 
  Popularity: 2 (history)
| Director: | John Guillermin | 
|---|---|
| Writer: | Roger O. Hirson, William Roberts, Richard Yates | 
| Staring: | 
| In March of 1945, as the War in Europe is coming to a close, fighting erupts between German and American troops at the last remaining bridgehead across the Rhine. | |
| Release Date: | Jun 25, 1969 | 
|---|---|
| Director: | John Guillermin | 
| Writer: | Roger O. Hirson, William Roberts, Richard Yates | 
| Genres: | Action, War | 
| Keywords | world war ii, bridge, soldier, explosion | 
| Production Companies | Wolper Pictures | 
| Box Office | Revenue: $0 Budget: $0 | 
| Updates | Updated: Feb 01, 2025 Entered: Apr 13, 2024 | 
| Name | Character | 
|---|---|
| George Segal | Lt. Phil Hartman | 
| Robert Vaughn | Maj. Paul Krueger | 
| Ben Gazzara | Sgt. Angelo | 
| Bradford Dillman | Maj. Barnes | 
| E.G. Marshall | Brig. Gen. Shinner | 
| Peter van Eyck | Gen. Von Brock | 
| Hans Christian Blech | Capt. Carl Schmidt | 
| Heinz Reincke | Holzgang | 
| Joachim Hansen | Capt. Otto Baumann | 
| Sonja Ziemann | Greta Holzgang | 
| Anna Gaël | French Girl | 
| Vít Olmer | Lt. Zimring | 
| Bo Hopkins | Cpl. Grebs | 
| Robert Logan | Pvt. Bissell | 
| Matt Clark | Cpl. Jellicoe | 
| Steve Sandor | Pvt. Slavek | 
| Frank Webb | Pvt. Glover | 
| Tom Heaton | Lt. Pattison | 
| Paul Prokop | Capt. John Colt | 
| Richard Münch | General von Stürmer | 
| Günter Meisner | SS Officer | 
| Fritz Ford | Col. Dent | 
| Rudolf Kalina | SS Corporal | 
| Rudolf Jelínek | Pvt. Manfred | 
| Rolf Jahncke | Krueger's Driver | 
| Zdeněk Braunschläger | German Lieutenant | 
| Jan Schánilec | Lt. Eckert | 
| Václav Neužil st. | Sgt. Becker | 
| Name | Job | 
|---|---|
| Harry V. Knapp | Editor | 
| Roger O. Hirson | Story | 
| Marshall Neilan Jr. | Editor | 
| Sam Freed Jr. | Musician | 
| Fritz Ford | Stunts | 
| William Roberts | Screenplay | 
| Alfred Sweeney | Production Design | 
| Richard Yates | Screenplay | 
| William T. Cartwright | Editor | 
| John Guillermin | Director | 
| Elmer Bernstein | Music | 
| Stanley Cortez | Director of Photography | 
| Lynn Stalmaster | Casting | 
| Hal Needham | Stunt Coordinator | 
| Gary McLarty | Stunts | 
| Name | Title | 
|---|---|
| David L. Wolper | Producer | 
| Organization | Category | Person | 
|---|
Popularity History
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The Amazing Story of March 7, 1945. The Bridge at Remagen is directed by John Guillermin and collectively adapted to screenplay by William Roberts, Richard Yates and Roger O. Hirson from the book The Bridge at Remagen: The Amazing Story of March 7, 1945. It stars George Segal, Robert Vaughn, Ben ... Gazzara, Bradford Dillman and E.G. Marshall. A Panavision/ De Luxe Color production, music is by Elmer Bernstein and cinematography by Stanley Cortez. Film is a fictionalised account of the battle for control of The Ludendorff Bridge over the Rhine during the tail end of World War II. A war film that’s rich with action and no little intelligence as it views the battle equally from both sides of the warring factions. The bridge is crucial to the war effort to both sides, but for different reasons, here the narrative is a little complex so total investment in the dialogue is strongly recommended. The characterisations are high quality, even if the war is hell weariness of the American soldiers had been done many times before in other notable war movies. Guillermin thrusts the psychologically hurt soldiers into desperate combat situations, from which we the viewers indulge in seeing the survival of the fittest. A sweeping score from Bernstein, gritty looking photography by Cortez, and a cast giving good turns, rounds this out as a thoroughly enjoyable World War II picture. 7/10
_**Sorta obscure WW2 flick from the late 60s with George Segal and Robert Vaughn**_ As the Allies are about to invade Germany in March, 1945, the Germans decide to blow up the last bridge on the Rhine in the area of Oberkassel, but a dissenting general (Peter van Eyck) convinces a major (Robert V ... aughn) to keep it up as long as possible so troops can escape Germany. On the American side George Segal plays a lieutenant, Ben Gazzara a sergeant and Bradford Dillman their commander. "The Bridge at Remagen" (1969) is a WW2 film loosely based on real-life events similar to the later “A Bridge Too Far” (1977), but with a lesser cast, albeit more streamlined and colorful, like the contemporaneous “Castle Keep,” but less artsy and more straightforward. It may not be great like “Where Eagles Dare” (1968) or near-great like “Kelly’s Heroes” (1970), but it’s solid and fills the bill if you’re in the mood for WW2 movie from the European theater. The film runs 1 hour, 55 minutes, and was shot in Davle & Most, Czech Republic (the river is the Vltava). Filming was interrupted by the Soviet invasion of August, 1968, wherein Cast & crew were taken to safety via a convoy of 28 taxis. The film was completed in Hamburg, Germany, and various Italian locations. The film unit was amusingly accused by the Soviets & East German press of smuggling weapons into the country, supposedly being a cover-up for the CIA. GRADE: B