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Cielo di fuoco

Titolo originale: Twelve O'Clock High
  • 1949
  • T
  • 2h 12min
VALUTAZIONE IMDb
7,7/10
16.479
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Gregory Peck in Cielo di fuoco (1949)
Trailer for this war time drama
Riproduci trailer2:05
1 video
42 foto
Dramma psicologicoDrammaGuerra

Durante la Seconda Guerra Mondiale il generale Savage, duro ed inflessibile, prende il comando di un'unità di bombardieri B-17 con il morale basso, cercando con lo spirito di corpo ed i succ... Leggi tuttoDurante la Seconda Guerra Mondiale il generale Savage, duro ed inflessibile, prende il comando di un'unità di bombardieri B-17 con il morale basso, cercando con lo spirito di corpo ed i successi in battaglia di ridare vigore al gruppo.Durante la Seconda Guerra Mondiale il generale Savage, duro ed inflessibile, prende il comando di un'unità di bombardieri B-17 con il morale basso, cercando con lo spirito di corpo ed i successi in battaglia di ridare vigore al gruppo.

  • Regia
    • Henry King
  • Sceneggiatura
    • Sy Bartlett
    • Beirne Lay Jr.
    • Henry King
  • Star
    • Gregory Peck
    • Hugh Marlowe
    • Gary Merrill
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • VALUTAZIONE IMDb
    7,7/10
    16.479
    LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
    • Regia
      • Henry King
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Sy Bartlett
      • Beirne Lay Jr.
      • Henry King
    • Star
      • Gregory Peck
      • Hugh Marlowe
      • Gary Merrill
    • 173Recensioni degli utenti
    • 52Recensioni della critica
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
    • Vincitore di 2 Oscar
      • 9 vittorie e 5 candidature totali

    Video1

    Twelve O'Clock High
    Trailer 2:05
    Twelve O'Clock High

    Foto42

    Visualizza poster
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    + 36
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    Interpreti principali44

    Modifica
    Gregory Peck
    Gregory Peck
    • Gen. Savage
    Hugh Marlowe
    Hugh Marlowe
    • Lt. Col. Ben Gately
    Gary Merrill
    Gary Merrill
    • Col. Davenport
    Millard Mitchell
    Millard Mitchell
    • Gen. Pritchard
    Dean Jagger
    Dean Jagger
    • Maj. Stovall
    Robert Arthur
    Robert Arthur
    • Sgt. McIllhenny
    Paul Stewart
    Paul Stewart
    • Capt. 'Doc' Kaiser
    John Kellogg
    John Kellogg
    • Maj. Cobb
    Robert Patten
    Robert Patten
    • Lt. Bishop
    • (as Bob Patten)
    Lee MacGregor
    • Lt. Zimmerman
    • (as Lee Mac Gregor)
    Sam Edwards
    Sam Edwards
    • Birdwell
    Roger Anderson
    • Interrogation Officer
    Robert Blunt
    • Officer
    • (non citato nei titoli originali)
    William Bryant
    William Bryant
    • Radio Operator
    • (non citato nei titoli originali)
    Steve Clark
    Steve Clark
    • Clerk in Antique Shop
    • (non citato nei titoli originali)
    Russ Conway
    Russ Conway
    • Operations Officer
    • (non citato nei titoli originali)
    Campbell Copelin
    • Mr. Britton
    • (non citato nei titoli originali)
    Leslie Denison
    Leslie Denison
    • RAF Officer
    • (non citato nei titoli originali)
    • Regia
      • Henry King
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Sy Bartlett
      • Beirne Lay Jr.
      • Henry King
    • Tutti gli interpreti e le troupe
    • Produzione, botteghino e altro su IMDbPro

    Recensioni degli utenti173

    7,716.4K
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    Recensioni in evidenza

    robbie49

    The finest world war II movie about the Air Force

    This movie is the only one I have seen that truly depicts how the air war was conducted in the 8th Air Force. It is patterned after the events which actually occurred at the 306th Bomb Group in England in 1943. In real life, General Savage (played by Gregory Peck) was General Frank Armstrong, former commander of the 306th Bomb Group; The first bomb group to fly over Germany.
    writers_reign

