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The Great Escape

Put a fence in front of these men... and they'll climb it!
1963 | 173m | English

(271593 votes)

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Popularity: 6 (history)

Details

The Nazis, exasperated at the number of escapes from their prison camps by a relatively small number of Allied prisoners, relocate them to a high-security 'escape-proof' camp to sit out the remainder of the war. Undaunted, the prisoners plan one of the most ambitious escape attempts of World War II. Based on a true story.
Release Date: Jul 03, 1963
Director: John Sturges
Writer: W.R. Burnett, James Clavell, Paul Brickhill
Genres: Adventure, Drama, War
Keywords prison, based on novel or book, optimism, switzerland, baseball, prisoner, shower, world war ii, prisoner of war, claustrophobia, nazi, machinegun, dystopia, attempt to escape, uniform, freedom, epic, based on true story, prison guard, prison escape, tragedy, escape, swastika, barbed wire, solitary confinement, motorcycle, alps mountains, british officer, 1940s, luftwaffe, soldiers
Production Companies United Artists, The Mirisch Company
Box Office Revenue: $11,700,000
Budget: $4,000,000
Updates Updated: Feb 01, 2025 (Update)
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
Trailers and Extras

Full Credits

Name Character
Steve McQueen Hilts 'The Cooler King'
James Garner Hendley 'The Scrounger'
Richard Attenborough Bartlett 'Big X'
James Donald Ramsey 'The SBO'
Charles Bronson Danny 'Tunnel King'
Donald Pleasence Blythe 'The Forger'
James Coburn Sedgwick 'Manufacturer'
Hannes Messemer Von Luger 'The Kommandant'
David McCallum Ashley-Pitt 'Dispersal'
Gordon Jackson MacDonald 'Intelligence'
John Leyton Willie 'Tunnel King'
Angus Lennie Ives 'The Mole'
Nigel Stock Cavendish 'The Surveyor'
Robert Graf Werner 'The Ferret'
Jud Taylor Goff
Hans Reiser Herr Kuhn
Harry Riebauer Stratwitch
William Russell Sorren
Robert Freitag Capt. Posen
Ulrich Beiger Preissen
George Mikell Lt. Dietrich
Lawrence Montaigne Haynes ('Diversions')
Robert Desmond Griffith 'Tailor'
Til Kiwe Frick
Heinz Weiss Kramer
Tom Adams Dai Nimmo ('Diversions')
Karl-Otto Alberty S.S. Officer Steinach
Name Job
W.R. Burnett Screenplay
Elmer Bernstein Original Music Composer
Daniel L. Fapp Director of Photography
John Sturges Director
James Clavell Screenplay
Fernando Carrere Art Direction
Paul Brickhill Novel
Ferris Webster Editor
Bert Henrikson Wardrobe Supervisor
Don Tomlinson Assistant Editor
Loren Janes Stunt Double
Steve McQueen Stunt Driver
Roy Jenson Stunts
Jay Sebring Hair Designer
Kurt Ripberger Set Decoration
John Franco Script Supervisor
Emile LaVigne Makeup Artist
Richard Carruth Music Editor
Jack N. Reddish Assistant Director
Wayne Fury Sound Effects Editor
Allen K. Wood Production Supervisor
Robert E. Relyea Production Office Assistant
Frank Agnone Property Master
A. Paul Pollard Special Effects
Sam Freed Jr. Musician
Name Title
James Clavell Producer
Walter Mirisch Executive Producer
John Sturges Producer
Organization Category Person
BAFTA Awards Best Actor Steve McQueen Nominated
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 37 51 22
2024 5 39 58 25
2024 6 36 56 24
2024 7 40 56 28
2024 8 41 72 27
2024 9 28 34 23
2024 10 35 58 25
2024 11 45 80 28
2024 12 35 54 24
2025 1 30 40 21
2025 2 28 41 7
2025 3 9 34 2
2025 4 7 12 3
2025 5 7 12 5
2025 6 6 9 4
2025 7 5 6 4
2025 8 5 7 4

Trending Position


Year Month High Avg
2025 8 578 838
Year Month High Avg
2025 7 454 713
Year Month High Avg
2025 6 254 660
Year Month High Avg
2025 5 440 676
Year Month High Avg
2025 4 552 791
Year Month High Avg
2025 3 458 798
Year Month High Avg
2025 2 496 655
Year Month High Avg
2025 1 697 883
Year Month High Avg
2024 12 311 752
Year Month High Avg
2024 11 149 604
Year Month High Avg
2024 8 954 954

