Go figure that a movie
about a military operation that was thwarted by excessive ambition would itself
be thwarted by excessive ambition. Based on the doomed World War II campaign
code-named Operation Market Garden, which was staged in late 1944 by Allied
forces eager to maximize the gains of D-Day by ending the European component of
the war with a push across Holland into Germany, A Bridge Too Far features one of the most impressive all-star casts
of the ’70s, in addition to spectacular production values and a few powerful
depictions of heroism and tragedy. Furthermore, the movie deserves ample praise
for bucking war-movie convention by dramatizing a campaign that didn’t work.
And, indeed, the theme evoked by the poetic title—sometimes, just one X factor
stands between glory and ignominy—comes across in several key performances. Yet
occasional glimpses of effective storytelling do not equal a completely
satisfying movie, and A Bridge Too Far
fails on many important levels when analyzed in its entirety.
The movie is hard
to follow, because it tracks too many characters in too many locations, and
because, quite frankly, director Richard Attenborough fails to give greater
dramatic weight to crucial moments. Everything in A Bridge Too Far is presented with almost exactly the same measure
of gravitas, so Attenborough squanders interesting potentialities found
throughout the movie’s script, which was penned by two-time Oscar winner
William Goldman. Clearly, Attenborough and Goldman were both stymied, to a
degree, by the sheer scale of the undertaking; producer Joseph E. Levine made
it plain he wanted this movie to equal the 1962 epic The Longest Day, another all-star war picture based on a book by
Cornelius Ryan.
Yet while The Longest Day
had the advantages of a triumphant subject (D-Day) and a receptive audience
(moviegoers still embraced pro-military themes in the early ’60s), A Bridge Too Far is a far different
creature—a story of battlefield hubris made at a time when America was still
reeling from the traumas of the Vietnam War. So, even if the movie possessed a
clearer narrative, chances are it still would’ve been the wrong movie at the
wrong time.
Having said all that, A
Bridge Too Far has many noteworthy elements. The subject matter is
fascinating, since Ryan’s book itemized the innumerable strategic errors made
by the Allies in planning Operation Market Garden—beyond problems of scale,
since the campaign involved things like an air drop of 35,000 paratroopers, the
plan was so contingent upon component elements that if any one piece of the
plan failed, the whole campaign would collapse. Therefore, the movie is a study of
men who represent the margin of error that Operation Market Garden cannot
afford—whether they’re Americans, Brits, or Poles, the soldiers in this movie
try to achieve the impossible even when it’s plainly evident success is
beyond their grasp.
The most vivid moments involve Sean Connery and Anthony
Hopkins as British officers trying to hold the Dutch town of Arnhem for days on
end despite a crippling lack of reinforcements and supplies. Robert Redford
dominates a key sequence in the third and final hour of the movie, playing an American
officer who leads a seemingly suicidal charge across a heavily fortified river
in broad daylight. Maximilian Schell makes an elegant impression as a German
commander capable of mercy and ruthlessness, while Dirk Bogarde is
appropriately infuriating as Schell’s opposite number on the Allied side, a
British general who refuses to acknowledge the possibility of failure.
Unfortunately, many promising characterizations are merely sketches: Actors
Michael Caine, Edward Fox, Elliot Gould, Gene Hackman, Hardy Kruger, Laurence
Olivier, Ryan O’Neal, and Liv Ullmann each have colorful moments, but all are
badly underutilized. And as for James Caan, his entire showy sequence could
have been deleted without affecting the story, since his subplot feels like a
leftover from a World War II movie actually made during World War II. Ironically, though, his are among the film’s
most memorable scenes.
A Bridge Too Far: FUNKY
For me the weakest element of the movie is John Addison's inappropriately jaunty music.
ReplyDeleteI saw this film 4 times in 1977 when I was 8 years old. It is one of the best war films ever made, I should know, I've watched hundreds of them over the years. a film about military failure did do well at the box office. Joseph E. Levine got his $25 million back and more besides. The spy who loved me at the time only cost $13 million I believe. Action and acting of highest order. Score bloody good too, written by a man who actually was in the British Armoured Divisions in this campaign. The attack over the German SS Panzer grenadiers in their armoured column is one of the highlights, along with the parachute drops, British breakout to link up with the paras.
ReplyDeleteOne of my favourite lines has to be about JOHNNY FROSTS friend who is dying and explains why he carries umbrella, as he always forgot the password, knew no German would carry one. "HAD TO PROVE I WAS AN ENGLISHMAN"
ALL DONE FOR REAL BEFORE DAYS OF CGI.
10 OUT OF 10
I remember it got mixed reviews upon release; it seems to have aged well, though, and its stature has somewhat improved over time.
ReplyDelete