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Section 44

Original title: A Midnight Clear
  • 1992
  • R
  • 1h 48m
IMDb RATING
7.1/10
10K
YOUR RATING
Section 44 (1992)
text os
Play trailer1:04
1 Video
37 Photos
Period DramaDramaWar

The Ardennes Forest, December 1944. A squad of six US infantrymen is sent to occupy a house to use as an observation post as the German Army is expected to advance through that area. However... Read allThe Ardennes Forest, December 1944. A squad of six US infantrymen is sent to occupy a house to use as an observation post as the German Army is expected to advance through that area. However, the Germans seem oddly friendly.The Ardennes Forest, December 1944. A squad of six US infantrymen is sent to occupy a house to use as an observation post as the German Army is expected to advance through that area. However, the Germans seem oddly friendly.

  • Director
    • Keith Gordon
  • Writers
    • William Wharton
    • Keith Gordon
  • Stars
    • Peter Berg
    • Kevin Dillon
    • Arye Gross
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.1/10
    10K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Keith Gordon
    • Writers
      • William Wharton
      • Keith Gordon
    • Stars
      • Peter Berg
      • Kevin Dillon
      • Arye Gross
    • 99User reviews
    • 24Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 nomination total

    Videos1

    A Midnight Clear
    Trailer 1:04
    A Midnight Clear

    Photos37

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    Top cast22

    Edit
    Peter Berg
    Peter Berg
    • Bud Miller
    Kevin Dillon
    Kevin Dillon
    • Cpl. Mel Avakian
    Arye Gross
    Arye Gross
    • Stan Shutzer
    Ethan Hawke
    Ethan Hawke
    • Sgt. Will Knott
    Gary Sinise
    Gary Sinise
    • Vance 'Mother' Wilkins
    Frank Whaley
    Frank Whaley
    • Paul 'Father' Mundy
    John C. McGinley
    John C. McGinley
    • Major Griffin
    Larry Joshua
    Larry Joshua
    • Lieutenant Ware
    David Jensen
    • Sergeant Hunt
    Curt Lowens
    Curt Lowens
    • Older German Soldier
    Rachel Griffin
    • Janice
    Timothy S. Shoemaker
    • Eddie
    • (as Tim Shoemaker)
    Kelly Gately
    • Young German Soldier
    Bill Osborn
    • American Sentry
    Andre Lamal
    • German Soldier
    Jim Beatty
    • American Soldier
    • (uncredited)
    Matt Bohling
    • Young German Soldier
    • (uncredited)
    Robert Chynoweth
    • Young German Soldier
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Keith Gordon
    • Writers
      • William Wharton
      • Keith Gordon
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews99

    7.110.3K
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    Featured reviews

    7ma-cortes

    A brooding and sensitive warlike film that takes place in the Ardennes Forest dealing with an American platoon to locate the enemy

    Adapted from the novel by William Wharton , with interesting script by director Keith Gordon himself, providing an absorving and stylised rendition , while acting is uniformly over-the-top and exploring issues of faith and morality about US and German soldiers, as both sides are determined to survive . It takes place in the Ardennes Forest , near the French-German enemy-line border , in December 1944 . The end of WWII approaches and it's Christmastime when six of the remaining members of a 12-member squad are sent on a perilous mission , as they settle at an abandoned , deserted cabin in order to report on enemy movements, but short of rations decide to explore all around . The American Intelligence Squad locates a strange German platoon stalking here and there . The German foes remain elusive , and after making contact with these young , nervous young men , the enemy soldiers prove strangely unwilling to attack and wishing to surrender rather than die in Germany's final war offensive, but then things go wrong.

    A thrilling wartime movie set in 1944 France, in the Ardennes forest region, at an isolated location with a handful of GIs and a band of of combat-weary Germans , displaying an intelligent story , emotion , solid storyline , enjoyable message and good feeling . A sensitive and thought-provoking movie in which a sense of anquish filtrates throughout the tale , moving inexorably towards spiritual reckoning and lethal confrontation . A worthwhile seeing psychological drama pits the message of peace against the stupidity of war . Packing a top-notch cast wiith full of future big stars and notorious secondaries , including as follows : Ethan Hawke , Gary Sinese , Kevin Dillon , Peter Berg , Frank Whaley , Ayrie Gross , John C. McGinley , David Jensen , Larry Joshua , Rachel Griffin who married director Keith Gordon , among others , all off them give nice interpretations .

