IMDb RATING
5.3/10
271
YOUR RATING
A squad member of a U.S. paratrooper unit in World War II accidentally shoots a member of his unit. The animosity of the other men against him grows as they battle their way across Italy.A squad member of a U.S. paratrooper unit in World War II accidentally shoots a member of his unit. The animosity of the other men against him grows as they battle their way across Italy.A squad member of a U.S. paratrooper unit in World War II accidentally shoots a member of his unit. The animosity of the other men against him grows as they battle their way across Italy.
James Beck
- Cowboy
- (as Jim Beck)
Sydney Lassick
- Interpreter
- (as Sid Lassick)
Robert Conrad
- Art
- (uncredited)
Dude Criswell
- Hans
- (uncredited)
Dick Crockett
- German #3
- (uncredited)
Carey Loftin
- Fritz
- (uncredited)
Hal Needham
- German #6
- (uncredited)
Cliff Rose
- German #5
- (uncredited)
Steve Ross
- Bill
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
"Paratroop Command" is not a typical sort of war film. It's from the ultra-cheap studio, American International Pictures. And, it's not really about a company or squad of men...more the story of one hard luck soldier during WWII.
When the story begins, Charlie (Richard Bakalyan) shoots a member of his own company....though it really isn't his fault. After all, the dead guy was dressed as a German soldier and was waving his fun about as if he was going to shoot Charlie's fellow soldiers! But one member of the company hounds Charlie...telling him that he murdered this man! And, through the course of the film, Charlie works had to overcome this distinction.
Despite the film being cheap and obviously filmed in California instead of North Africa and Italy, the story itself is sound and works because of it. While not a brilliant film by any means, it's a good example of a cheap movie done right.
When the story begins, Charlie (Richard Bakalyan) shoots a member of his own company....though it really isn't his fault. After all, the dead guy was dressed as a German soldier and was waving his fun about as if he was going to shoot Charlie's fellow soldiers! But one member of the company hounds Charlie...telling him that he murdered this man! And, through the course of the film, Charlie works had to overcome this distinction.
Despite the film being cheap and obviously filmed in California instead of North Africa and Italy, the story itself is sound and works because of it. While not a brilliant film by any means, it's a good example of a cheap movie done right.
Charlie (Bakalyan) joins the paratroops because he has failed at everything else in his life. When he accidently kills another GI, things really take a turn down. The cast of relative unknowns does a fine job, and Bakalyan shows flashes of brilliant acting ability that thus far have gone undiscovered. This one is low-buck all the way, puts stock war footage to good use, but well worth catching on the late show.
Meh. Way too unrealistic except for most of the uniforms..
This film was screened on Sony Movies Action the other evening, so I recorded it. I gave up after 15 minutes (so I missed the skinny-dipping scene mentioned by another reviewer). The battle scene (actually just a skirmish) went on and on, and it was difficult to distinguish who was who, not helped by none of the actors being familiar.
In the short running time of 71 minutes Paratroop Command follows a small group of soldiers participating in landing in North Africa, Sicily, and Salerno which in actual time was about a year and a half. One of them, Richard Bakalyn accidentally kills one of his comrades in friendly fire and can't quite win the trust of the other men, including his lieutenant Ken Lynch.
Not that the incident was his fault, it wasn't. In fact it was a rather stupid way for the other guy to get killed if you watch the movie. Still Bakalyn just can't get the others to trust him.
Directing Paratroop Command is William Witney who was one of Herbert J. Yates's best B western directors. He directed films with all of Republic's western stars. His grind them out style honed with years working for Yates shows in Paratroop Command.
Nothing terribly special here, just some veteran movie makers doing their thing.
Not that the incident was his fault, it wasn't. In fact it was a rather stupid way for the other guy to get killed if you watch the movie. Still Bakalyn just can't get the others to trust him.
Directing Paratroop Command is William Witney who was one of Herbert J. Yates's best B western directors. He directed films with all of Republic's western stars. His grind them out style honed with years working for Yates shows in Paratroop Command.
Nothing terribly special here, just some veteran movie makers doing their thing.
Did you know
- TriviaMentioned by Quentin Tarantino among his favorite war films.
- GoofsThe helmet of the Lieutenant (played by Ken Lynch) has a vertical white stripe on the back. In 1943, the US Army did not use the white stripes during the North Africa Campaign (vertical for officers, horizontal for NCO's). These were not added to the combat helmets until just before D-Day in 1944.
- Crazy creditsOpening credits prologue: INVASION OF AFRICA 1942
- ConnectionsReferenced in Nadja à Paris (1964)
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Paratroop Command
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 1h 11m(71 min)
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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