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  • Duke-10222 May 2004
    Very underrated film, excellent action, realistic, with frantic battles and lulls where we get to see the various personalities of the excellent cast. McQueen is a hard nosed bitter Sarge - tough, would kill you as soon as look at you. Great comic touches too, a fine Siegel film. War drama at its best.

    Black and white film is most effective. Like the film Battleground only not in the winter. There is good dialogue with the GI's - Bob Newhart is real funny.

    Very violent, with nice action sequences - almost too intense. Do not see an edited version. See the real thing.
  • This Don Siegel directed film is a very simple war film--similar to Sam Fuller's STEEL HELMET. Both films involve a very small group of American soldiers who are holding out against a larger enemy force and as a result, it's a very tense and claustrophobic film. Unlike STEEL HELMET, this is set in WWII and has a lot of stars and soon-to-be stars, such as Steve McQueen, James Coburn, Bobby Darin, Bob Newhart and Harry Guardino--though at the time, none of them were "big" stars.

    A group of only six guys are given the task of filling in where a hundred soldiers had been the day before. The problem is that the Germans are just across the battlefield and the Americans have to try and convince the enemy that there are a lot more than just the six guys. So, they use a variety of ruses to try to keep the Germans at bay--ultimately culminating in an insane attack against a heavily defended pillbox. When this fails, the rather surly and antisocial McQueen decides to try it again....and practically alone.

    Overall, it's an incredibly tense film and one with a lot of realism--perhaps too much for some (my wife got pretty upset during one of the bloodier scenes). The acting and direction are very good--in particular, Steve McQueen did an excellent job following the first abortive attack--showing a lot of the effects of exhaustion and fear. However, the whole "court martial" scene following this was a bit silly--it seemed excessive and hard to believe for the Commanding Officer to respond to this brave action this way--or at least it seemed this way to me. Also, the film, towards the end tended to use too much stock footage--a bit of a minus in an otherwise good film. But at least it did end on a very tough and tense note--a definite plus.
  • This World War II film is one of the finest I have seen. It features an allstar cast, great direction, a great script and compelling performances.

    Steve McQueen plays an American soldiers who thrives on combat. He gets busted from squad leader to Private when he crashes a jeep. His squad gets sent to the front lines, where he clashes with by-the-book Sergeant Larkin (Harry Guardino). Problems are made worse when the Company pulls out, leaving Larkin's squad to cover a huge section of the front lines. In order to succeed, they trick the Germans in various ways to make them think they're a much larger unit.

    The film features a powerful central performance by Steve McQueen. While his lines are short and to the point, his facial expressions and movements are just as important. He makes a very convincing front-line soldier, doing a lot of things many other front-line-combat themed war movies of the time (TO HELL AND BACK, etc) leave out.

    Supporting McQueen are Bobby Darin, James Coburn, and Mike Kellin all very young. Their characters were unique at the time but may seem a bit chliched and two-dimensional if you've seen a lot of war pictures.

    Also lending a hand if Bob Newhart as a bumbling typist who ends up getting commandeered to help hold the front line position. His telephone monlogue scene is a classic and he makes a very believable scared-stiff REMF, just like Jeremy Davies as Cpl. Upham in SAVING PRIVATE RYAN.

    The battle scenes were obviously filmed on a tight budget but are very authentic appearing. They involve soldiers bleeding profusely and screaming in agony -- not something you see in older war films.

    All in all, a very well done, realistic and very believable war film. It was apparently based on a true incident.

    The DVD is of high quality. It is finally in letterbox format, about a 1.78:1 ratio. The video quality is superb. The sound is mono but very good mono; quite rich. Also included is a widescreen but scratchy and grainy trailer.

    I enjoy and admire HELL IS FOR HEROES so much that I am using it as a model for my own WWII home video, BATTLEGROUND.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    This keen little B movie must have packed quite a punch back in the early 60s, but in the wake of the likes of Saving Private Ryan it looks a lot tamer than it must have done back then. An intense and moody Steve McQueen (both on and off screen, apparently) is Reese, a maverick soldier assigned to a small group of soldiers landed with the unenviable task of defending a hill against a platoon (or troop or squad or battalion – more than the 6 men the Yanks had, anyway) of Germans during WWII. The soldiers employ a number of 'Home Alone' style tactics in order to fool Jerry into believing they number in the hundreds before finally mounting an attack on a seemingly impenetrable pill box, the residents of which are systematically gunning our heroes down.