    Plain Torque

    It's a good twenty years since I last saw this movie on TV and I retained very pleasant memories of it, so much so that when I saw it on DVD a couple of days ago I snapped it up. Watching it again I was equally impressed but I turned to this site with some trepidation fearing that a modern audience may find it slightly risible but I was delighted to read the many raves to which I now add my own. Several commentators have noted a thematic similarity with 'Command Decision' released one year prior to this but no one seems to have realized, or at least not mentioned, that these two movies paved the way for a spate of 'stress' type movies in the 50s, Paul Newman in 'The Rack', Tony Hopkins in 'Fear Strikes Out' (actually a true story of the Red Sox's Jim Piersall and his stress-related breakdown) and ironically Peck himself, some fifteen years later would deal with stress from the other side of the shrink's desk in his eponymous role in 'Captain Newman, MD'. But I digress; several commentators have also mentioned the framing device and again I'd like to endorse the positive comments. The movie opens in 1949 in a London street when civilian Dean Jagger leaves a London Hatters (looking remarkably like Bates in Jermyn Street) and after exchanging what seems like an innocuous bit of dialogue with two shop assistants but is really there to illustrate the difference between Americans and English, he goes on his way, stopping briefly to look at his reflection in a neighboring shop window and find himself face to face with a Toby Jug that clearly has vivid memories for him. Having purchased the Jug he is next seen cycling in the country and walking through an abandoned airfield. Although not essentially a visual film - because the talk is the important thing - helmer Henry King obtains a beautifully lyrical effect by leaving his camera on Jagger's face as the sound of airplane engines grows louder and louder and the grass begins to sway dramatically and all at once we are back in 1942 on an airfield at the heart of the still unproved, ergo still controversial 'daylight' bombing raids over Germany. Quickly, economically, we are made privy to the situation that prevails; the station has been having a lean spell, okay, they may be overworked but there are too many planes not making it back, too many elementary mistakes. Colonel Keith Davenport (Gary Merrill) is idolised by the crews not least because he flies nearly every mission himself and is clearly all but burned-out. Brigadier General Frank Savage (Gregory Peck) realizes as much in an informal conversation with his friend, Davenport, and passes on his misgivings to Major General Ben Pritchard (Millard Mitchell). Finding it difficult to believe Pritchard goes to see for himself and what he DOES see leads him to relieve Davenport of command and replace him with Savage. It's a thankless job for Savage, go in playing the heavy because the humane approach doesn't cut it in wartime. We've been here before a thousand times and we KNOW that in the end the martinet is going to crumble and win the love of the guys but as I've said before in these pages and will no doubt say again, it's all in the wrist. Peck, a fine and underrated actor gives arguably his greatest ever performance here, and he gave many great ones but in no sense does he 'carry' the film because he doesn't have to. EVERYONE involved, even Merrill and Marlowe, normally wooden actors, rise to the occasion and deliver career-best performances. Jagger's performance earned him a Best Supporting Actor Oscar and if he wasn't perhaps the Best Supporting Actor that year it is safe to say that there were none BETTER. Perhaps the most amazing thing about this film is that even now, some sixty years later when stress, combat fatigue, maximum effort, etc have long been identified as medical conditions we can still watch this film with first-time eyes and enjoy it to the full. 9/10
    9old-bolingbroke

    Leadership and pride

    I first saw TOH about 30 years ago, and, yes, it was at a management training course. Video wasn't common then; so it was projected onto a screen, I remember, which was a bonus. I wasn't sure about management principles, but it went straight onto my ten greatest films list, where it remains. A few reasons why I think it's a great war film.

    Following the intro with Dean Jagger, the action gets off to a good start with the B17 crash landing, a man staggering out to vomit, a reference to a wounded man's brain being visible and an account of Bishop's bravery. This is strong stuff for 1949.

