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Le combat du Capitaine Newman

Original title: Captain Newman, M.D.
  • 1963
  • Approved
  • 2h 6m
IMDb RATING
6.9/10
3.1K
YOUR RATING
Le combat du Capitaine Newman (1963)
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ComedyDramaWar

In 1944, an Army doctor is in charge of a neuropsychiatric ward at an Army Air Corps hospital in Arizona, and he must deal with a variety of tough cases.In 1944, an Army doctor is in charge of a neuropsychiatric ward at an Army Air Corps hospital in Arizona, and he must deal with a variety of tough cases.In 1944, an Army doctor is in charge of a neuropsychiatric ward at an Army Air Corps hospital in Arizona, and he must deal with a variety of tough cases.

  • Director
    • David Miller
  • Writers
    • Richard L. Breen
    • Phoebe Ephron
    • Henry Ephron
  • Stars
    • Gregory Peck
    • Tony Curtis
    • Angie Dickinson
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.9/10
    3.1K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • David Miller
    • Writers
      • Richard L. Breen
      • Phoebe Ephron
      • Henry Ephron
    • Stars
      • Gregory Peck
      • Tony Curtis
      • Angie Dickinson
    • 48User reviews
    • 20Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 3 Oscars
      • 10 nominations total

    Videos1

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    Trailer 0:58
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    Photos43

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    Top cast59

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    Gregory Peck
    Gregory Peck
    • Capt. Josiah J. Newman, MD
    Tony Curtis
    Tony Curtis
    • Cpl. Jackson 'Jake' Leibowitz
    Angie Dickinson
    Angie Dickinson
    • Lt. Francie Corum
    Eddie Albert
    Eddie Albert
    • Col. Norval Algate Bliss
    James Gregory
    James Gregory
    • Col. Edgar Pyser
    Bethel Leslie
    Bethel Leslie
    • Mrs. Helene Winston
    Robert Duvall
    Robert Duvall
    • Capt. Paul Cabot Winston
    Jane Withers
    Jane Withers
    • Lt. Grace Blodgett
    Dick Sargent
    Dick Sargent
    • Lt. Belden 'Barney' Alderson
    Larry Storch
    Larry Storch
    • Cpl. Gavoni
    Robert F. Simon
    Robert F. Simon
    • Lt. Col. M.B. Larrabee
    Syl Lamont
    • Sgt. Kopp
    Paul Carr
    Paul Carr
    • Arthur Werbel
    Vito Scotti
    Vito Scotti
    • Maj. Alfredo Fortuno
    Crahan Denton
    Crahan Denton
    • Maj. Gen. Snowden
    Gregory Walcott
    Gregory Walcott
    • Capt. Howard
    Charlie Briggs
    • Gorkow
    • (as Charles Briggs)
    Bobby Darin
    Bobby Darin
    • Cpl. Jim Tompkins
    • Director
      • David Miller
    • Writers
      • Richard L. Breen
      • Phoebe Ephron
      • Henry Ephron
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews48

    6.93.1K
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    Featured reviews

    9bkoganbing

    The Army Air Corp's Own Snake Pit

    For reasons I don't understand Captain Newman MD has always been singled out for criticism, most particularly directed at Gregory Peck saying he's too stiff for comedy. I don't agree on a number of levels and this is one of my favorite films with him.

    First and foremost Peck's role is not one of comedy. What he does in the film is serve as Tony Curtis's straight man. Now his role is a comic one and very funny indeed.

    Peck runs the psychiatric ward in an Army Air Corps Hospital out in the Arizona desert during World War II. There's no way a man like Peck would be in the command of George S. Patton who just didn't believe in Peck's whole profession. And in Patton like fashion if someone isn't shipped back to command in twelve weeks, Peck hears about it.

    Captain Newman, MD is a serious film about such people and they are at the heart of the story with Peck trying his best to fix the broken minds and psyches in our Armed Forces. Three of his cases are the drunken, guitar playing corporal Bobby Darin, the catatonic flier Robert Duvall, and Eddie Albert the colonel who has gone psychotic. Peck has a mixed record of success with these three and with others in his ward.