    Hell is for Heroes follows many of the genre stereotypes, a fact which weakens its overall impact simply because it's all a bit too familiar. You have the surly loner (McQueen), the wily gopher (Bobby Darin), the stoic leader (Fess Parker), the ever-so-slightly remote but highly intelligent soldier (James Coburn), the enthusiastic partisan (Nick Adams) etc. These all interact in pretty much the way you'd expect, and because the story has to find room for two comic characters (Darin and stand-up comic Bob Newhart as a nervous typist who strays into the battle arena) the film has a fairly uneven tone. This ensemble approach means the character of Reese - ostensibly the lead - is too often sidelined so that others get their moment on screen, and we learn little about him other than the fact that he's a moody bugger.

    Having said that, the film contains some undeniably powerful moments. Not only the climactic scene, an accident of financial shortcomings which has subsequently earned the film an apparent cult status, but also the death scene of Private Kolinsky (Mike Kellin), filmed from above and screaming with a terrifying intensity while claustrophobically surrounded by his comrades as he's stretchered to safety. It's concise, anti-war scenes like these – and not the misguided comic moments – that give the film its impact and give it the right to lay some claim to the status it has received.
  • In 1944, in France, Pvt. John Reese (Steve McQueen) is assigned for a platoon close to the front. He is a very experienced, but also rebel and neurotic soldier, who lost his ranked position due to his behavior, questioning orders and authority. His platoon joins other army companies in the front, and they are left in only six men to hold up their position against a great quantity of Germans soldiers for a couple of days. They use their experience and many tricks to cheat the enemy, pretending they are in a larger number. This black and white movie of war is a very tense, claustrophobic and full of action. Steve McQueen has an excellent performance, as usual, as well as the rest of the cast and direction. This film is highly indicated for fans of action movie of war. My vote is seven.

    Title (Brazil): `O Inferno é Para Heróis' (`The Hell is for Heroes')
  • WWII drama film dealing with a frontline American infantry squad as they battled their way across Europe . This movie's opening prologue is represented by segments of a speech by President John F. Kennedy . A single maneuver by a squad of GIs in retaliation against the force of the German Siegfried line. While most of the men withdraw from their positions taking on a German pillbox at the far side of a mine-field, half a dozen men are left to protect a wide front. By various ruses, they manage to convince the Germans that a large force is still holding the position by pretending they are more powerful and larger that they really are . As the small squadron is forced to hold off a German attack suffering several dangers , risks and deaths . Reese joins a group of weary GIs unexpectedly ordered back into the line Siegfried and when the main platoon returns, he is threatened with court-martial .

    World War II film where the drama centers around the diverse characters and on the attack about a well-defensed pillbox . With mud-splattered realism, the show offered character studies of men striving to maintain their own humanity , and heroism in the midst of a world torn by war . Impressive as well as surprising climax final , plenty of action and intensity . Very good acting by Steve McQueen as a degraded soldier who leads two of the men in an unauthorized and unsuccessful attack . Steve McQueen did not socialize with the rest of cast because his character was anti-social and alienated himself from the rest of the squad . In fact , a columnist visiting the set commented on Steve McQueen's irascible temperament by noting that McQueen seemed to be his own worst enemy. Furthermore , Steve McQueen and Bobby Darin did not get along during filming . Support cast is frankly excellent such as Fess Parker as Sgt. Pike , Harry Guardino as Sgt. Larkin , James Coburn as Cpl. Henshaw , Nick Adams as Homer Janeczek , Mike Kellin as Pvt. Kolinsky and a young Bob Newhart's feature-film debut as Pvt. Driscoll who even interpolates a variation on one of his phone monologues into the tale . Director Don Siegel did not want to shoot the scene where Bob Newhart's character has a fake telephone conversation with "headquarters" to fool the Germans listening through a microphone planted in the US bunker, believing that it had no place in the story , he was overruled by the studio, however .

