KELLY'S HEROES / WHERE EAGLES DARE ACTION DOUBLE FEATURE [BLU-RAY]
Kelly's Heroes / Where Eagles Dare Action Double Feature [Blu-ray]
Retail Price:$19.98 Lowest Total Price:$16.97 You Save:$3.01 (15%) Merchant: Amazon More Details Below
Sales Rank: 5,232
Actors: Clint Eastwood, Telly Savalas, Don Rickles, Carroll O'Connor, Donald Sutherland Director: Brian G. Hutton Rating: Features: Widescreen Running Time: 158 minutes Aspect Ratio: 1.77:1 Release Date: June 1, 2010 Studio: Warner Home Video
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KELLY'S HEROES/WHERE EAGLES DARE - Blu-Ray Movie
Kelly's Heroes, a tongue-in-cheek 1970 variation on The Dirty Dozen looks less fresh than it did in the year of its release, but it still has some enjoyable moments. Clint Eastwood stars along with Donald Sutherland, Harry Dean Stanton, Telly Savalas, Don Rickles, Carroll O'Connor, and Gavin MacLeod in the story of American soldiers who try to steal gold behind enemy lines in World War II. Sutherland's hippie G.I. doesn't have the sardonic and timely appeal he did during the Vietnam War, but the film's irreverence and several of the performances are worth a visit. --Tom Keogh
Scorned by reviewers when it came out, Where Eagles Dare is a concentrated dose of commando death-dealing to legions of Nazi machine-gun fodder that has acquired a cult over the years. In 1968 Clint Eastwood was just getting used to the notion that he might be a world-class movie star; Richard Burton, whose image had been shaped equally by classical theater training and his headline-making romance with Elizabeth Taylor, was eager to try on the action ethos Eastwood was already nudging toward caricature. Alistair MacLean's novel The Guns of Navarone had inspired the film that started the '60s vogue for World War II military capers, so he was prevailed on to write the screenplay his first. The central location, an impregnable Alpine stronghold locked in ice and snow, is surpassing cool, but the plot and action are ultra-mechanical, and the switcheroo gamesmanship of just who is the undercover double triple? agent on the mission becomes aggressively silly. --Richard T. Jameson