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The Longest Day Poster

The Longest Day

1962 | 178m | English

(61690 votes)

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Popularity: 2 (history)

Details

The retelling of June 6, 1944, from the perspectives of the Germans, US, British, Canadians, and the Free French. Marshall Erwin Rommel, touring the defenses being established as part of the Reich's Atlantic Wall, notes to his officers that when the Allied invasion comes they must be stopped on the beach. "For the Allies as well as the Germans, it will be the longest day"
Release Date: Sep 25, 1962
Director: Ken Annakin, Andrew Marton, Bernhard Wicki, Gerd Oswald, Darryl F. Zanuck
Writer: Cornelius Ryan, Romain Gary, Jack Seddon, David Pursall, James Jones
Genres: Action, Drama, War
Keywords steel helmet, resistance, allies, world war ii, normandy, france, based on true story, d-day, historical fiction, soldier
Production Companies 20th Century Fox, Darryl F. Zanuck Productions
Box Office Revenue: $50,100,000
Budget: $10,000,000
Updates Updated: Feb 01, 2025 (Update)
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
Trailers and Extras

Full Credits

Name Character
Henry Fonda Brig. Gen. Theodore Roosevelt Jr.
John Wayne Lt. Col. Benjamin Vandervoort
Robert Mitchum Brig. Gen. Norman Cota
Robert Ryan Brig. Gen. James M. Gavin
Eddie Albert Col. Thompson
Paul Anka U.S. Army Ranger
Arletty Madame Barrault
Jean-Louis Barrault Father Louis Roulland
Richard Beymer Pvt. Dutch Schultz
Hans Christian Blech Maj. Werner Pluskat
Bourvil Mayor of Colleville
Richard Burton Flying Officer David Campbell
Wolfgang Büttner Maj. Gen. Dr. Hans Speidel
Red Buttons Pvt. John Steele
Pauline Carton Maid
Sean Connery Pvt. Flanagan
Ray Danton Capt. Frank
Irina Demick Janine Boitard, a resistance
Fred Dur U.S. Army Ranger Major
Fabian U.S. Army Ranger
Mel Ferrer Maj. Gen. Robert Haines
Steve Forrest Capt. Harding
Gert Fröbe Sgt. Kaffekanne
Leo Genn Brig. Gen. Edwin P. Parker Jr.
John Gregson British Padre
Paul Hartmann Field Marshal Gerd von Rundstedt
Peter Helm Young GI
Werner Hinz Field Marshal Erwin Rommel
Donald Houston RAF Pilot
Jeffrey Hunter Sgt. (later Lt.) John H. Fuller
Karl John Gen. Wolfgang Häger
Curd Jürgens Maj. Gen. Gunther Blumentritt
Alexander Knox Maj. Gen. Walter Bedell Smith
Peter Lawford Lord Lovat
Fernand Ledoux Louis
Christian Marquand Cmdr. Philippe Kieffer - Commando Leader
Dewey Martin Sgt. Wilder
Roddy McDowall Pvt. Morris
Michael Medwin Pvt. Watney
Sal Mineo Pvt. Martini
Kenneth More Capt. Colin Maud
Richard Münch Gen. Erich Marcks
Edmond O'Brien Gen. Raymond D. Barton
Leslie Phillips RAF Officer Mac
Wolfgang Preiss Maj. Gen. Max Pemsel
Ron Randell Joe Williams
Madeleine Renaud Mother Superior
Georges Rivière Sgt. Guy de Montlaur
Norman Rossington Pvt. Clough
Tommy Sands U.S. Army Ranger
George Segal U.S. Army Ranger
Jean Servais RAdm. Janjard
Rod Steiger Destroyer Commander
Richard Todd Maj. John Howard
Tom Tryon Lt. Wilson
Peter van Eyck Lt. Col. Ocker
Robert Wagner U.S. Army Ranger
Richard Wattis British Paratrooper
Stuart Whitman Lt. Sheen
Georges Wilson Alexandre Renaud
Patrick Barr Group Capt. J.N. Stagg (uncredited)
Lyndon Brook Lt. Walsh (uncredited)
John Crawford Col. Caffey (uncredited)
Armin Dahlen Blumentritt's Adjutant (uncredited)
Mark Damon Pvt. Harris (uncredited)
Richard Dawson British Soldier (uncredited)
Eugene Deckers German Soldier (uncredited)
Gil Delamare French Commando (uncredited)
Frank Finlay Pvt. Coke (uncredited)
Harry Fowler British Paratrooper (uncredited)
Bernard Fox Pvt. Hutchinson (uncredited)
Robert Freitag Meyer's Aide (uncredited)
Bernard Fresson French Commando (uncredited)
Lutz Gabor Minor Role (uncredited)
Arnold Gelderman German Guard on Train Track (uncredited)
Harold Goodwin British Soldier (uncredited)
Walter Gotell German Soldier (uncredited)
Henry Grace Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower (uncredited)
Clément Harari Minor Role (uncredited)
Ruth Hausmeister Frau Maria Rommel (uncredited)
Jack Hedley RAF Briefing Officer (uncredited)
Michael Hinz Manfred Rommel (uncredited)
Walter Horsbrugh Adm. Creasey (uncredited)
Til Kiwe Capt. Helmuth Lang (uncredited)
Harry Landis British Soldier (uncredited)
Wolfgang Lukschy Col. Gen. Alfred Jodl (uncredited)
Victor Maddern Camp Cook (uncredited)
Howard Marion-Crawford Glider Doctor (uncredited)
Neil McCallum Canadian Doctor (uncredited)
John Meillon RAdm. Alan G. Kirk (uncredited)
Kurt Meisel Capt. Ernst During (uncredited)
Gérard Moisan Paratrooper (uncredited)