    Screenwriter Robert Pirosh was originally set to direct the film but after repeated clashes with star Steve McQueen he was replaced with Don Siegel ; Pirosh's script featured many blackly comedic scenes but most of them were not filmed, as Siegel wanted to make the film more dramatic. Robert Pirosh was a Master Sergeant during World War II, serving with the 320th Regiment, 35th Division. He fought in the Battle of the Bulge, at Ardennes and in the Rhineland. He commanded a unit in Bastogne during the Battle of the Bulge was awarded a Bronze Star. Pirosh directed a classic war film titled ¨Go for broke¨and wrote ¨Battleground¨ , ¨A Gathering of Eagles¨ and ¨Combat¨TV series . The motion picture was well directed by Donald Siegel . His first feature as a director was 1946's The Verdict (1946). He made his reputation in the early and mid-'50s with a series of tightly made, expertly crafted, tough but intelligent "B" pictures , among them : The Lineup (1958), Riot in Cell Block 11 (1954), Invasion of the body snatchers (1956)), then graduated to major "A" films in the 1960s and early 1970s. He made several "side trips" to television, mostly as a producer . Siegel directed what is generally considered to be Elvis Presley's best picture, Flamingo Star (1960). All of Eastwood's later Western and his ¨Dirty Harry¨ movies owe a considerable debt to Sergio Leone and Donald Siegel . As Donald directed Eastwood in various films , such as : Coogan's bluff , The beguiled , Dirty Harry , Escape from Alcatraz. He had a long professional relationship and personal friendship with Clint Eastwood . This Hard Hitting WWII Action Film has a high rating : Above average , well worth watching.
  • Damn good war flic with lots of pyrotechnics, flame throwers, automatic fire, a super cool, triple magazine grease gun wielded by McQueen, and Gerand rifles which were actually shown being fired dry. Oh, and quite a few Americans were killed instead of being bullet proof. Not as graphic as "Saving Private Ryan", but what is, eh? For 1962, this was really a very gritty war pic: too bad it wasn't in color.
  • Gritty realism and a riveting performance by Steve McQueen highlight the World War II action/drama `Hell Is For Heroes,' directed by Don Siegel. The setting is France, 1944, and American troops are spread thin across a sector of the Siegfried Line. When heavy action in another area precipitates troop movement, a squad of six men is left behind to hold the position until reinforcements arrive, which means a day or maybe two of making the Germans believe they are actually up to strength with a full complement of men. Not an easy task, but like the man said, war is hell. With Sergeant Larkin (Harry Guardino) in charge, and left to their own devices for survival, the men of the 2nd Squad dig in for what just may be the longest night of their lives. And for some, it will prove to be not only the longest, but their last. In the shadow of a murderous pill box held by the enemy, the soldiers make their stand and add yet another footnote to another chapter in the history of the eternal struggle for freedom.

    Filmed in stark black&white, Siegel's film succinctly captures the fatal brutality of war, in terms perhaps not as graphic, but every bit as effectively as Steve Spielberg would do some thirty-six years later with his monumental film `Saving Private Ryan.' Siegel may not have had the special effects in 1961 that Spielberg had at his disposal in 1998, but he did have an excellent screenplay (by Robert Pirosh and Richard Carr) from which to work. He tells his story in a direct, unromanticized way that maintains the focus and conveys the sense of urgency of the moment, through which he builds the tension and suspense that makes the peril of the situation immediate and real. Siegel had two predominant elements going for him that helped him achieve success with this venture: One was an instinctive knowledge of what works and how to deliver it; but most of all, he had Steve McQueen to sell it.

    McQueen plays Pvt. John Reese, a veteran soldier who transfers into this particular outfit on the very day they are ordered to the front line. And that's just the way Reese wants it. When he reports for duty (three days late), he runs into Sergeant Pike (Fess Parker), who had served with him in another campaign. It's late evening, and the troops are assembling at an old church outside of town that now serves as a makeshift barracks; Pike sees Reese and asks him how he is. `Thirsty,' Reese replies. `Town's off limits,' Pike tells him. The very next scene shows Reese walking into town and finding what appears to be the only bar on a lonely street. Stepping up to the counter, Reese asks the bartender (a woman) for a bottle. `One pack or two?' he asks. `We aren't allow to serve soldiers--' she says. `Two,' he replies, and setting the cigarettes on the counter, he walks around and takes a bottle. And now, without a doubt, we know exactly who and what Reese is; the personification of the iconoclastic loner, embodied to perfection in the form of Steve McQueen.

