List
The Dirty Dozen

Director: Robert Aldrich
Writer: E.M. Nathanson, Nunnally Johnson
Producer: Raymond Anzarut, Kenneth Hyman
Theatrical: 1967
Rated: Unrated
Studio: Warner Studios
Genre: Action & Adventure
Duration: 145
Media: Digital
Collection ID: 1279
DVD Details
Languages: English, French
Subtitles: English, Spanish, French
Sound: Dolby Digital 2.0 Surround
Aspect Ratio: 2.00:1
Picture Format: Letterbox
Discs: 1
Region: 1
Release:Nov 2004
Price: $14.97
Credits
Maj. John Reisman
Lee Marvin
Maj. Gen. Worden
Ernest Borgnine
Joseph T. Wladislaw
Charles Bronson
Robert T. Jefferson
Jim Brown
Victor Franko
John Cassavetes
Sgt. Clyde Bowren
Richard Jaeckel
Maj. Max Armbruster
George Kennedy
Pedro Jiminez
Trini López
Capt. Stuart Kinder
Ralph Meeker
Col. Everett Dasher Breed
Robert Ryan
Archer J. Maggott
Telly Savalas
Vernon L. Pinkley
Donald Sutherland
Samson Posey
Clint Walker
Brig. Gen. Denton
Robert Webber
Milo Vladek
Tom Busby
Glenn Gilpin
Ben Carruthers
Roscoe Lever
Stuart Cooper
Cpl. Morgan - MP Guard
Robert Phillips
Seth Sawyer
Colin Maitland
Tassos Bravos
Al Mancini
Pvt. Arthur James Gardner
George Roubicek
Gen. Worden's Aide
Thick Wilson
German Officer's Girl
Dora Reisser
Staff Sergeant Alistair Clayton
Gerry Crampton
Summary
The mission: Train twelve military convicts to go behind enemy lines. The objective: Destroy a French chateau and kill the Nazi officers occupying it, causing a major disruption in the German Army ranks. If mission is successful, prisoners will be pardoned for all crimes under the Visiting Forces Act in Britain.Easier said than done. However, for U.S. Army Major John Reisman, it is a task that he will accomplish by any means necessary. And that sets in motion one of the greatest World War II films ever made for the cinema screen. Released in 1967 by MGM, The Dirty Dozen changed the way we looked at soldiers and war heroes. Instead of the clean-cut types we have been used to watching in war films, we are introduced to the most psychopathic, anti-social bunch of soldiers ever to take on the Third Reich.Nevertheless, the film is still entertaining, and explosive to boot. With a cast that includes Lee Marvin, Ernest Borgnine, the great Donald Sutherland, Charles Bronson, Jim Brown, Telly Savalas, Clint Walker, Richard Jaeckel, Robert Ryan, George Kennedy, and the late John Cassavetes (in a hateful role that earned him an Oscar nomination for best supporting actor), The Dirty Dozen proves that you can find heroes in the most unlikely of all places. These twelve men fight like twelve hundred when it comes to taking on the Imperial German Army, and in the end, it becomes an explosive confrontation between two forces that are bent on annihilating each other. If you enjoy war movies, you'll enjoy The Dirty Dozen.Trivia note: The movie was filmed on location at MGM British Studios in Borhamwood, England. Lee Marvin appeared in another classic WWII movie thirteen years later. The 1980 classic The Big Red One.Both Jim Brown and Ernest Borgnine appeared in the classic 1968 Cold War Thriller Ice Station Zebra. Like in The Dirty Dozen, Brown's character gets killed off. Apparently, some execs were a bit racist.