    Colorful cinematography by Tom Richmond , shot in a dreamy surreal style , as the setting is somewhat reminiscent of a fairytale . As well as moving and touching musical score by Mark Isham . This thoughtful motion picture was compellingly written/directd by Keith Gordon . He's a good actor and filmmaker. Appeared with Kevin Bacon in Off-Broadway theater when they were both starting out as actors. Standing out his characters in Brian De Palma's Home Movies , Back to School (1986) , John Carpenter's Christine , Charles Shyer's I Love Trouble . He quit acting to become a director. As he made the following ones : Mother Night (1996), Walking the dead , The singing detective , The chocolate war and several episodes of famous TV series as Nurse Jackie , The Leftovers , Dexter , The Returned , Masters of Sex , Strain , The Bridge , Homeland , Legion , Fargo , Better Call Saul , among others . Rating : 7/10. Above average. Well worth watching. Essential and indispensable seeing for WWII lovers.
    8planktonrules

    A bit like the fine French film "Joyeaux Noel", though set during WWII.

    "A Midnight Clear" is a film that reminds me of the wonderful French film, "Joyeaux Noel". However, instead of being set during WWI, this American film is set just before the Battle of the Bulge in WWII. Both occur at Christmas time...and both involve a strange sort of cessation of hostilities.

    The story is about a tiny reconnaissance group of American soldiers. They have the thankless task of scouting ahead of the rest of the army...and not surprisingly many in their small unit have already been killed. There are two main plots that result. First, they are discovered by a group of German soldiers who do not attack but instead wish to surrender. But, in order to prevent the SS back home from taking retribution against them for not fighting, they propose to make it look like they surrendered only after a horrible fire fight. Sadly, it does NOT go down as they'd planned. Second, after this, when the Major meets up with them, this commanding officer mostly screams at them and threatens them...and leaves them back at their forward base. When the German offensive begins, they're soon stuck behind enemy lines and they have to work hard to find their way back to the Allied lines.

    Despite some similarities to "Joyeaux Noel", it is different enough and somber enough to be a different film viewing experience. For the most part, it's just the story of a few men trying to survive...and the thankless tasks they've been given. Well made and worth seeing.
    7boblipton

    Not A Merry Christmas

    T's a story about a squad of foot soldiers caught in the Battle of the Bulge. They are youngsters, thrown into the battle, trapped behind enemy lines in the freezing Ardennes, trying to survive. Some of them will.

    It's a good place, I think to tell my family story about the Bulge. My uncle was a foot soldier in the battle. He was stuck in a fox hole with an Italian POW who agreed to fight with the American forces. A shell landed right on them, blowing my uncle out of the foxhole, ripping off all his clothes. When a jeep showed up, the driver wanted to leave my uncle's body, but the man he was in insisted he not be left behind. My uncle's corpse was strapped to the front of the jeep like a shot deer, taken back to field headquarters, and dumped in the tent with the other dead soldiers, and soon my grandparents get their 'deeply regret' telegram. Some time later, a doctor, walking through the tent, thought he saw my uncle breathing, and revived him from the hypothermia he was in. He spent a few years in a wheelchair, and eventually made a full recovery. He died about fifteen year ago.

    Maybe it's that connection that makes this talky drama, shot in a freezing Utah winter, speak to me. Maybe it's the cast, including Peter Berg, Arye Gross, Kevin Dillon, Ethan Hawke, Gary Sinise (in his screen debut), and Frank Whaley. Maybe it's the sere, white cinematography of Tom Richmond. Whatever it is, it's a very worthwhile movie to watch on Memorial Day.
    9lost-in-limbo

    "I'm scared all the time."