    By all accounts, McQueen was not only a tough guy on screen, but in real life as well; tough meaning that he was always up for a challenge of any kind, and determined to live by his own set of rules, no matter what the cost. But he was a complex individual, and that was but one side of his true persona. To play Reese, McQueen went to that dark, stoic side of himself, exaggerated it, and the result was one of the most intense characters he ever created. Reese is a force of one, adamant and relentless, single-minded and fatalistic. At the moment he's on the Siegfried Line, but for him it's just another battle in a war he's been waging with life since the day he was born. And he knows deep down that it's a war he's never going to win; it's just a matter of time before his hand plays out, and being on the line is just as good a place as any. For him, it's not a matter of options, but of inevitability. It's an exemplary performance, and one for which McQueen never received the acclaim he was due, which unfortunately was not an isolated instance in his career. There was Vin in `The Magnificent Seven,' Frank Bullitt in `Bullitt' and Tom Horn in `Tom Horn,' as well. And that's but a sample of the work he did for which he never received enough recognition. His only real acknowledgement came with his creation of Jake Holman in `The Sand Pebbles,' a role for which he was nominated and should have received the Oscar for Best Actor. But Reese was one of his first, and one of his best.

    The supporting cast includes Bobby Darin (Corby), James Coburn (Henshaw), Mike Kellin (Kolinsky), Joseph Hoover (Captain Loomis), Bill Mullikin (Cumberly), Nick Adams (Homer) and Bob Newhart in his film debut as Pvt. Driscoll. Hard-hitting and with unforgiving realism, `Hell Is For Heroes,' though on a smaller scale, perhaps, than Spielberg's `Ryan,' is one of the most effective and memorable war films ever made; Siegel gave it direction and focus, McQueen brought it to life. And it's quite simply one of the best of it's kind you'll ever see. I rate this one 10/10.
  • I'm fascinated by World War II, but I have a dilemma when it comes to movie representations of the war. I think a lot of 1950s and 60s WWII movies are too cheesy to be believed; however, contemporary films about the war are incredibly violent and tend to have preachy messages. So I don't actually like a lot of WWII movies, even though I'm interested in the war itself.

    "Hell is for Heroes" is, thankfully, a movie that lies somewhere between 60s cheese and today's realism. It's not packed with blood, gore, and guts, but when people die in this movie, they die in agony, and it's effective. The combat is loud, intense, and convincing - for an old Hollywood movie, mind you.

    Another realistic touch about this movie is that parts of it are slow. Whenever I read up on wars, I invariably encounter a description of how a soldier's life is frequently boring, consisting only of waiting around for the action to start. "Hell is for Heroes" captures that "waiting around" feeling - much of the first hour is taken up by idle chat between the soldiers. While that kind of pacing might bore some viewers (and it did try my patience a bit), I thought it lent the film verisimilitude.

    As is common for a war movie, the characters are not necessarily that well-developed. However, I found the acting quite solid. Steve McQueen always seems to have the same stoic and cool persona, but it works for me - his charisma is undeniable. Harry Guardino and James Coburn also give strong performances.

    I should also mention that the movie actually has some genuinely funny moments, particularly when the heroes try to use a backfiring jeep to convince the Germans that the American position is defended by tanks!