Tony Mordente Cook (uncredited)
Bill Nagy Major in Ste. Mère-Eglise (uncredited)
Rainer Penkert Lt. Fritz Theen (uncredited)
Malte Petzel German Officer with Rupert (uncredited)
John Phillips Roosevelt's Aide (uncredited)
Siân Phillips WRNS Officer (uncredited)
Maurice Poli Jean (uncredited)
Hartmut Reck Sgt. Bernhard Bergsdorf (uncredited)
Trevor Reid Gen. Sir Bernard L. Montgomery (uncredited)
Heinz Reincke Col. Josef 'Pips' Priller (uncredited)
Alexandre Renaud Firefighter (uncredited)
Paul Edwin Roth Col. Schiller (uncredited)
Ernst Schröder Gen. Hans von Salmuth (uncredited)
Dietmar Schönherr Luftwaffe Major (uncredited)
Heinz Spitzner Lt. Col. Helmuth Meyer (uncredited)
Nicholas Stuart Lt. Gen. Omar N. Bradley (uncredited)
Hans Söhnker German Officer (uncredited)
Alice Tissot Housekeeper (uncredited)
Michel Tureau French Commando (uncredited)
Roland Urban Paratrooper (uncredited)
Vicco von Bülow Pemsel's Adjutant (uncredited)
Joe Warfield US Army Medic (uncredited)
Dominique Zardi French Spitfire Pilot (uncredited)
Name Job
Cornelius Ryan Screenplay, Novel
Jean Barral Technical Advisor
James R. Johnson Technical Advisor
Werner Pluskat Technical Advisor
Friedrich Ruge Technical Advisor
Roger Bligh Technical Advisor
Jean Fouchet Visual Effects, Special Effects
Mitch Miller Music Arranger
Fernando Pérez Special Effects
Gérard Moisan Stunts
Ian Yule Stunts
Romain Gary Writer, Script Supervisor
Erich Maria Remarque Script Consultant
Gil Delamare Stunts
John Sullivan Stunts
Walter Wottitz Director of Photography
Samuel E. Beetley Editor
Johnny Borgese Special Effects
Jean Bourgoin Director of Photography
Vincent Korda Art Direction
Ted Haworth Art Direction
Jack Seddon Writer, Script Consultant
Maude Spector Casting
Léon Barsacq Art Direction
Gabriel Béchir Set Designer
David Pursall Writer, Script Consultant
Max Pemsel Technical Advisor
Pierre Koenig Technical Advisor
Philippe Kieffer Technical Advisor
E. C. Peake Technical Advisor
Lucie Maria Rommel Technical Advisor
Hubert Deschard Technical Advisor
Albert Saby Technical Advisor
Helmuth Lang Technical Advisor
The Earl of Lovat Technical Advisor
Willard L. Bushy Technical Advisor
Josef Priller Technical Advisor
Günther Blumentritt Technical Advisor
Louis Pitzele Assistant Director
John Howard Technical Advisor
Joseph de Bretagne Sound, Special Effects
James Gavin Technical Advisor
Fernand Prevost Technical Advisor
Jacques Maumont Sound
Gérard Renateau Assistant Director
Bernard Farrel Assistant Director
Elmo Williams Second Unit Director
Gerald Endler Special Effects
R.A. MacDonald Special Effects
Frederick Morgan Technical Advisor
A. J. Hillebrand Technical Advisor
Joseph B. Seay Technical Advisor
Henry Wise Second Assistant Director
Henry Sokal Jr. Assistant Director
Augie Lohman Special Effects
Alex Weldon Special Effects
Karl Baumgartner Special Effects
Karl Helmer Special Effects
Wally Veevers Visual Effects
Jack Cooper Stunts
Alexandre Renaud Stunts
David S. Horsley Additional Visual Effects
Vincent Rossell Still Photographer
Paul Wurtzel Special Effects
Jean-Pierre Janic Stunts
Bob Cuff Matte Painter
Henri Persin Cinematography
John McCorry Wardrobe Coordinator
Ken Buckle Stunts
Joe Powell Stunts
Pierre Levent Cinematography
Guy Tabary Aerial Camera
Lucie Lichtig Continuity
Frank Khoury Driver
Ken Annakin Director
Andrew Marton Director
Maurice Jarre Original Music Composer
Bernhard Wicki Director
James Jones Writer
Paul Anka Additional Music
William Robert Sivel Sound
Tom Pevsner Assistant Director
Gerd Oswald Director, Second Unit Director
Darryl F. Zanuck Director
Jean Herman Assistant Director
Yvan Chiffre Stunts
Nosher Powell Stunts
Lionel Vitrant Stunts
Name Title
Elmo Williams Associate Producer
Darryl F. Zanuck Producer
Organization Category Person
Academy Awards Best Picture N/A Nominated
Academy Awards Best Picture N/A Nominated
Academy Awards Best Director Ken Annakin Nominated
Golden Globes Best Picture N/A Nominated
Berlin International Film Festival Best Supporting Actor Richard Beymer Won
Berlin International Film Festival Best Supporting Actor Eddie Albert Nominated
Berlin International Film Festival Best Supporting Actress Mildred Natwick Won
Cannes Film Festival Best Supporting Actress Red Buttons Won
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 26 39 20
2024 5 28 37 23
2024 6 64 113 28
2024 7 36 54 20
2024 8 26 37 17
2024 9 23 35 14
2024 10 25 48 15
2024 11 21 36 15
2024 12 19 25 13
2025 1 21 38 16
2025 2 18 24 4
2025 3 7 24 1
2025 4 4 9 2
2025 5 4 9 2
2025 6 4 7 2
2025 7 3 3 2
2025 8 3 4 2
2025 9 2 3 2

