- Film Review
- Reviewed By Andrew Collins
-
5 out of 5
Few Second World War films are as enduring as this multi-Oscar-winning examination of the stiff upper lip from director David Lean. Alec Guinness plays Colonel Nicholson, the epitome of British dignity and resolve who, after brutal treatment at the hands of his Japanese captors in Burma, leads his men in the building of a strategically vital railway bridge for the enemy as an exercise in keeping up their - and his - morale. This is interesting enough, but the ironies of war are further pointed up by the subplot in which wily American escapee William Holden is dispatched back into the jungle to blow up said bridge. The central performances are all first rate, including Sessue Hayakawa as the Japanese commander, but it's Guinness who stands out, imbuing Nicholson with a brand of pride, patriotism and courage that speaks of another age. The film was adapted from Pierre Boulle's novel by Carl Foreman and Michael Wilson, who went uncredited at the time as they were blacklisted during the McCarthy hearings.
Plot Summary
Second World War drama starring Alec Guinness, William Holden and Jack Hawkins. Despite being held in a Japanese PoW camp in Burma, Colonel Nicholson still runs his regiment by the military textbook. However, Nicholson meets his match in the equally stubborn prison commander Colonel Saito, and the two find themselves on a collision course when Saito gets orders to build a strategically important railway bridge.
Cast and crew
Cast
- Shears
- William Holden (2)
- Colonel Nicholson
- Alec Guinness
- Major Warden
- Jack Hawkins
- Colonel Saito
- Sessue Hayakawa
- Major Clipton
- James Donald
- Lieutenant Joyce
- Geoffrey Horne
- Colonel Green
- André Morell
- Captain Reeves
- Peter Williams
- Major Hughes
- John Boxer
- Grogan
- Percy Herbert
- Baker
- Harold Goodwin (2)
- Nurse
- Ann Sears
Crew
- Director
- David Lean
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