    Ultimately, I enjoyed "Hell is for Heroes" quite a bit, even if I didn't find it to be an all-conquering war classic. You can buy it for pocket change on DVD, so if you're a fan of McQueen and you can stand a slightly slow pace, pick it up.
  • A must must-see for Steve McQueen fans. Understrength American platoon tries to hold the line against entrenched Germans in 1944 France. Hard-working cast rises above shoe-string production values. Then-present and future stars include Harry Guardino, James Coburn and personal favorite Nick Adams. Despite lack of glitzy special effects, this has the best "feel" of any war film I've ever seen. McQueen shines as Private Reese, an efficient killer sabotaged only by his own unwillingness to follow orders. Subdued Parker plays very effectively against McQueen's intensity, and Newhart adds some humor to grim story line. Highly recommended.
  • Terrific war drama. Great action well directed by now legendary Don Siegel. A group of fatigued soldiers are required to return to the front to fight off the Germans in WWII. Not unlike the other top flight war movies an ensemble cast meshes together to provide realism. Steve McQueen is excellent in his role as Pvt. Reese an independent, "to hell with the regulations" soldier. It is obvious the movie gravitates around the master of "cool". Singer Bobby Darin actually turns in a fine performance as a quirky and sometimes obnoxious Private Corby. Fess Parker at times is stoic as Platoon Sgt. Pike. Also in the cast are Harry Guardino, Nick Adams, Bob Newhart, L.Q. Jones and James Coburn. For an exciting day watch in tandem with A WALK IN THE SUN(1945).
  • WW2 B actioners are usually very good or very bad. This one belongs in every War Movie Buff's collection. One of the soon to be best action directors of his generation making a film with a half dozen of the soon to be best screen and TV actors to come out in the 60s. McQueen is at his classic Lonesome Cool persona best here. James Coburn at his quirky supporting role best. Bobby Darin, Nick Adams, Fess Parker and a new comedian turning actor called Bob Newhart. This movie couldn't miss. Even the small budget and stock footage doesn't tarnish it. Newhart has said they ran out of money and couldn't shoot the original ending so the ending as it is was shot on the fly. It is CLASSIC. This fact alone shows the quality of the people who made this little number. Much better than most of the lumbering big budget WW2 A films of the period like "The Longest Day" and "Bridge on the River Kwi". Both good films but not nearly as exciting and gripping as this gritty little B movie.
  • It's a pretty good war movie with a '50's sort of juvenile delinquent element to it. Steve McQueen is so hard boiled and nasty in this one you'd think he was made of nails with the misunderstood troublemaker but good soldier act. The supporting cast was much better with vets like Harry Guardino, Fess Parker and a punky Bobby Darin. Bob Newhart was hilarious with his party line skit as a clueless Army clerk getting thrust into the front line. The action sequences are pretty good except when Seigel spliced in some stock footage of German 37mm flak guns firing at aircraft at night when all the action was on the ground. Because of Siegel's and McQueen's cult status, it got a lot of second looks but it's no better than a 7!
  • thormang26 October 2012
    Don't get your hopes up with all the great cast members, especially Bob Newhart. This is a ho-hum WWII movie. Part way through I thought, "Wow, that music sounds just like the TV show Combat!". Well, the director went on to do Combat!(!). Story line is just like an extra 1/2 hr of Combat! and not as good. For a TV show script it was great. For a $2.5 million dollar movie it was slow, disjointed and boring. The Newhart lines were funny but out of place during a war sequence of events. My generous rating : 4 of 10. No wonder McQueen was stand-offish. Who would want to be there? If you like WWII movies there are so many better ones to pick from.
  • Steve McQueen's character of Reese is not the jock he played in the Great Escape nor is he Jake Thurlow a rule bender,but whose's found his home in the U.S.Navy of the 1920's. No Reese is a stone cold killer a front line ideal who gets in trouble because in the rear like probably in his civilian life there are too many rules issued by and for the protection of soft bellied fools. He has survived like Fess Parker's Sgt.Pike, a man who knows him and if not a friend in the service buddy/Beery/Gable manner of war movies,understands him. Pike knows that Reese though a leader is not a workaday type who will listen recommend and obey. Reese is a loner living on borrowed time. North Africa,Sicily,Italy maybe were where he campaigned with a dwindling amount of men he came in with still alive. A bullet or shell,or mine,or tank treads is waiting on the next wooded hill, or valley or village to end it for him. There is no Longest Day comrades in arms in a worthy cause emotion emanating from Reese and squad mates. There is no grander vision for them then earning a front line soldiers highest decoration - survival. The German bunker is the squatting beast of War waiting to feed and it does on the Mike Kellin character, the attacking company, Steve McQueen's now Ahab like Reese who must destroy the beast at the cost of his life, and the bunkers' anonymous defenders-inmates while the beast battered partially in flames still consumes GIs and Wehrmact landers indiscriminately. Rock solid war film.
  • Of all the actioners Steve McQueen ever did, "Hell Is For Heroes" may be the most unpleasant, a grim, tightly-wound tale of GIs abandoned on the Siegfried Line. The only presence more threatening than the German soldiers in the distance is the guy with the grease gun taking point for your side.

    McQueen is the guy on point, a private named Reese who was a decorated sergeant until he tried to run down an officer with a jeep. Suffice it to say he has a problem with authority: "You wave that finger in my face once more and I'm gonna take your head off," he tells one non-com, eyes bulging.