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Reviews

John Chard
10.0

Not just great, simply magnificent more like! "Wait a minute, you aren't seriously suggesting that if I get thru the wire and case everything out there, and don't get picked up, to turn myself in and get thrown in the cooler for a couple of months so you can get the information you need" Smart ... , witty and directed with adroit hands by John Sturges, The Great Escape is standing the test of time as a joyous multi cast family favourite. Based on the real accounts of allied soldiers escaping en mass from a German POW camp back in 1942, the film is involving from start to finish, due in the main to the wonderful array of characters on show. We follow them from the moment they arrive at the camp right through to the stunning climax, and it is with great joy I say that none of the cast lets the side down, they all do great work for the astute and undervalued Sturges. A number of great set pieces align with Elmer Bernstein's fabulous score to never let the blood settle, and in among the cheeky slices of humour is palpable tension to make this simply one of the best films of its type, in fact one of the best films ever. Sturges and his writers, James Clavell & W.R. Burnett, adapt from the book written by Paul Brickhill, someone who speaks from experience having been one of the prisoners of super POW camp Stalag Luft III, which of course is what The Great Escape is born from. Sturges was fascinated by the story and after trying without fail for over a decade to get it onto the screen, he finally succeeded. The success three years earlier of his star ensemble Western, The Magnificent Seven, enabled Sturges to realise his vision, the result of which is still enthralling new generations with each passing year. The cast is made up of notable thespians and iconic heroes. Steve McQueen (enticing the American audience in one feels), Richard Attenborough, Charles Bronson, James Donald, Donald Pleasance, James Coburn, James Garner, David McCallum, John Leyton and Gordon Jackson. Which of course is a pretty tidy roll call, but the input and impact of Hannes Messemer as the Camp Commandant, Colonel Von Luger should not be understated. His scenes have a real humanistic quality that shows a softer side of Germany to the one ruled by a certain despot (the finale here offering up the counter opposite of the war), the writers smartly, and rightly, not tarring a nation with the same old brush. A wonderful involving movie that puts characteristic heart in bed with the action and suspense laden plot. 10/10

May 16, 2024
GenerationofSwine
10.0

I can't watch this any more. It's a fun movie, one that my dad made me watch as a kid. One that I loved... .... and then Eddie Izzard killed it for me. Now whenever I try to watch it all I do is think about his stand-up bit. I think it was from his "Dressed to Kill," maybe "Circle," but whichever ... it was, that is how you know you're hysterical, when you forever utterly ruin a classic movie because your routine surpasses the film you're making fun of. Anyway, Izzard had a point, so it's fair I can't not think of him whenever I watch it. He turned Steve McQueen's character into a joke and I love him for it. But, if you haven't seen the stand-up, it's a fun movie. It's not as good as Stalag 13, but it's more of an action film and one that, well, Izzard had a point but it's still a fun movie.

Jan 10, 2023
Geronimo1967
8.0

Got to be the definition of an all star (albeit all male) cast in this gripping demonstration of just how inventive and ingenious people can be when incarcerated and facing a bleak (if any) future. Each character in this WWII POW drama brings something different to this ensemble of style and imagina ... tion. Richard Attenborough stars as the proverbial pain in the ass to his Nazi guards having repeatedly escaped before, and he puts together his "X" organisation to work every scheme imaginable to get people out of this supposedly escape proof "Super-Stalag ". Steve McQueen forms an unlikely alliance with Angus "the Mole" Lennie; James "the scrounge" Garner with the expert, tea-drinking, forger Donald Pleasance whose eyesight is failing rapidly; Charles Bronson and James Coburn and a whole raft of seasoned British actors bring this whole enterprise to life in a gritty, sometimes amusing, but ultimately determined way. Hannes Messemer "The Kommandant" also deserves mention as he seems to still cling to some of the basic tenets of human decency as he tries to stop the Gestapo from implementing their more drastic solutions. Elmer Bernstein tops the whole thing off with a cracking score. It is long, certainly, but at least we can be certain we get out at the end...

Jun 01, 2024