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IMDbPro

Screaming Eagles

  • 1956
  • Approved
  • 1h 19m
IMDb RATING
5.8/10
394
YOUR RATING
Tom Tryon in Screaming Eagles (1956)
DramaWar

"Screaming Eagles" is a historical drama about paratroopers of the 101st Airborne Division fighting during the D-Day Invasion in June of 1944. The title was the Division's nickname."Screaming Eagles" is a historical drama about paratroopers of the 101st Airborne Division fighting during the D-Day Invasion in June of 1944. The title was the Division's nickname."Screaming Eagles" is a historical drama about paratroopers of the 101st Airborne Division fighting during the D-Day Invasion in June of 1944. The title was the Division's nickname.

  • Director
    • Charles F. Haas
  • Writers
    • David Lang
    • Robert Presnell Jr.
    • Virginia Kellogg
  • Stars
    • Tom Tryon
    • Jan Merlin
    • Alvy Moore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.8/10
    394
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Charles F. Haas
    • Writers
      • David Lang
      • Robert Presnell Jr.
      • Virginia Kellogg
    • Stars
      • Tom Tryon
      • Jan Merlin
      • Alvy Moore
    • 13User reviews
    • 1Critic review
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos17

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    Top cast22

    Edit
    Tom Tryon
    Tom Tryon
    • Pvt. Mason
    Jan Merlin
    Jan Merlin
    • Lt. Pauling
    Alvy Moore
    Alvy Moore
    • Pvt. Grimes
    Martin Milner
    Martin Milner
    • Pvt. Corliss
    Jacqueline Beer
    Jacqueline Beer
    • Marianne
    Joe Di Reda
    Joe Di Reda
    • Pvt. Dubrowski
    • (as Joe di Reda)
    Mark Damon
    Mark Damon
    • Pvt. Lambert
    Paul Burke
    Paul Burke
    • Cpl. Dreef
    Pat Conway
    Pat Conway
    • Sgt. Forrest
    Edward G. Robinson Jr.
    Edward G. Robinson Jr.
    • Pvt. Smith
    Ralph Votrian
    Ralph Votrian
    • Pvt. Talbot
    Paul Smith
    Paul Smith
    • Pvt. Foley
    Robert Blake
    Robert Blake
    • Pvt. Hernandez
    • (as Bobby Blake)
    Robert Roark
    Robert Roark
    • Pvt. Torren
    Robert Dix
    Robert Dix
    • Pvt. Peterson
    • (as Bob Dix)
    Wayne Taylor
    • Pvt. Nolan
    Robert Boon
    • Hans Schacht
    Peter Michaels
    • Gustav Bormann
    • Director
      • Charles F. Haas
    • Writers
      • David Lang
      • Robert Presnell Jr.
      • Virginia Kellogg
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews13

    5.8394
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    Featured reviews

    1likbikarmy

    Whoa, so bad

    As a movie, as a story, this flops. Such a terribly performed and written movie. It's as though someone woke up, said, "hey, let's do a tribute for D-Day, we will feature a unit from the 101st, and who do we have hanging around the studio?" Then, a secretary walks out the door, finds a few folks loafing about and points out, "You, you, you, and you all. Wanna make a movie? Here's your lines, now go do it." And, in one day it was done. Oh, let's add some WW2 footage to the stock, backlot scenery for realism. Just a poorly done movie in all regards. The whole Tom Tyron chomping on a cigar is right out of a comic book.
    1mikereaves-46905

    No Realism in 1956 Movies

    Filmed on a sound stage for the most part. If Saving Private Ryan is a 10 star, this pitiful movie gets 1 star. They lost me when the Lieutenant came in the quonset hut wearing a shiny leather A-2 jacket. The replacements showing up in dress uniforms. I will give them credit for the double buttoned cargo pocketed paratrooper jackets. But in real life these troopers shaved their heads except for a mohawk, and the pitiful Lt had long blonde hair. No wonder audiences gave up films for television in the 1950s.
    qhtmike

    C119's

    In the beginning of the film there are C119 with jumpers exiting them, in practice jump, as the title credits run the jumper are exiting a C-47, a DC-3! I'm pretty sure there were no C-119 flying in France on D-Day!

    The LT tells the squad way too much information as they are going to 'town!' They would have been restricted to the post, if they could be leaving on 30 minutes notice!

    The stock footage of the C47's before the jump over France are painted wrong!
    patsw

    Interesting and unusual

    Tom Tryon's first movie. He is over the top as being the most unlikeable soldier in the 101st Division. Some 20 miles behind German lines on Day-D minus 12 hours they are casually taking prisioners. They encounter a tri-lingual French woman for sweet talking the Germans who let them pass thru to the American lines in the North. It's all highly improbable. The bad attitude shown by Private Mason (Tryon) should have gotten him transfered into a less critical position. I think of all the unlikely things in this movie, the fact that no one beats the stuffing out of Mason is the most unusual thing about the movie. Another strange thing about this movie, is that the unit doesn't accomplish its mission, you get reminded at the end what they were supposed to do in the first place.
    8SimonJack

    Very good WW II film about the paratroopers in D-Day

    "Screaming Eagles" is a very good World War II movie about the airborne role in Operation Overlord, better known as D-Day. This story follows 15 men of a platoon, including the platoon leader, of Company D of the 502nd Airborne Infantry Regiment. The 502nd then was part of the 101st Airbourne Division, known as the Screaming Eagles.