    With McQueen delivering the line, you have no problem believing he'll do just that. "Hell Is For Heroes" catches him just as he was taking off as the "King Of Cool," his more sympathetic persona still to come. For the moment, he's all tough guy, someone whose ultimate welfare you might not care too much about but who you come to rely on in the same way his comrades do, however unlikeable they may otherwise find him.

    Other than McQueen, the film is an eclectic hodgepodge, including no less than three fellow icons, from pop music (Bobby Darin), comedy (Bob Newhart's debut film role), and television (stolid Fess Parker, TV's Davy Crockett and the best-known face in the cast back when the film was released.) James Coburn is also on hand as an agreeable mechanic handy with a flame-thrower; this easily is better than the two more famous films Coburn and McQueen did together. Another major presence is that of director Don Siegel, second to none at delivering "tough-guy cinema". Despite the presence of Newhart, and Darin's comedic turn as a soldier on the make, "Hell Is For Heroes" is every bit as tough as its name implies.

    It's not really a classic, just a very good war film. Many here liken it to "Saving Private Ryan", and you definitely notice a resemblance. There's even the same use of the term "flake out", which I never heard before "Ryan" and figured was an anachronism until I heard Harry Guardino as a sergeant use it here. Ultimately both are gritty combat flicks in which good guys get killed, sometimes suddenly and senselessly, and the question of whether it was worth it or just plain FUBAR is left hanging in the gunsmoke. I give "Ryan" the edge for its broader scope and characters, but "Hell" is every bit as unflinching for its time in its depiction of combat horror.

    Unlike "Ryan", the comedy in "Heroes" is rather broad and jarring, occasionally clashing with the rest of the action. Newhart even does one of his telephone routines, though it's integrated cleverly into the plot. Darin's more problematic, wisecracking and eyerolling like a svelte Lou Costello in "Buck Privates". It doesn't weaken "Heroes" exactly, so much as point up the conscious effort at providing entertainment.

    Okay, so it's a bit of a comic-book yarn beneath it all, and a bit far-fetched, with annoying stock footage and some dicey plot holes. But it stars McQueen showcasing another of his cool weapons (this time a Grease gun with three mags taped together for instant reloading) and his economy with words. Like reviewer HalfCentury noted in his May 2005 review, McQueen's physicality goes a long way to selling his performance, and in turn the film, the way he jumps into foxholes or stabs a German with the ferocity of a caveman in "2001: A Space Odyssey".

    When I was a boy, this was the kind of film that had me wincing at the screen, then looking for friends to act out the deaths of my favorite characters. War is hell, I guess, and this isn't that, but it's more than enough of a substitute for us couch-combat enthusiasts.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    Directed by Don Siegel, and co-written by Robert Pirosh, this gritty World War II drama stars Steve McQueen, Bobby Darin, Fess Parker, Harry Guardino, James Coburn, and Bob Newhart (!), among others.

    Guardino plays the Sergeant of a group of veterans thinking they're about to go home. The group includes Darin - the "free enterprise" scrounger who sells needed supplies ($5 for a pen) to his fellow soldiers; Coburn, wearing glasses - the fix-it guy who's second in command; and a couple of other actors including Mike Kellin, whose character serves as a translator for a Polish refugee (played by Nick Adams) that wants to join the group.

    McQueen arrives as a newly assigned member of the group, one that can't seem to follow orders but who's a "great soldier in a pinch" (battle situations). The platoon Sergeant is played by Fess Parker, who's familiar with the McQueen character's shortcomings, but also with his abilities such that he protects him from his Captain's (Joseph Hoover) discipline.

    Instead of getting to go home, the group is assigned to return to the line, where a lack of reinforcements means the unit will have to protect a wide expanse of real estate from a German advance. Using their heads, they devise various means to appear like a larger group than they are. Newhart plays an Army clerk, who accidentally drives a jeep through the volatile area, that Guardino reassigns to increase their numbers.

    Coburn fixes the jeep to sound like a tank and drives it around out of sight. Newhart (whose comedy routine is really out of place here) is then given the job of pretending to talk to HQ on the disconnected field phone to fool the German listening station. The unit also fills empty ammo boxes with rocks and rigs them wire such that they can simulate a nighttime patrol.

    All goes according to plan until McQueen believes a German squad's advance has exposed their weakness to the enemy. He convinces Guardino to seek Parker's permission to advance on the German's stronghold, a heavily armed pillbox with machine guns which keep them pinned down. Before Guardino's returned, he asks Coburn to secure the needed explosives.

