Eight Iron Men
Eight Iron Men is a 1952 American World War II drama film directed by Edward Dmytryk and produced by Stanley Kramer. It stars Bonar Colleano, Arthur Franz, Lee Marvin, Richard Kiley and Mary Castle. Lee Marvin's powerful performance as the squad's leader ratchets up the suspense along with Dmytryk's noir style direction and J. Roy Hunt's deft cinematography.
Plot
Three American infantrymen—Carter (Arthur Franz), Ferguson (James Griffith) and Small (George Cooper)—are returning from patrol in a bombed-out town when they are pinned down by an enemy machine gun. Meanwhile, Coke (Richard Kiley), who was separated from the patrol, returns on his own to the squad's basement outpost where goof-off Private Collucci (Bonar Colleano) is sleeping, dreaming of beautiful women. A runner from company headquarters delivers a package for a squad member and tells the men that the regiment is moving out of the line that night. Shortly after another patrol returns with Sgt. Mooney (Lee Marvin) and privates Spiros (Nick Dennis) and Muller (Dickie Moore).
More details
author | Harry Brown |
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director | Edward Dmytryk |
editor | Aaron Stell |
events | World War II |
genre | drama |
keywords | fruitcake george cooper gun fire machine machine gun morphine mortar move out platoon platoon leader richard grayson sleep trap |
musicBy | Leith Stevens |
producer | Stanley Kramer |
productionCompany | Stanley Kramer Productions |
publisher | Columbia Pictures |
theme | noir |