    The opening has the men of Lt. Pauling's platoon in England where they have been training for weeks for the assault on northern France. After three new replacements arrive, there are a couple more days before they get the word that D-Day is set for the next day, June 6, 1944. So, that night, they begin the assault phase of Overlord, called Operation Neptune. They are part of more than 13,000 Americans of the 82nd and 101st Airborne divisions that parachute into northern France the night of June 5. The naval bombardment and Allied troop assaults would take place the next day at five landing sites, with beaches named (West to East) Utah, Omaha, Gold, Juno and Sword.

    The missions of the airborne units were to secure bridges and block German reinforcements from reaching the coast at Utah Beach. As this film shows, the pilots didn't see the ground signals for drop zones, and when German anti-aircraft guns started firing on the planes, the troops jumped as soon as they could. As a result, the units were spread out and scattered over a large area. While they couldn't get organized to take all of their objectives immediately, the various smaller groups assembled on the ground were able to attack Germans at various locations. The resulting chaos confused the Germans so that they weren't able to mount strong reinforcements. And the Allied landings were soon able to break out of their beachheads.

    This story shows the engagements and combat that just one third of Lt. Pauling's platoon encountered. While he was blinded by the flash of a German's luger, Pauling could speak French with a young French woman they rescued when they assaulted Germans held up in her family's farmstead. Marianne, in turn, could speak German, so between them they were able to foil the Germans. When Pauling's group reaches the rest of his platoon who are assembled with their company at the bridge that was their mission,10 of his 15 men have been killed.

    The cast all do well in their roles. Among them are Tom Tryon as Private Mason, Jan Merlin as Lt. Pauling, Martin Milner as Pvt. Corliss, Jacqueline Beer as Marianne, Robert Blake as Pvt. Hernandez, Pat Conway as Sgt Forrest, and Edward G. Robinson Jr. As Pvt. Smith.

    There is one thing missing from this film - or, that would have been good to include. On June 5, the day before D-Day, the 101st Airborne Division men were paid a special visit by Gen. Dwight D., Eisenhower, the Allied Command-in-Chief. But, considering that this movie was made in 1956, and Ike was then sitting as President of the U. S., it was probably too much to ask him to make a cameo appearance back in uniform. And, of course, with the man himself living, no one was about to suggest a stand-in actor.

    Many more movies were made about WW II battles and combat. There have been films that focus on strategic planning, intelligence, and espionage. Combat movies have been made that focus on tanks, artillery, medics and field hospitals. There have been many movies made about aerial and naval combat. But many combat films have been about the infantry in Europe, Africa and Asia; and Marines in the South Pacific. That's because there were far more infantry and Marine units with many more operations and battles. Airborne (parachute) units were mostly infantry who were trained for assaults behind enemy lines and then regular ground fighting. So, while they would be called on for assaults, usually at the start of an operation, most of their time would then be spent engaged in ground combat.

    A few other movies show airborne training and/or combat jumps during WW II. They include "Parachute Battalion' of 1941, "Objective Burma" of 1945, the British "Paratrooper" of 1953, "The Longest Day" of 1962, and "A Bridge Too Far" of 1977. Some other movies have been made that have scenes of small groups or individuals jumping behind enemy lines. The 1944 film, "Battleground", is a very good film about the 101st Airborne Division that wouldn't retreat or surrender to the Germans in the Battle of the Bulge toward the end of the war. They held out until George Patton's Third Army arrived to reinforce them and push the Germans all the way back into defeat and surrender.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The uniforms and equipment the U.S. paratroopers wear in the film are fairly realistic for the D-Day period, including the white "card suit" markings the 101st Airborne Division used on the sides of their helmets to identify sub-units in the Division. The paratrooper's helmets in the film carry the heart suit of the 502nd Parachute Infantry Regiment.
    • Goofs
      The beginning of the movie with the opening credits shows paratroopers jumping from C-119 Flying Boxcar transport aircraft. The first C-119 made its initial flight in November 1947, over 3 years after the period the movie depicts, (June 1944)
    • Quotes

      Lt. Pauling: Whatever you find, don't try any fighting alone. Ya Got that? We do our fighting together.

    • Connections
      Referenced in Air Force Academy (1986)

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • December 12, 1956 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Languages
      • French
      • German
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Mit blanker Waffe
    • Filming locations
      • Fort Benning, Georgia, USA
    • Production company
      • Bischoff-Diamond Corporation
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 19 minutes
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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