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IMDbPro

Más allá de la gloria

Título original: The Big Red One
  • 1980
  • R
  • 1h 53min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
7.1/10
22 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Mark Hamill and Lee Marvin in Más allá de la gloria (1980)
Official Trailer
Reproducir trailer2:31
1 video
74 fotos
Épica de guerraDramaGuerra

Un curtido sargento y los cuatro miembros principales de su unidad de infantería intentan sobrevivir a la II Guerra Mundial mientras se mueven de batalla en batalla por toda Europa.Un curtido sargento y los cuatro miembros principales de su unidad de infantería intentan sobrevivir a la II Guerra Mundial mientras se mueven de batalla en batalla por toda Europa.Un curtido sargento y los cuatro miembros principales de su unidad de infantería intentan sobrevivir a la II Guerra Mundial mientras se mueven de batalla en batalla por toda Europa.

  • Dirección
    • Samuel Fuller
  • Guionista
    • Samuel Fuller
  • Elenco
    • Lee Marvin
    • Mark Hamill
    • Robert Carradine
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
    7.1/10
    22 k
    TU CALIFICACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • Samuel Fuller
    • Guionista
      • Samuel Fuller
    • Elenco
      • Lee Marvin
      • Mark Hamill
      • Robert Carradine
    • 147Opiniones de los usuarios
    • 65Opiniones de los críticos
    • 77Metascore
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
    • Premios
      • 2 premios ganados y 2 nominaciones en total

    Videos1

    The Big Red One
    Trailer 2:31
    The Big Red One

    Fotos74

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    + 67
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    Elenco principal36

    Editar
    Lee Marvin
    Lee Marvin
    • The Sergeant
    Mark Hamill
    Mark Hamill
    • Pvt. Griff - 1st Squad
    Robert Carradine
    Robert Carradine
    • Pvt. Zab - 1st Squad
    Bobby Di Cicco
    Bobby Di Cicco
    • Pvt. Vinci - 1st Squad
    Kelly Ward
    Kelly Ward
    • Pvt. Johnson - 1st Squad
    Stéphane Audran
    Stéphane Audran
    • Underground Walloon Fighter at Asylum
    • (as Stephane Audran)
    Siegfried Rauch
    Siegfried Rauch
    • Sgt. Schroeder
    Serge Marquand
    • Rensonnet
    Charles Macaulay
    • General…
    Alain Doutey
    Alain Doutey
    • Sgt. Broban - Vichy Soldier
    Maurice Marsac
    Maurice Marsac
    • Vichy Colonel
    Colin Gilbert
    • Dog Face POW - Tunis Hospital
    Joseph Clark
    • Pvt. Shep - Soldier on Troop Transport
    Ken Campbell
    • Pvt. Lemchek - #2 on Bangalore Torpedo
    Doug Werner
    • Switolski
    Perry Lang
    Perry Lang
    • Pvt. Kaiser - 1st Squad
    Howard Delman
    • Pvt. Smitty - Soldier in Sicily Fetching Water
    Marthe Villalonga
    Marthe Villalonga
    • Madame Marbaise
    • Dirección
      • Samuel Fuller
    • Guionista
      • Samuel Fuller
    • Todo el elenco y el equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Opiniones de usuarios147

    7.122.3K
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    Opiniones destacadas

    jay4stein79-1

    Among the greatest WWII epics

    A lot of people hate The Big Red One. They call it farcical, uneven, clichéd. They find it farcical, I believe, because the film revels in the absurdity of war rather than gloss over it. They would rather watch a film, like Saving Private Ryan, which ignores absurdity in favor of violence. These people find it uneven because the "important scenes" (like the D-Day and North African invasion) take only a minute or two to conclude, while other scenes, less typical of a war movie, spread out before us. They call it clichéd because the movie is unsubtle in its treatment of character development and plot.

    I cannot agree with these beliefs. The Big Red One is not only one of the greatest WWII films, it is also one of the greatest war movies.

    Sam Fuller's film, which was butchered by the studio, is the picaresque tale of 5 members of the First Infantry, known, because of their shoulder patch, as the Big Red One. The film moves from one story to the next without spending too much time on any particular tale.