    Bobby Darin got an Academy Award nomination for Best Supporting Actor, it's a fine performance but he lost that year to Melvyn Douglas for Hud. But personally I feel that Eddie Albert stole Captain Newman, MD from the rest of the cast. It's a tossup between this role and Attack for the best performances of Albert's carer.

    Robert Duvall always credited Peck with giving him a good start to his long career with key roles in To Kill A Mockingbird and Captain Newman, MD. Funny thing is that Duvall has little dialog here and none in To Kill A Mockingbird. Far from the well spoken attorney who was consigliere to The Godfather. He's matched in his performance by his wife played by Bethel Leslie who is apparently much influenced by Grace Kelly in her performance. She's his prim and proper wife who tries to stir his interest in an attempt at an unusual kind of shock therapy.

    Aiding Peck in his treatment of his patients are nurses Angie Dickinson and Jane Withers and orderlies Tony Curtis and Larry Storch. In his memoirs Tony Curtis says that he got along very well with Gregory Peck who he says was one of the best class acts in Hollywood. He didn't get along all that well with director David Miller who wanted Curtis to be more ethnic in his interpretation of Corporal Jackson Leibowitz. Curtis won out and I think he was right in this case. A friend of Tony Curtis's since childhood is Larry Storch and because of that Storch appears in a few films with Curtis. As Peck was Tony's straight man, Storch becomes his comic foil in a couple of scenes and they work well together.

    Captain Newman, MD is a classic film, both entertaining and thought provoking, about the treatment of mental breakdowns among our military. As we certainly now are a country at war, Captain Newman, MD has a relevancy today that is timely. Absolutely do not miss it when it is broadcast.
    7lee_eisenberg

    military psychiatry

    Hot off "To Kill a Mockingbird", Gregory Peck played another really good role in David Miller's "Captain Newman, M.D.". This time he's a psychiatrist on an army base in WWII having to deal with what we now recognize as PTSD, while also dealing with the military bureaucracy. In a way, the movie almost seems like a preview of the war in which the United States was about to mire itself (the Vietnam War). Fine support comes from Tony Curtis as a streetwise corporal and Angie Dickinson as a tolerant lieutenant, along with Eddie Albert, Bobby Darin and Robert Duvall as Peck's damaged patients.

    Without a doubt this is one that I recommend. Maybe it's not as good as "To Kill a Mockingbird" - a little silly at times - but still a solid look at the world with which the psychiatrist has to put up.

    Also starring Bethel Leslie, James Gregory, Robert F. Simon, Dick Sargent*, Larry Storch, Jane Withers and Vito Scotti.

    *Robert F. Simon and Dick Sargent played father and son on "Bewitched". Also, Vito Scotti guest-starred on an episode.
    8planktonrules

    an excellent depiction of psychiatry

    I previously gave a terrible review to Peck's movie Spellbound. This movie just goes to show that he CAN make a good movie about psychiatry (unlike Spellbound--yuck).

    Peck is an officer running a psychiatric ward stateside during WWII. He has a good heart and good intentions and tries a lot of different techniques to help these men. What I like is that although he is generally successful, it is very clear Captain Newman feels, at times, over his head dealing with these many patients. He is not a SUPERMAN but a decent guy who's trying his best.

    Tony Curtis is the comic relief. So, while the movie is VERY serious at times, it also can be rather comical. This is a tough balance but it is done well and I liked Curtis in this film.

    However, apart from Gregory Peck, the real standout in the movie is Bobby Darin. Although he only is a supporting player, his is the meatiest performance. He wonderfully plays a man suffering from Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (though he outwardly hides it with bravado and obnoxiousness)--this is particularly true when he is under the influence of Sodium Pentathol (or some other "truth serum"). I would say it is worth seeing the film just for this sequence--it's just so nice that there are many other good moments to recommend this flick.
    8amazeika