    It avoids a lot of war film clichés. There's no love interest (there's even a nod to the fact that the men weren't always faithful to their loved ones back home). There's no attempt to create a group of men who represent the breadth of society back home. You know the sort of thing - the New York cabbie, the young farm boy, the Texan, the idealistic schoolteacher, the journalist, the architect who's now bombing things that he once built. And it's about failure, it's about men destroying their bodies and their minds for something they don't understand. It reminds me of the colour-sergeant's reply to a soldier in Zulu, who asks 'Why us?'. 'Because we're 'ere, lad. Just us. Nobody else.' If I wanted to sound pretentious, I'd use the word 'existential'.

    It's about leadership and is similar to Nortwest Passage. Both Spencer Tracy in that film and Peck in this are aware that they are putting on an act. One of the great scenes is Peck arriving at the base. He's sitting in the front of the car. They stop and Peck offers his driver, whom he calls 'Ernie', a smoke. He thinks for a while, then grinds out his cigarette, says, 'Right, sergeant.' His driver snaps open the rear door and Peck becomes the general. Northwest Passage again - Tracy says 'I'm not a man now, I'm an officer responsible for men. If you meet me when I'm just a man, you might have to use a little charity.' Other nice touches: the way the fur-lined RAF boots become the symbol of leadership. The way the real-life footage is dovetailed into the main action, a tribute to the war-time cameramen as much as the editor. Notice how they filmed detail like empty shells falling to the aircraft floor.

    So how could a film about military leadership help a local government manager, of all people. I couldn't bust people or demote them easily, rearrange their duties with a stroke of the pen. I would have loved to set up a leper colony, but the union wouldn't let me. But Peck's stressing of the need for pride in one's group is something that can be transferred to any walk of life.
    10smiley-39

    A fine memorial to the men of the 8th Air Force.

    Of all the movies to come out of Hollywood covering world war two, I place this one, which I first saw in 1950, in the top-draw category. From the very start when the credits start rolling, the opening music seemed to fit perfectly; instead of the era-splitting noise they have hit us with in recent years. The old wartime, "Bless 'em All" and, "Don't sit under the apple tree", heard in the background, as Dean Jagger, now a civilian, slowly takes a nostalgic walk out onto the weed-covered, oil-stained runway to remember gallant times of the 918th Bomb Group, now past.

    Gregory Peck as Brigadier General Frank Savage did great credit to this role, and deserved an Oscar. From the moment he enters the base and tears into the guard at the gate for casually waving him through, you know he's going to be a S.O.B. Dean Jagger as Major Stovall, the lawyer in uniform now Ground Executive Officer knows how to handle the paperwork after the first sobering face to face encounter with with Savage. That Jagger won the Oscar as best supporting actor, was well deserved indeed. Gary Merrill as Colonel Keith Davenport, the too popular Group CO, very good. Hugh Marlowe as Lt Colonel Ben Gately, who flew too many missions from behind a desk, placed on the rack by Savage with the other bomb group deadbeats and foul ups, handles his role well. Then their's Millard Mitchell as Major General Pritchard, displaying a commanding presence, and Paul Stewart as Doc Kaiser, also well portrayed.

    There are no false heroics in this movie. No blood and guts all over the silver screen. And no routine world war two, hard boiled, go-get-'em dialogue to spoil it. The authors, Sy Bartlett and Beirne Lay. wrote an excellent screenplay. They did the film a favour, they deleted General Savage's love interest that appeared in their fine novel. I don't think it would have added anything to the movie at all. Maybe what surprised a lot of moviegoers who had not read the book before seeing the movie, was Savage's mental breakdown; freezing suddenly at the hatch as he attempted to heave himself aboard the B-17. It was so unexpected of him after showing such ice-cold nerves

    What rounded out this impressive movie was the insertion of the air combat footage shot over Europe during the actual daylight operations. This documentary footage crowned a very fine achievement. One of Henry King's best; a professional effort indeed. The thread of sincerity in this war movie runs deep.

