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In 1944, during a sabotage mission, the sole surviving U.S. paratrooper is saved by a group of Italian orphans who later aid him in blowing up a vital enemy dam.In 1944, during a sabotage mission, the sole surviving U.S. paratrooper is saved by a group of Italian orphans who later aid him in blowing up a vital enemy dam.In 1944, during a sabotage mission, the sole surviving U.S. paratrooper is saved by a group of Italian orphans who later aid him in blowing up a vital enemy dam.
Giacomo Rossi Stuart
- Schwalberg
- (as Giacomo Rossi-Stuart)
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(1970) Hornets' Nest
WAR
Although the movie is not base on fact, this movie experience is still an involving one to the same degree as other fictional war movies such as "Where Eagles Dare", "The Bridge on the River Kwai", "The Guns of Navarone" and "The Dirty Dozen" to name a few.
The opening has families of the young boys looking out hiding behind the bushes while the SS were lining them across the road, before Captain Friedrich Von Hect (Sergio Fantoni) asks them where "The Partisans" are! And when nobody would not give him an answer, they are then gunned down while the young boys look on helplessly, motivating them to seek for a little retribution. We are then introduced to Turner (Rock Hudson) and his recruits, and just as they are parachuting off from a plane and coming down, they are then met with SS men shooting at the resistance fighters as they are coming out of the bushes and killing all of the parachuter's except for one, who happens to be Turner played by Rock Hudson. And because one of the resistance fighters double crossed them, he was immediately shot and killed. And while Turner was hanging on a tree, the boys then manage to reach to him first, cut him down and hid him inside of a cave. The boys leader, Aldo (Mark Colleano) then goes back down to the village, only so he can fetch a doctor as none of them know whether he was hit or not. And it is not long before Aldo suspects he too may be double crossed as well, as he manages to escape before he was being seen. After barely escaping, he then managed to use one of the boys to convince a female doctor (Sylva Koscina) who was actually a surgeon to come with them. They hold her hostage calling Turner, Soldier and calling her Fraulein. We then find out he is heavily bruised, and she does eventually treat him. We later find out that the resistance boys kept "Soldier" alive because they want him to train them how to use a machine gun, while his objective was to blow up a particular dam. We then find out that besides showing them how to shoot, they also wanted Soldier to guide them to get back at some of the SS who gunned down their families. We also find out that this a group of about 15 boys who are taking on two tasks.
While I was watching this, I had my own assumptions how it was going to be ended, but was quite relieved that my presumptions were not the way that it happened.
Although the movie is not base on fact, this movie experience is still an involving one to the same degree as other fictional war movies such as "Where Eagles Dare", "The Bridge on the River Kwai", "The Guns of Navarone" and "The Dirty Dozen" to name a few.
The opening has families of the young boys looking out hiding behind the bushes while the SS were lining them across the road, before Captain Friedrich Von Hect (Sergio Fantoni) asks them where "The Partisans" are! And when nobody would not give him an answer, they are then gunned down while the young boys look on helplessly, motivating them to seek for a little retribution. We are then introduced to Turner (Rock Hudson) and his recruits, and just as they are parachuting off from a plane and coming down, they are then met with SS men shooting at the resistance fighters as they are coming out of the bushes and killing all of the parachuter's except for one, who happens to be Turner played by Rock Hudson. And because one of the resistance fighters double crossed them, he was immediately shot and killed. And while Turner was hanging on a tree, the boys then manage to reach to him first, cut him down and hid him inside of a cave. The boys leader, Aldo (Mark Colleano) then goes back down to the village, only so he can fetch a doctor as none of them know whether he was hit or not. And it is not long before Aldo suspects he too may be double crossed as well, as he manages to escape before he was being seen. After barely escaping, he then managed to use one of the boys to convince a female doctor (Sylva Koscina) who was actually a surgeon to come with them. They hold her hostage calling Turner, Soldier and calling her Fraulein. We then find out he is heavily bruised, and she does eventually treat him. We later find out that the resistance boys kept "Soldier" alive because they want him to train them how to use a machine gun, while his objective was to blow up a particular dam. We then find out that besides showing them how to shoot, they also wanted Soldier to guide them to get back at some of the SS who gunned down their families. We also find out that this a group of about 15 boys who are taking on two tasks.