    On DVD at las

    With all due respect to HAL-900, Bobby Darin's excellent portrayal as "Little Jim" HAD to be less than subtle in order to allow the also very excellent Robert Duval to play his character as subtly as he did. Gregory Peck is excellent as the stalwart Psychiatrist dealing with medical as well as bureaucratic challenges. Angie Dickinson IS pretty much just for show, but she NEVER looked better. Yes, Peck's 'drunk' is a tad corny but necessary to show that he was not invulnerable to the suffering that whirled about him. Tony Curtis and Larry Storch provide (necessary) comic relief. Modern Psychiatry was still in it's infancy when this movie is set and a long way from where it is today when the movie was produced. Gregory Peck starred in a LOT of excellent films and I number CAPTAIN NEWMAN, MD among them. It is part of TCMs library so catch it if you can.(Added 11/01/08)Huzzah! A new GREGGORY PECK DVD collection will be released November 4th, 2008 and CAPTAIN NEWMAN, MD is one of the titles included along with TO KILL A MOCKINGBIRD, CAPE FEAR, ARABESQUE and THE WORLD IN HIS ARMS.
    7secondtake

    Pre-MASH wartime hospital mix of comedy and tragedy

    Captain Newman, M.D. (1963)

    Almost twenty years after WWII, a movie that reflected the growing public admission that there were many psychological victims from the war, often ignored or minimized at the time (unlike, say, Vietnam, which was just unfolding, and which demanded a different kind of accountability). And this one is set in the middle of the war, though in an Arizona military hospital far from direct action.

    The star is certainly the title character, played by Gregory Peck, and Peck is his usual highly respectable self, moral and a natural leader, but likable and willing to take chances, too. That is, an ideal male, in many ways, the kind you might like to have as President, or at least the chief doctor in your hospital. He is, in particular, in charge of the mental ward, and his main intern played by Tony Curtis steals the show, on purpose. While much of the movie is funny, or at least peculiar enough to be ironic and wry, there are moments of heartfelt tragedy and even heartwrenching trauma (especially when a couple of the inmates go berserk). Third in line is a strong, sympathetic nurse (Angie Dickinson) and these three run the ward with unusual verve and intelligence. It clearly is a case in favor of the military giving good psych treatment.

    There are several interesting patients, as well as a band of Italian POWs brought in for some nice comic relief (and for a reminder that people are people, even if they are enemies). The most famous and unusual is played by Bobby Darin, who I just saw in another movie from the period where he played a patient in an army psych ward, the riveting "Pressure Point." This is a whole different kind of movie, though Darin's performance is strong in similar ways in both cases. Here he even plays an impressive ten seconds on the guitar, and if you watch closely you'll see it's the real deal, not recorded later.

    The color in the filming is unusually clear and vivid in a realistic way, and Russell Metty behind the camera has made a number of really solid, beautiful, richly colorful films ("That Touch of Mink" and "Imitation of Life" as well as the more earthy "The Misfits"). The lighting is usually fairly bright and broad, though there are some scenes pumped up with shadows. A couple of shots toward the end are oddly filmed against an obvious back projections (when they are rounding up the sheep) which is too bad because otherwise the standards are very high. Director David Miller isn't especially legendary, but he has one terrific film I'd recommend to anyone, "Sudden Fear" made a decade earlier. Here he shows general high production values and a sense of humor (mostly through the endlessly lively Curtis).

    A nice little colorful film with a gently persuasive subtext.

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    Captain Newman, M.D.

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Author Leo Rosten based the character of Captain Josiah Newman on his friend, Captain Ralph Greenson, a U.S. Army psychiatrist who worked with traumatized airmen during World War II, and was one of the first to identify the symptoms of Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder following combat.
    • Goofs
      Even though the story is taking place in 1944, hairstyles, uniforms and clothes are from 1963.
    • Quotes

      Capt. Josiah J. Newman, MD: You mustn't confuse sadness with depression, "professor."

      Cpl. Jackson 'Jake' Leibowitz: Is there any difference? Can a man look sad and still be happy?

      Capt. Josiah J. Newman, MD: Yes.

      Cpl. Jackson 'Jake' Leibowitz: Example?

      Capt. Josiah J. Newman, MD: You.

    • Connections
      Featured in Biography: Bobby Darin: I Want to Be a Legend (2001)
    • Soundtracks
      Jingle Bells
      Written by James Pierpont (uncredited)

      Performed by Tony Curtis and the people from the Hospital

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • March 20, 1964 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Languages
      • English
      • Italian
    • Also known as
      • Capitán Newman
    • Filming locations
      • Fort Huachuca, Arizona, USA
    • Production companies
      • Brentwood Productions
      • Reynard Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      2 hours 6 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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