
Just the best memories.
Also, I wanted to point out another important member of the cast, the great Irene Papas. Such a wonderful actress…so beautiful and so strong. The movie wouldn’t have been the same without her.
I remember, some years ago, I had the joy of bringing my kids to see this movie on the big screen @ the Cinerama Dome in Hollywood. They loved it too. Happy I got to share it with them.
Thanks again John for the recommendation of this classic film.
The Guns of Navarone and The Great Escape…the two best war movies ever made.
JIMMY ARONE writes:
“Also, I wanted to point out another important member of the cast, the great Irene Papas. Such a wonderful actress…so beautiful and so strong. The movie wouldn’t have been the same without her.”
I couldn’t agree more. When she tells the other girl’s story as she understood it, she shows such sympathy, but when the truth is revealed, she doesn’t hesitate.
I love her line, “Mr. Stavro…I like you.” It’s so direct and simple, as is her dedication to the people of Mandrakos. Beautifully done!
Terrific film. It bears mentioning that it was based on a novel of the same title by the magnificent Alistair MacLean. He also wrote such thrilling book-to-movies as Where Eagles Dare, Ice Station Zebra, and Breakheart Pass.
Incidentally, for those who ask why they don’t make movies like this anymore, Quentin Tarantino is soon releasing his homage, Inglourious Basterds (sic and sic), starring none other than Brad Pitt. He mentioned this project to me years ago, which he said was inspired by such movies as The Dirty Dozen and Guns of Navarone. Imagine that — Pulp Fiction meets The Dirty Dozen. Promises to be, er, interesting, if nothing else.
One of my favorite all-time movies. Watched it first as little boy in India. Still catch it every time I get.
Interesting tidbit; David Niven was a reserve officer, recalled to duty in 1940 (?) and who eventually wound up in a little known unit called SOE- Special Operations Executive. He jumped into Normandy in May of 1944 if I recall correctly, to create ‘merry mayhem.’
“Battle of Britain”, “Tora, Tora, Tora”, “The Blue Max”. Never miss.
A great, great war movie. Amazingly, the writer was on the blacklist, but you wouldn’t be able to tell his politics from the script. And the Allistair Maclean novel it’s based on still holds up pretty well too.
A memorable movie to be sure but I always found it a bit overwritten, Peck ponderous, and Niven the weak link. But I recall Quinn’s extravagant groveling in the Nazi office as one of the great scenes in movies.
What on outstanding review. The dissection and explanation are perfect
“I gave a German patrol a safe passage to get some of their wounded to a hospital…. As soon as they got behind our lines, they shot their casualties”
I knew this was an unrealistic movie based on a novel by a stupid and unrealistic alleged writer, but I never before knew how bad it is.
Thank God I’ve never wasted a minute of my life on this crap.
If you haven’t wasted even a minute on it then how do you if it is bad or not?
The book was better, much more time devoted to the night climb up a rain covered cliff face. The officer they had to leave behind broke his legs there in a fall. Some of it may have been over scripted, but “crap”?
compared to what?
Tobruk was good, so was Devil’s Brigade.
My only problem with “Navarone” is the ending. Peck and Niven leave the explosives, hoping the timer connected to the elevator will detonate them before the Germans start firing on our ships.
While Niven was wiring the explosives, why didn’t Peck take three seconds to fires some shots into the gun’s electronic controls, thus easily disabling the guns until they could be blown.
The obvious answer is that there would be no suspense otherwise, which isn’t a very good one. Why not have Peck do that and then double up the suspense by showing the Germans hurrying to manually aim the guns?
Although it has nothing to do with the purpose of this article, I like James Robert Justice’s line describing the crew. “Well, there’s your team; pirates and cut-throats the lot of them.”
Although “COCKLESHELL HEROES had NAVARONE beat by a few years, it’s still the best p;ace to start if you’re going to have a MEN ON A MISSION film festival. A good, obscure film is THE SECRET INVASION. Some Roger Corman cheeze, but a solid actioner. Only two things missing. One good, one bad. The Good – No Ashley Judd. The Bad – No Peter Fonda playing a bad-ass bounty hunter.
Although it’s not been made into a movie, Alistair MacLean’s novel HMS Ulysses is an exception piece of work and you should check it out if you like his other fare. It describes the hardships of the artic Mumansk Run to supply Russia, where the weather was as much of an enemy as the U-boats and bombers. Plenty of human intrigue as well, and a hell of a war story.
Here’s a wiki link with more details: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HMS_Ulysses_(novel)
No 'analyses' pro or con can change the fact that this is one great war movie. For all the reasons expressed in the article. It is a wonderful thing to introduce this and many other fine films about WWll.
We could learn many things apparently not now being taught to this and younger generations.
The Guns of Navarone is an excellent example of what another generation had to go through to secure freedom for us. Our current generation of military deserve the same respect given to our men and women during WWll.
IF our culture cannot learn these lessons in other ways, perhaps movies such as The Guns of Navarone.,The Longest Day. The Great Escape. ( On TV years ago: The Holocaust: starring a very young Meryl Streep among others) This one made a huge impression on my own children during that time, sparking interest and research on their part.
I actually own two copies of this movie. Um, just because. And I've shown the "You're in it now! up to your NECK!" scene to about 40 film classes.
Plus which, I think somebody should've given that speech ("Your by-standing days are over!") to our new Prez.
Oh wait! I think I did! Back in the days of DHP! [breaks arm patting self on back]
Wankette,
That scene makes the movie for me. Not only is it really clever (and I think the point to the movie), but Peck's acting, to me, is one of those few moments where I actually lose the actor into the role and I believe that he's honestly feeling what he's acting.
Can I ask what you're using that scene to teach?
This is a great film.
A great movie, absolutely..and (unfortunately) I'm old enough to have seen in when it first came out in the theaters (and yes, this was before multiplexes – and when theaters had a "Smoking Section" or a "Smoking Loge." Although the scene that still gets to me is when the Stanley Baker character explains why he doesn't want to do it anymore ("Where you have to get close enough to smell a man when you kill him?" – whoa, creepy)
Jackson,
That was a fantastic scene. You could almost experience "the smell" as he tells you.
I really liked Baker in Zulu as well — another one of my favorite war movies.
While we are remembering David Niven, may I recommend his autobiography, The Moon's a Balloon." Niven had a fascinating life. He was a graduate of Sandhurst, if I remember correctly. It's long out of print, but one might find it in a library or a used book store.
So many great scenes in this flick but the one no one has mentioned so far is the scene where the commando team is betrayed and captured by the Germans at the wedding party in the outdoor taverna. You can tell by the expressions on the faces of the locals who are the collaborators, who are the resisters and who are the fence sitters. Awesome bit of film making. I can't go to a Greek restaurant without thinking of that scene and the music in it.
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