Oddpoff

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From
Zeroes to Heroes.
by
Jon Dunmore © 1 Mar 2006.
It
is World War II. A small troop of American soldiers surrounds
the German-occupied French village of Claremont, closing in
slowly over the rooftops and through the ruins. Thirty miles
behind enemy lines, isolated from their own army, one Sherman
tank their only armored support against three superior German
Tiger tanks, they're not here to fight a battle.
They're
here to rob a bank.
With
characters like Pvt. "Barbara," Pvt. "Cowboy,"
"Little Joe" (jumpy Stuart Margolin), "Crapgame"
(whining Don Rickles), "Big Joe" (rough-hewn Telly
Savalas), "Pvt. Willard" (Harry Dean Stanton,
actually looking young - well, young-ISH), "Oddball"
(a mind-expanded Donald Sutherland) and the unruffled, smooth
operator, Kelly (Clint Eastwood, gliding through this movie
like a Private With No Name), Kelly's Heroes invented
the word "ragtag." Up against these guys, American
troops in previous films portrayed as impertinent insubordinates
looked like altar boys.
These
misfits hear of a cache of 14,000 German gold bars behind
enemy lines and - led by Pvt. Kelly - take a detour from
their futile war effort to heist it. Like The Dirty Dozen
without the meticulous planning. One: down to the road
block we've just begun. Two: the guards are through. Three:
we're ALL on a spree!...
Released
smack in the midst of the Viet Nam war (1970), the film's
coterie of quirky characters more readily reflects that
era's disheveled anti-establishmentarians, rather than the
somewhat grittier G.I.'s of the actual Second World War.
Which accounts for Oddball's hippie commune of actual "flower
children" - a species that did not yet exist at the
time of this movie's supposed period.
Chief
crewman of Oddball's cadre of three Sherman tanks is Moriarty
(engine-oiled Gavin MacLeod, long before he captained The
Love Boat, here piloting The Love Tank), incessantly
being accused and mispronounced by Oddball, "Always
with the negative waves, Moriaritty! Always with the negative
waves!"
In
their quest to pull off the perfect crime, with an actual
pot of gold (worth 16 million dollars) at journey's end,
Kelly's "heroes" inadvertently win battle after
battle, carving a swathe of allied territory straight through
the heart of German occupation - to the chagrin and delight
of General Colt (frenetic Carroll O'Connor), who believes
these troops are ploughing patriotically through enemy lines
despite the hesitance of their commanders.
Languidly
directed by Brian G. Hutton (who also directed the other
Eastwood war movie of this era, Where Eagles Dare),
this movie would have fared better - as a more entertaining
diversion and as a better story - if it had concentrated
on the aspects which separated it from other war
movies of its day - the "heist" angle and the
"comedy" - rather than adhering to war movie convention
so perfunctorily: machine guns blaze away at every opportunity,
mowing down Germans who couldn't hit the side of a barn,
with carpet-bombing padding out large segments of screen
time. Being a "war movie," Hutton obviously received
a fat explosives budget - and by Jerry Bruckheimer he was
going to use it!
By
the time they reach Claremont, Kelly's armada of companies
has been whittled down to only his troop and Oddball's one
remaining Sherman. Meanwhile, General Colt drives headlong
to Claremont to meet up with Kelly's troop, not realizing
that if he did, instead of handing out the medals he brings,
he'd have to court-martial the lot of them.
After
his troop disables two Tigers, Kelly must find a more subtle
way to subvert the last remaining Tiger, dug in directly
in front of the gold-laden bank.
And
Sergio Leone comes to the rescue!
In
a scene directly spoofing one of Clint's own Dollar
standoffs, he faces down - across an expanse of dusty street
- a Tiger tank. Joined by Sutherland and Savalas, and accompanied
by Lalo Schifrin's score emulating one of Ennio Morricone's
evocative passages (i.e. close your eyes and you're back
in For A Few Dollars More), they grimly (yet almost
smirking for the audacity of the in-joke) stalk towards
the tank, whose occupants silently regard this display of
bravado - or temporary insanity. All that's missing are
the spurs and ponchos.
From
out of the tank steps the commander (Karl-Otto Alberty,
oozing such searing Nazi authenticity
it's a wonder he wasn't indicted for war-crimes after the
film). Kelly's plan: like any good American entrepreneur
- to Make A Deal. "All you have to do to have an equal
share in this money is crank that turret around - and blow
a hole in that door."
Once
again, though other movies may have united Germans and Americans
in touching tableaus serving to illustrate the meaninglessness
of war, this movie unites them in a decidedly Marxist twist
- the proletariat partners in crime united against the capitalistic
bourgeoisie.
Amidst
the French celebrating in the street
(thinking they have been liberated), with General Colt mistaken
for de Gaulle by the revelers and mobbed before he can discover
the decimated bank and American soldiers making off with
its loot, Lalo Schifrin's and Mike Curb's strangely nostalgic
and immortally memorable theme, Burning Bridges,
plays out the credits, as Kelly's unlikely heroes load the
last of the gold onto their truck and drive off - literally
- into the sunset.
END
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