    The action which follows is both tense and educational, but McQueen's bravery outstrips his reason, leading to tragic results. However, he is able to redeem himself in the final assault, once Parker has secured the necessary troops, with a crazy maneuver that both impresses and horrifies his remaining unit's members.
  • When Bob Newhart is doing the same one-way-telephone bit that made him famous enough to have a comic relief role in director Don Siegel's otherwise intense World War II flick HELL IS FOR HEROES, he actually surprisingly fits since there's a reason behind that call...

    Otherwise HELL is one of those sparse, brooding and melancholy vehicles... involving a small troop of eclectic American soldiers, ironically having to do what the anemic production was actually saddled with -- stretch a little into a lot, herein providing only a few men to do the job of an entire platoon, and with very limited special effects or extras...

    All to reach a perilous goal in a craggy final-act battleground, liken to Stanley Kubrick's PATHS OF GLORY, which is far superior and less stagy: this cast seems part of an actor's workshop... but only before the important attack begins, where Siegel's finally in his potboiler element of blending action with urgency and suspense...

    Starring Steve McQueen in one of his bitter maverick roles, only more dissociated than usual... his signature cool is downright cold to everyone... until partially bonding with an extremely miscast (and way too tall for a foxhole picture) Fess Parker's sergeant/leader, seeming more like a bland captain or lieutenant on a TV-series...

    So there's Harry Guardino as a more fittingly durable sergeant; Nick Adams overacting as a young Russian; James Coburn underused as a resilient mechanic while pop star Bobby Darin's perhaps the most natural and unpretentious, resembling a regular-guy character-actor who'd blend neatly into any older war picture...

    That would have been the usual patriotic propaganda a decade earlier... which Siegel intentionally avoided... yet far more edgy and realistic ten years later, when directors could go anti-war without such obvious messages that these actors seem almost forced to spout...

    Yet only before they're desperately active -- which is when HELL redeems itself through a tense and grungy campaign that thankfully, for a programmer length of 90-minutes, fills up most of the screen-time.
  • kenandraf25 November 2001
    In your face WW2 movie that has little compromise in it's depiction of a slice of that war.The screenplay could have been better but still,the production was good enough to give this movie classic status for it's genre.No perfume romantisation here,just plain old battle line warfare and the soldiers who are there to do those hellish things.If you want that kind of action,this movie is for you.Also one of the best movies McQueen ever made........
  • Warning: Spoilers
    HELL IS FOR HEROES is the second of two war movies that Steve McQueen made in 1962, the other being THE WAR LOVER, in which he played basically the same character: bright, taciturn, impetuous with a James Dean-style streak of rebellion. This one's a black-and-white effort by the great Don Siegel which follows the usual '50s template of joining a platoon of American soldiers as they battle against overwhelming odds in occupied territory. The budget effectively brings the chaos of battle to life, although like many this is essentially a character drama spearheaded by McQueen's larger-than-life performance. Good support comes from familiar faces including James Coburn and Bobby Darin, and it finishes on a dramatic high.
  • This n The Blob were among the first few films of McQueen which i saw during school days n i became a fan of him.

    I saw his The Magnificent Seven n others after these two movies.

    Revisited it recently on a dvd which I own.

    The future king of cool played an angry, morose, detached loner in this flick.

    The movie has Bob Newhart in his very first movie role.

    Its a very good World War film, not quite in the league of Platoon, Apocalypse Now or Thin Red Line.

    But fans of the genre, the director and/or McQueen should definitely check this one out.

    I am fascinated by World War II, but i think a lot of 1950s and 60s WWII movies are too cheesy to be believed except a few n Hell is for Heroes is a solid one.

    A wounded Reese (McQueen) blowing up enemies' fortification n its occupants and himself is riveting.

    This climactic scene is shamelessly copied by a Bollywood war movie Border 1998, during the climax the character of Akshay Khanna copies McQueen's way of blowing up himself n the enemies.
  • This film was one of many World War II movies that I recall watching in my childhood in the early 2000s (with names like Kelly's Heroes, Where Eagles Dare, Bridge Over the River Kwai, and the Great Escape).

    While this film does not necessarily match the prior-mentioned films in terms of quality, it still definitely holds its own among stiff competition.