    The reason I found the movie so engrossing was, as a teenager, on the sidelines of the war, I saw more than one B-17 stagger home and belly in on a wing and a prayer. This movie was loaded with integrity from the beginning to the end credits. I'm sure the gallant gentlemen who flew with the Eighth Air Force over enemy-occupied Europe would be of the same opinion. It is a kind of monument to those warriors.
    9rupie

    'classic' an inadequate term for this one

    Without any question, indisputably the greatest WWII film ever (except, perhaps for "Bridge on the River Kwai"; but that's a WWII story only in the same sense that "Moby Dick" is a book about a whale). There are no weaknesses in this movie. The screenplay is perfect, rooted as it is in the historical reality of the U. S.'s attempt to prove the superiority of Daylight Precision Bombing over the Brits favored strategy of night bombing. The terrible human pressures it placed on young American pilots AND their leaders has never been so well-portrayed on film. Dramatic tension is perfectly manipulated, and the characters are well-drawn, sympathetic and fully developed. Every member of this superb cast gives this great material the great acting it deserves. The usage of actual WWII bombing footage adds to the sense of reality. The psychological drama - what "maximum effort" does to people - is at the core of the story and supercedes the mere military aspect. And the device of the framing scenes - Harvey Stovall (Dean Jagger) recollecting the story while standing in the abandoned airstrip - is brilliant. It gives the tale an overwhelmingly bittersweet feeling of "long-ago" nostalgia. It is so powerful that Spielberg must have consciously had 12 O'clock High in mind when he used the same device in Saving Private Ryan to make that whole film a flashback, just as this one is. To hell with the flashy flamboyance of Citizen Kane; I would have to give 12 O'clock High a better shot at being "the best movie ever made". One mark of the film's realistic portrayal of psychological issues in warfare is that for many years it was required viewing in many military leadership classes. Film buffs &/or devotees of WWII history who haven't seen this one are living a deprived existence.

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    • Quiz
      This film is used by the US Navy as an example of leadership styles in its Leadership and Management Training School. The Air Force's College for Enlisted Professional Military Education also uses it as an education aid in its NCO academies and Officer Training School. It is also used as a teaching tool for leadership at the Army Command and General Staff College and for leadership training in civilian seminars. It is used at the Harvard Business School as a case study in how to effect change in organizations.
    • Blooper
      Savage is given command of the 918th and tells Pritchard that he'll get there "early" the next day. By the time he does arrive, Lt. Zimmerman has committed suicide, been given a funeral and Major Stovall has had time to get drunk afterwards.
    • Citazioni

      Major Stovall: That is not why I am drunk tonight. I got drunk because I am confused. I was thinking, which is a thing a man should not do, and all at once I couldn't remember what any of them looked like. I, I couldn't see their faces, Bishop, Cobb, Wilson, Zimmy, all of them. All of you. They all looked alike, just one face. And it was very young. It confused me. I think I shall stay drunk until I'm not confused anymore.

    • Curiosità sui crediti
      Opening credits prologue: LONDON 1949
    • Connessioni
      Edited into All This and World War II (1976)
    • Colonne sonore
      Don't Sit Under the Apple Tree
      (uncredited)

      Music by Sam H. Stept

      Lyrics by Charles Tobias and Lew Brown

      Sung at the officers' club

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    Dettagli

    Modifica
    • Data di uscita
      • 30 aprile 1950 (Italia)
    • Paese di origine
      • Stati Uniti
    • Lingua
      • Inglese
    • Celebre anche come
      • Almas en la hoguera
    • Luoghi delle riprese
      • Ozark Army Airfield, Ozark, Alabama, Stati Uniti
    • Azienda produttrice
      • Twentieth Century Fox
    • Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro

    Botteghino

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    • Lordo in tutto il mondo
      • 4499 USD
    Vedi le informazioni dettagliate del botteghino su IMDbPro

    Specifiche tecniche

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    • Tempo di esecuzione
      • 2h 12min(132 min)
    • Colore
      • Black and White
    • Proporzioni
      • 1.37 : 1

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