While I was watching this, I had my own assumptions how it was going to be ended, but was quite relieved that my presumptions were not the way that it happened.
I was flipping channels and came upon Hornet's Nest. I thought I was watching Force 10 From Navarone (no digital cable) until the hospital scene. The movie had elapsed 20 minutes but for some reason I was drawn into the story. There was quite a lot of carnage in the movie and I hope I had to assume that Rock raped the doctor lady. The real character that you have to clap for is the German Captain that was dissed by all his superiors pretty much for the whole movie when he was just doing his job in the best interest of the Fatherland.
I went through all possible emotions during the flick and was overall happy with the movie having never seen it before. I had to log onto the database to know it's title which brings me to making my comments. I give it a 7.
I went through all possible emotions during the flick and was overall happy with the movie having never seen it before. I had to log onto the database to know it's title which brings me to making my comments. I give it a 7.
I saw this film many years ago when it was panned because children were being used in a war movie. That attitude reflected the times in which it was produced.
People wanted Anti War movies like "The Deer Hunter" or heroic battle epics like "Tora, Tora, Tora".
Movies that brought the stark reality of war too near were not well received.
"Hornet's Nest", was made in Italy and like the movie, "Two Women", made ten years before, it was not widely popular in the United States. Although "Two Women", gave Sophia Loren new respect as an actress and received an Oscar for Best Foreign Film, it did not receive favor from the public.
The patriotism of World War II had faded by the 1970's and the public demonstrations against Viet Nam were gaining force when "Hornets Nest" was released. It was seen as a glorification of war and a fading star like Rock Hudson could not save it.
Ironically one of the actors playing an SS officer in the movie was a French Partisan who spent a year in Buchenwald after the Nazi's captured him. The one female star, Sylvia Koscina, was a child in Yugoslavia, during the war and had memories of the Nazi occupation.
Sophia Loren began filming this movie and withdrew because it recalled too much of the trauma of her childhood in war time Italy.
The children who made this movie did a good job of showing the effect of war on young minds. In spite of being little more than amateurs the acting was capable. The one young actor who was professional, Mark Colleano, was particularly talented. He played Aldo , the leader of the partisan children. His last scene brought tears to my eyes.
It was not intended to be an easy picture to watch. Those reviewers who made snide remarks about Rock Hudson's sexual preferences and the nudity of the teen and child actors in the movie were simply revealing their own salacious nature. They deliberately missed the point.
In retrospect this film was made before it's time. Based on actual events where Nazi troops committed atrocities against entire villages it was meant to remind the world of the savagery of a totalitarian military that had absolute control over the lives of helpless populations. It foreshadowed the massacres committed by the Soviet troops who took over Eastern Europe and much of the territory bordering the USSR. Massacres in Hungary, and in Poland and the building of the Berlin Wall
Since then we have seen movies like "Schindler's List", "Hotel Rwanda", "The Killing Fields" and "Empire of the Sun", win awards. They all show the atrocity and dehumanizing effects of war in a much more graphic manner than does "Hornets Nest", as do many, many, other well respected films. Though "Hornet's Nest" can't compare in quality to them it did not have the budget nor the huge cast they had either.
In the years since " Hornets Nest", the world has been treated to Bosnia, Rwanda, Somalia, and Serbia, where women and children are victims and participants in total warfare. It prefaced the time of child soldiers who watch their families slaughtered and go on to commit unspeakable acts themselves.