    The individual vignettes, as they must, vary in quality, but on the whole are excellent. The Big Red One stirs within you a desire to run right out and tell your friends about this amazing scene or that.

    There's the soldier who loses his testicle, the birthing scene in the belly of a tank, Lee Marvin, in Middle Eastern garb, traipsing across a beach, soldiers dug into holes over which a Panzer tank division travels, the entire Mad House segment... The list goes on.

    Some people dislike the absurdest nature of several of this film's stories, but, for me, those surreal touches make this film great.

    Without them (and there are a lot), you would be left with a very normal and very boring film. Using bandoleers as stirrups is genius, as is the woman faking crazy as she whirls through a monastery, slicing German throats.

    The performances are solid, for this type of film, but if you are looking for subtlety, go elsewhere. Each character is drawn in broad strokes; you never learn too much about them, but you learn enough to understand who they are and why. Lee Marvin, as usual, is amazing. He is one of the great, gruff actors of our time, bringing a special, intangible quality to every film in which I've seen him. He makes every movie he's in better just by showing up. There are too few actors about whom you can say that.

    Like the acting, the direction is masculine, but, for a war movie, that's a compliment. In some ways, Fuller's direction here and in his other films reminds me of Hemmingway's writing - terse and effective. Both men believe in an economy of shots or words, depending on their medium, but, through that economy, they attain a muscular sort of poetry akin to the beauty of a horse's rippling muscles as it races on a plain. Fuller's direction here, though not his best when compared to Underworld USA or Shock Corridor, is still better than most, especially considering that this was his first film in several years.

    All in all, I find the Big Red One to be an exemplary war movie, even in its emasculated format (I cannot wait to see the restored, 140 minute print, which should improve upon scenes that feel to brief in this version). It's certainly no Apocalypse Now, but it puts to shame most World War II epics before or since.
    JAM-31

    Good personal story from Sam Fuller

    This film is really about the experiences that Sam Fuller had during WWII. It is a bit dated, and the low budget really shows, but SF clearly did the best with what he had, and it stands as a great monument on war from a director who was really there.

    All of the characters are very likeable, and well acted by Lee Marvin, Mark Hamill, Robert Carradine, and company. The movie is fiction but influenced by real events. Many of the scenes, especially one involving a group of older sicilian women who cook a big meal for the squad, ring very true, since a fiction writer would obviously try and spice them up--the film is very honest, and it is good that Fuller left this story for us. I also like how it ends on a positive, optimistic note.

    "The real glory of war is surviving."
    7Groverdox

    A victim of butchery?

    "The Big Red One" is an episodic war movie from maverick American filmmaker Samuel Fuller. Having only seen "Shock Corridor" from the director's oeuvre, I didn't know what to expect from him this time around. It becomes obvious pretty quickly that Fuller was never going to be a mainstream filmmaker. There's something about his style that's really off-putting. You empathise with the camera, not the actors. It's like they're at odds with each other.

    This is not a bad thing, as you can tell from the enthusiastic reception Fuller's movies have gotten here on IMDB. But "The Big Red One" is also drastically cut down from the original print Fuller had, and I wonder if that's why it feels so disjointed.

    Of course, it is supposed to be episodic, but I don't know. I didn't really get into it.
    5matjusm

    Just didn't do it for me

    Perhaps I am an exception but this film really did nothing for me.

    The premise is simple: the experiences of a US infantry squad led by Lee Marvin fighting in Europe and North Africa during WW II. It was supposed to be about the experiences of the men who fought but I didn't feel the film delivered that: none of the characters were really explored or given much depth, even the great Lee Marvin seemed distant and cold. There isn't too much dialogue, in fact there isn't too much of anything in this film. Its just there but it doesn't really give you much, it just leaves you cold. The plot is occasionally just plain weird and confusing, not the good kind of quirky type of weird but just strange for no apparent reason and with no charm to it.

