[A WWII veteran, Lt. Harry Brubaker, has been drafted back into service in the Korean War as a Naval Reserve pilot, and asked to undertake a dangerous new mission.]
Rear
Adm. George Tarrant
[played by Fredric March]: “Son, whatever progress this world has made,
it's always been because of the efforts and the sacrifices of a few.”
Lt.
Harry Brubaker [played
by William Holden, pictured]: “I was one of the few, Admiral, at New
Guinea, Leyte, Okinawa. Why does it have to be me again?”
Tarrant: “Nobody ever knows why he gets
the dirty job. And this is a dirty job.”— The Bridges at Toko-Ri (1954), screenplay by Valentine
Davies, adapted from the novel by James Michener, directed by Mark Robson
I have
known about this movie for quite a while, but had never seen it till this
weekend, when I watched it in preparation for a talk next month on one of its stars,
Grace Kelly (who plays Holden's loyal but worried wife). This quote seems especially appropriate on Veterans Day.
The
screenplay is not everything it could have been, but it captures quite well the
ambivalence that even the best service personnel, like Tarrant and Brubaker,
feel about such conflicts.
And the
Oscar-winning special effects powerful approximate the visceral sensations
involved with flying into the form of hell known as the combat zone—something
that most of us will, fortunately, never experience firsthand.
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