All of these years later this picture is still relevant. Children become partisan fighters much like the boys in this film. Children turn themselves into human bombs or carry guns for ISIS. Boy soldiers live and die in the jungles of the Philippines or as pirates off the coast of Somalia.
Savage child soldiers in Africa showed the whole world how easy it is to create baby-killers and how hard it is to return them to what they once were, Children.
In Afghanistan, Syria, Yemen, Libya, children are carrying weapons and fighting as adults. Boys and girls are being robbed of both their childhood and their future.
I watched "Hornets Nest" again tonight and it brought tears to my eyes. These children, dirty, ragged, hungry orphans, had managed to survive and had taken vengeance on their tormentors, but in doing so, they had lost something irreplaceable. They had lost their innocence and a part of their humanity. Although they survived they were truly victims of a terrible war.
Maybe watching this movie in todays context makes the point it did not when it was first released. War is bad for children and other living things.
Being safe and smug in a country free from these things, we can put our children to bed with out fear of bombs or machine guns waking them. But in many parts of the world that is not the case.
So is this movie so ridiculous? Is it so unrealistic? Is it a joke because Rock Hudson turned out to be a Gay man?
I don't think so. I think the movie deserves a respectful viewing and some recognition at long last.
It has been argued the Germans during World War Two made a number of mistakes with the various countries they conquered. In some cases, those mistakes were colossal. Take this film for instance. It's called " Hornets Nest " and takes place in 1944, near Reanoto, Italy. The small village is suspected of aiding the Partisans. These guerrilla, groups have become so annoying to the Germans, the local military Italian governor is replaced by a brutal SS Officer. Upon reaching the town, he rounds up the villagers and order them to reveal the Partisans upon pain of death. Bad mistake, but one which the Germans inflict with Nazi efficiency. Their children, learn the US military is sending a team of Commandos to destroy the dam near the town. The SS discover the drop zone and massacre all the airborne troops except one. The single survivor called Turner (Rock Hudson) awakens from his wounds and discovers he owes his life to a group of Teenage boys. Informed the SS is searching for him, Turner also learns an experience German Officer name Von Hecht (Sergio Fantoni) is also closing in on his whereabouts. Realizing, he has little choice, Turner decides to use his hate-filled and revenge seeking youths to continue his mission to destroy the dam. Accompanying him is a kidnapped female doctor (Sylva Koscina) who reluctantly joins the group. The movie itself is interesting in that instead of battle hard soldiers, Hudson has to first teach the kids to kill and then later must reverse his lessons. To the credit of the young cast, the teens lead by vengeance seeking Aldo (Mark Colleano) do a remarkable job of acting. From deep sorrow to hate spewing machine-gun scenes, they add to the over the top drama. In all, this action film does an honest job of creating a military Classic. However, much as I enjoy Hudson the actor, I can't help feel Charles Bronson or Burt Lancaster would have been a better choice as Husdon is not convincing as a rapist of women or abuser of children. ****
"Hornets' Nest" (1970) is far from a great World War II film, but I have a soft spot for it and it does contain some highlights.
THE PLOT: The lone survivor of a paratrooper mission to blow up a dam in German-held Italy is rescued by a group of orphans, who live in a cave in the woods. Their families where slaughtered by the Germans and they want to use the soldier to help them get revenge whereas he wants to train the kids so they can help him blow the dam.
This is more of an Italian film than an American one and it shows in the Italian style of direction & editing, which sometimes comes off awkward.
Everyone speaks English but the Germans and Italians are heavily accented, so I suggest using the subtitles.
The biggest highlight is the moving score by Ennio Morricone. The second is the beautiful Sylva Koscina, who plays the doctor that nurses the soldier (Rock Hudson) to health and hangs around the outcasts the entire film. Sylva is just breathtaking throughout (and fully-clothed the entire time, I might add).