    The action scenes are average, nothing special but enough for their purpose. What annoyed me was that so many different locations were so obviously filmed in the same sandy country (Israel) and it just didn't come off as very convincing. I didn't believe that what I was being shown was really the place it was supposed to be. Its also a quiet film, with very minimal music which in itself isn't bad but just gave the whole thing a somewhat sleepy atmosphere. I wouldn't go so far as to say the film was boring, it wasn't but it just wasn't that attention grabbing either.

    Its a film that is there but it did absolutely nothing for me. Others however might enjoy it.
    8keihan

    Perhaps the last great movie of Lee Marvin...

    Some movies are like buried treasure; someone manages to slip them into the theater, practically under every critic's nose, where they either thrive or famish and then vanish into the nearest video catalog. "The Big Red One" is one of those films. For all the hoopla created by "Saving Private Ryan" (another excellent film, which, in my opinion, had a better understanding of it's subject than a lot of it's critics gave it credit for), it owed a great deal to what Sam Fuller did a decade and a half before.

    Lee Marvin, an actual WWII veteran himself, holds the film together as the tough but exhausted seargent. When he tells Mark Hamill (yes, Luke Skywalker, folks) that you don't murder animals, you kill them, the look on his face after that seems to say that he wished it could be some other way. It's hard to grab defining moments in this film as stand-out, but the two sequences that stick the most to my mind are the taking of the insane asylum and the horrors of the concentration camp. While other movies have focused on specific campaigns, "The Big Red One" deserves high marks for painting the broad canvass of the Second World War from the perspective of the guys who actually had to do the work.

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    Argumento

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    • Trivia
      The bulk of the picture was shot in Israel, and director Samuel Fuller remarked that it was unsettling after a scene was shot when the German soldiers and SS troops would take off their helmets and Fuller would see them wearing yarmulkes; also, between takes they would be sitting around the set in full Nazi uniform speaking Hebrew or reading the Torah.
    • Errores
      During the WW1 scene between the Sergeant and the officer in the dug-out, the Sergeant learns that the armistice had been signed 4 hours previously at 1100hrs, November 11, 1918. While talking with the officer, the sergeant is cutting a piece of red cloth in the shape of a number '1' which he says he will submit as a proposed insignia for the division. However the shoulder sleeve insignia for the 1st Division consisting of a red number "1" was already approved on 31 Oct 1918.
    • Citas

      Johnson: [concerning a woman in labor] How do you say "push" in French?

      The Sergeant: Poussez.

      Johnson: [to woman] Pussy! Pussy! Pussy!

    • Versiones alternativas
      In 2004, film critic Richard Schickel restored this film to a new director's cut length of approximately 160 minutes. Using Samuel Fuller's production notes and the full-length, unexpurgated script, Schickel restored the footage that was forced to be cut by the studio upon its original 1980 release (which runs 116 minutes). The restored version's DVD release date is 3 May 2005. This longer, epic-length version is closer to Fuller's original vision for the film.
    • Conexiones
      Featured in A tout coeur: Episode dated 7 May 1984 (1984)
    • Bandas sonoras
      Horst-Wessel-Lied
      Written by Horst Wessel

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    Preguntas Frecuentes21

    • How long is The Big Red One?Con tecnología de Alexa
    • Are the Germans portrayed fairly in this film?
    • What are the differences between the Theatrical Version and The Reconstruction Version?

    Detalles

    Editar
    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 15 de enero de 1982 (México)
    • País de origen
      • Estados Unidos
    • Idiomas
      • Inglés
      • Francés
      • Italiano
      • Alemán
    • También se conoce como
      • El escuadrón Gran Rojo
    • Locaciones de filmación
      • King John's Castle, Trim, County Meath, Irlanda
    • Productoras
      • Lorimar Productions
      • Lorac Productions
    • Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro

    Taquilla

    Editar
    • Presupuesto
      • USD 4,500,000 (estimado)
    • Total en EE. UU. y Canadá
      • USD 7,206,220
    • Total a nivel mundial
      • USD 7,206,823
    Ver la información detallada de la taquilla en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

    Editar
    • Tiempo de ejecución
      • 1h 53min(113 min)
    • Color
      • Color
      • Black and White
    • Mezcla de sonido
      • Dolby Stereo(original release)
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 1.85 : 1

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