Trending Position


Year Month High Avg
2025 6 879 879

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Reviews

John Chard
8.0

For the Allies as well as the Germans, it will be the longest day. The events of D-Day, told on a grand scale from both the Allied and German points of view. The retelling of June 6, 1944, from the perspectives of the Germans, US, British, Canadians, and the Free French gets an all star produ ... ction. One of the great war movie epics, it has all the requisite blunderbuss spectacle and heroism as the Allies invade Normandy. It's not hard to see why it was such a box office winner, sure it's a touch too long given that a lot of characters don't really have much to do, but performances are strong and the slices of humour off set some of the national stereotypes on show. One has to marvel at the ambition of the production, Fox Studios boss Darryl F. Zanuck spent $10 million to get it onto the big screen, and it shows. Narrative is split into three parts, the preparation, the operations on land and sea in readiness for the Normandy assault, and then the landings in all their powerful glory. For sure we have seen more authentic war movies post The Longest Day, but it undeniably deserves its place as a template movie whose power to entertain in any era forever holds firm. 8/10

May 16, 2024
Geronimo1967
7.0

John Wayne may have featured just slightly more than anyone else in this drama, but it's very much an ensemble effort that delivers a film with a great deal of authenticity to it. It's all set around the day of the D-Day landings in 1944. The weather on England's south coast was, in the words of the ... ir meteorologist, "akin to mid-winter". Delay meant more frustrations for everyone so off they go using just about every form of transportation available - gliders, planes, tanks, landing craft - you name it, as a quarter of a million men (plus lots of sparkling "Tommies") headed to Normandy. Meantime, we also see a fairly plausible perspective from the Nazi side of the channel. They've been preparing for an invasion for a while, but are unsure where and when it will come and the apprehension is beginning to take it toll. What's also clear is that the High Command are, themselves, losing faith with the battle tactics of the Bohemian corporal and much less afraid to let it be known. It's now that the story picks up the pace as troops land by sea and air and face the entrenched enemy who are determined to stop the establishment of a beach-head. With bullets flying and explosions everywhere the cinematography, stunt arranging and pyrotechnics really do give us a sense of the dangers the men faced trying to secure a few miles of sand. There's a lovely, short, cameo from Bourvil as the mayor of a small town so delighted to see them that he turns up, suitably sashed and armed with a bottle of champagne to celebrate as the shells drop all around them! Gert Fröbe also finds his milk round become just a touch too perilous too, allowing just a little humour to creep into the story of precision logistics that didn't always go to plan. It's effectively and tightly edited and the momentum drives itself as we see but this one day - no conclusions, not even the end of the end of the beginning. It's lengthy, but each beach has it's own story to tell and the four creative brains behind this project keep it enthralling, for the most part, for a watchable three hours of horror and hope.

Jun 03, 2024