The Dirty Dozen (1967) Synopsis & Summary

Synopsis

Director Robert Aldrich took what he considered a hopelessly old-fashioned script by Lukas Heller and Nunnally Johnson and fashioned The Dirty Dozen into one of MGM's biggest moneymakers of the 1960s--and the sixth highest-grossing film in the studio's history. Lee Marvin plays Major Reisman, assigned to coordinate a suicide mission on a French chateau held by top Nazi officers. Since no "normal" GI can be expected to volunteer for this mission, Reisman is compelled to draw his personnel from a group of military prisoners serving life sentences. This "dirty dozen" includes a sex pervert (Telly Savalas), a psycho (John Cassavetes), a retarded killer (Donald Sutherland), and the equally malevolent Charles Bronson, Trini Lopez, Jim Brown, and Clint Walker. On the dim promise of receiving pardons if they survive, the criminals undergo a brutal training program, then are marched behind enemy lines dressed as Nazi soldiers, the better to overtake the chateau and kill everyone in it--including the innocent wives and mistresses of the German officers. - Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

Movie Info

Theatrical Release Date:
06/15/1967
DVD Release Date:
04/29/1998
Rating:
Not Rated
Run Time:
149 min.
Distributor(s):
MGM
Production Co.:
MGM
Director(s):
Genre(s):
Themes:
Military Life, Behind Enemy Lines, Heroic Mission
Tone:
Angry, Rousing, Tense, Gritty
Keywords:
Nazi, group, machismo, major, suicide-mission, training, war
Setting:
war
Time Period:
1944
Language:
English
Status:
DVD