    It's a war film, but an atypical and sober one at that. Probably war drama fits better. As there's a whole lot more to it than just action. On that count it has its moments, but really it's about the characters (if something of a coming of age) and the realisation that their enemy is just as reluctant and afraid as them. The script is meditatively thoughtful and the performances by a capable cast (Ethan Hawke, Kevin Dillon, Peter Berg, Gary Sinise, Frank Whaley, Arye Gross and John C. McGinley's pig-headed Major Griffin) are genuinely layered. This helps draw you in, feeling the joy but also the tragic nature that waits. It absorbingly paints the foolishness of war, where in a serenely ironic manner it all pans out. It follows a small young American reconnaissance platoon nearing the end of WW2 in Eastern Europe, which was put together due to them having the highest I.Q. in the army. Thinking that they would get better results, however on their mission they come across a patrol of German soldiers hiding from their inevitable fate and a special, if strange bond is formed between the two parties. Written and directed by Keith Gordon (who I'll always remember him as Arnie Cunningham from John Carpenter's 80s horror flick "Christine"), he does an effective job tailoring the welcoming humanity and the painstaking horrors of war through the visuals, dialogues, atmospheric surroundings and performances. The narrative moves back and forth early on dealing with past events that brought these American soldiers together, before settling on the straight-and-narrow. The material is rather offbeat and mellow, especially when it came to the interactions between the two groups. What seems unfathomable, becomes reality and then even playful (snowball fights?!). There's something simply haunting and forlorn about this presentation and you could probably attributed it to the beautifully moody, if glassy music score. It just stays with you. Like the final shot of the film, where the camera pans onto Hawke's face of despair and this is one powerfully heartfelt moment. "A Midnight Clear" is quite low-key and unpredictable in all, but hard to forget.

    "I'm through playing soldier."
    8moorespace

    True Story

    It is worth noting that Keith Gordon (director) met with William Wharton (book author and war veteran) on several occasions and was left with the impression that the 'story' Wharton told is true. Neither author or director could use the 'based on a true story' epitaph simply because the events are completely unverifiable; but reading the book -- and watching the film to a certain degree -- does give a sense that these events did occur.

    Knowing that the film is a reasonably accurate portrayal of real events -- William Wharton was said to be impressed by the final cut -- makes the events portrayed in the film even more moving. It also explains why the director chose to focus on certain scenes to keep the story flowing, it was as if he wanted to commit the 'story' to film before it was forgotten.

    Having said that, there are touches of directorial brilliance and subtlety in this bleak and wintry tale. For example, the panning shot of the squad of soldiers walking through the forest which finishes with the still picture of a frozen hand -- if you even notice it -- is unforgettable.

    These were true events according to the author; it is worth keeping that in mind when you watch the film.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Filming took place during the coldest winter in Utah in 83 years. The temperature dropped about thirty degrees during the night, when much of the action takes place. December of 1990 through January 1991 was especially cold, the average daytime high temperature was only 18.6 °F (-7.4 °C) and the average night low was 2.39 °F (-16.45 °C); the lowest daytime temp was 2 °F (-16.7 °C) and the lowest night temp was -11 °F (-23.9 °C).
    • Goofs
      Throughout the movie, the forest is predominantly comprised of white birch trees. This species is native only to North America and does not grow in the Ardennes Forest where the events take place.
    • Quotes

      Will Knott: I'm not exactly sure what country we're in. Could be Belgium, Luxembourg, France, or even Germany. I don't know what day it is. I have no watch, so I don't know what time it is. I'm not even sure of my name. The next thing you know, they'll be making me a general.

    • Connections
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert & the Movies: White Sands/A Midnight Clear/Passed Away/The Playboys/Delicatessen (1992)
    • Soundtracks
      The Jersey Bounce
      Recorded by Studo Music Department

      Written by Buddy Feyne, Bobby Plater (as Bobby Platter), Tiny Bradshaw and Edward Johnson

      Published by Lewis Music Publishing Co., Inc.

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    FAQ19

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • April 24, 1992 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Languages
      • English
      • German
    • Also known as
      • En la línea de ataque
    • Filming locations
      • Utah, USA
    • Production companies
      • A&M Films
      • Beacon Communications
      • Beacon Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $5,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $1,526,697
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $46,938
      • Apr 26, 1992
    • Gross worldwide
      • $1,526,697
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 48m(108 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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