Hudson is rock-solid as the taciturn soldier (sorry) and Mark Colleano is excellent as Aldo, the fanatical leader of the ragtag group of kids. He wants revenge at all costs and the young actor gets this across with passion. Sergio Fantoni is also notable as Captain Von Hecht; he's not a one-dimensional German officer and is actually a solid man who just got trapped on the wrong side of the war.
There are a couple of action sequences, one being pretty far-fetched (when the soldier & the kids mow-down an entire village of Germans while riding in an Army truck), but the action is usually swift and quiet in the order of guerilla tactics.
I like how the members of the outcast group, including the soldier and nurse, are always sweaty and dirty with messy hair and crumpled clothing. It smacks of how war really is -- dirty, sweaty and messy.
The presence of the stunning Sylva Koscina blows any theory of gay or pedophile subtext. If any other actor than Hudson played the role of the soldier, like Clint Eastwood or Charles Bronson, there would be no such inane theory. It doesn't exist.
In any event, "Hornets' Nest" was likely the blueprint for John Milius' "Red Dawn" (1984). The difference being that "Hornets' Nest" takes place in Italy during WWII and involves a younger group of kids.
The Italian locations are a huge plus; the film runs 110 minutes.
GRADE: B
THE PLOT: The lone survivor of a paratrooper mission to blow up a dam in German-held Italy is rescued by a group of orphans, who live in a cave in the woods. Their families where slaughtered by the Germans and they want to use the soldier to help them get revenge whereas he wants to train the kids so they can help him blow the dam.
This is more of an Italian film than an American one and it shows in the Italian style of direction & editing, which sometimes comes off awkward.
Everyone speaks English but the Germans and Italians are heavily accented, so I suggest using the subtitles.
The biggest highlight is the moving score by Ennio Morricone. The second is the beautiful Sylva Koscina, who plays the doctor that nurses the soldier (Rock Hudson) to health and hangs around the outcasts the entire film. Sylva is just breathtaking throughout (and fully-clothed the entire time, I might add).
Hudson is rock-solid as the taciturn soldier (sorry) and Mark Colleano is excellent as Aldo, the fanatical leader of the ragtag group of kids. He wants revenge at all costs and the young actor gets this across with passion. Sergio Fantoni is also notable as Captain Von Hecht; he's not a one-dimensional German officer and is actually a solid man who just got trapped on the wrong side of the war.
There are a couple of action sequences, one being pretty far-fetched (when the soldier & the kids mow-down an entire village of Germans while riding in an Army truck), but the action is usually swift and quiet in the order of guerilla tactics.
I like how the members of the outcast group, including the soldier and nurse, are always sweaty and dirty with messy hair and crumpled clothing. It smacks of how war really is -- dirty, sweaty and messy.
The presence of the stunning Sylva Koscina blows any theory of gay or pedophile subtext. If any other actor than Hudson played the role of the soldier, like Clint Eastwood or Charles Bronson, there would be no such inane theory. It doesn't exist.
In any event, "Hornets' Nest" was likely the blueprint for John Milius' "Red Dawn" (1984). The difference being that "Hornets' Nest" takes place in Italy during WWII and involves a younger group of kids.
The Italian locations are a huge plus; the film runs 110 minutes.
GRADE: B
Did you know
- TriviaThe film is based on a true World War II incident that occurred when the German army was making its last stand in Italy.
- GoofsWhen the German Major and German Captain enter the radio room after the raid on the village, the radioman 'corpse' in the chair clearly takes several quick controlled breaths by breathing with his abdomen, then visibly swallows, right before he starts holding his breath. He is immediately knocked out of his chair and out of frame off screen by the Captain, probably to prevent more visible breathing from a corpse on the film.
- ConnectionsReferenced in Django Unchained (2012)
- How long is Hornets' Nest?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Languages
- Also known as
- Hornets' Nest
- Filming locations
- Gazzola, Provincia di Piacenza, Emilia-Romagna, Italy(Castello di Rivalta)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
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By what name was L'assaut des jeunes loups (1970) officially released in India in English?
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