    Although my exact memory of this film is a little foggy, one scene that that still sticks with me is when a code word is created among the American soldiers:

    In this scene, (similar to the call "Thunder" and reply of "Flash" in Saving Private Ryan) the call "Apple" is used to which the response is "Cobbler". When an unsuspecting German soldier creeps to their pit, the call "Apple" is given. The response heard is "Pie" not "Cobbler" leading to the Americans opening up into the darkness, and subsequently inspecting the German soldier.

    Overall, the reason for this movie's score is a great story and plot, the unfortunate reason for its loss is due to the poor aging of this film (I mean, come on, the Guns of Navarone came out a year before this and seemed years ahead in terms of quality).
  • Steve McQueen is the reason to watch this movie. As some of these recent Docs on McQueen point out, he researched his moves, how to plausibly use his hardware and props and look very cool doing it. Turning his part into something he can omit unnecessary duologue from while he does physical stuff. His Reese is a hardcore guy with no room for nonsense or humor. When the Nick Adams character, a puppy dog native trying to adopt the unit as an ersatz GI, tries to ingratiate himself with Reese, Reese says "If I see you at the front, I'll Kill you myself." With that 1000 mile stare very few tough guys really master. And a goofy detail that I associate with this movie and the McQueen body/instrument. McQueen scrambles over to another foxhole and drops his weight into a perfect glide on his knees coming down the dirt bank. A hiss of contact that is pure grace, pure athleticism. Dumb detail but exactly the kind of stuff you're absorbing while you watch McQueen. I wish Don Siegel could have worked with McQueen on other projects. They both had a larger than life style that still kept it real.
  • I just bought this video after reading all of the great reviews here. Can't figure them out, this show was a real stinker. This ranks as Steve McQueen's worst performance. It's not Steve's fault; the script is horrible. What a waste of out-standing actors. McQueen is wooden and emotionless. He looks puffy too. The action scenes are as fake as can be. The show is so cheaply made that you keep seeing the same three German soldiers over and over.

    Unrealistic scenes, super clean uniforms, only three German soldiers in the whole film, and Nick Adams as a Polish guy! He is horrible in this role! Bob Newhart's rambling walkie-talkie scene put me to sleep. James Coburn looked embarrassed by the whole thing.

    Hell isn't for heroes, Hell is for anyone who buys and sits through this boring, stupid, badly acted, piece of worthless junk.
  • bkoganbing21 September 2007
    One of Steve McQueen's better roles is one that is modeled on one that James Cagney played in The Fighting 69th. If you'll remember Cagney was a wise guy who lost his nerve on the battlefield and was sentenced to be shot, but redeemed himself in a heroic climax.

    Now McQueen wasn't a coward and he didn't have a priest like Pat O'Brien to have faith in him. But he was a reckless sort and convinced of his own righteousness. It negated his acts of bravery and when the film opens we find him down to being a private and under the command of a sergeant played by Fess Parker who likes him, but understands him all too well.

    And Parker's platoon has a really rotten assignment. Hold their position on the Siegfried Line with a handful of men until help arrives and maybe convince the Germans there's a lot more out there than there really are.

    McQueen in his usual rebel way goes his own way. It costs the lives of a lot in his squad. Still he does redeem himself like Cagney in the end. This is maybe the only film in which McQueen's rebel persona worked against his character. Still it's an interesting and moving performance he gives.

    Look also for good performances from the rest of the cast that includes Harry Guardino, Bobby Darin, Nick Adams, Mike Kellin, and Bob Newhart as other soldiers on the dirty detail.

    The film credits say 'introducing Bob Newhart' and he provides what little comedy there is. After the Parker platoon gets the assignment to hold on their assigned piece of real estate, Newhart comes driving up in a jeep loaded with typewriters. He's a clerk/typist at division headquarters and it seems as though he made a wrong turn. Never mind because Guardino and Parker commandeer him and his jeep.

    Which sets up one of his routines from his early standup act. Newhart used to work with a telephone and he's asked to do so here for the benefit of a German microphone planted on the American line. It actually works very well into the fabric of the plot.

    Hell is for Heroes is one tough and gritty war drama, the kind of film that a generation later, Steven Spielberg would get all kinds of acclaim for Saving Private Ryan. For war picture fans, this is a must.
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