Since his obscure 1965 debut Wild Seed, director Brian G. Hutton has made only nine films. Of that handful, the 1968 and 1970 war films Where Eagles Dare and Kelly’s Heroes, both starring Clint Eastwood, are his greatest achievements. The latter is an action-packed story about a team of soldiers who infiltrate a Nazi-held castle, not unlike 1967’s The Dirty Dozen. The former is one of my favourite World War II films.
Taking place in the late stages of the war, after Operation Overlord and the Allied breakout from the Normandy beachhead, Kelly’s Heroes follows the escapades of a group of men, lead by Eastwood’s Kelly, as they deviate slightly from the grand strategy of the war and take a detour behind enemy lines to steal a cache of gold. Filling out the fantastic cast of characters (and actors!) are Big Joe, played with comedic machismo by Telly Savalas, supply officer Crapgame, a whiney Don Rickles and, the best of the bunch, tank commander Sergeant Oddball, an era-displaced Hippie played with flair by Donald Sutherland. No doubt a reference to the Vietnam War, which was very much going on when Kelly’s Heroes was released, Oddball and his troupe, who lounge about in Flower Power glory, add an interesting dimension to film. A taboo subject in Hollywood until the late ‘70s, when both American involvement in Vietnam, and the war, was over, the Vietnam War had a significant impact on American filmmaking. That Kelly's Heroes, released in 1971, even raised the subject is somewhat amazing. Six years later, Taxi Driver, which dealt with a Vietnam vet in Travis Bickle, was still seen as breaking taboo ground. And it took Hal Ashby’s 1978 Coming Home to finally take the finger out of the dam.
Regardless, Kelly’s Heroes is still very much a World War II film. And its depiction of that war adeptly balances the tragic with the comic. There are scenes of utter brutality, such as a famous minefield shootout, and ones of easygoing laughter, provided largely by Don Rickles’ character.






Article comments
1 - Aaron, Duke De Mondo
great stuff QC. i don't believe i ever saw Kellys Heroes, but i'll keep an eye for it next time it's on telly.
And Texas Chain Saw Massacre is still my favourite Vietnam flick.
2 - dave
This has been my favorite Sunday afternoon movie since I was a kid. Great performances all around, but Sutherland's "Oddball" is the highlight of the movie: between the barking and the paint-filled practice shells, you forget you're watching a movie about a war that killed millions. (Maybe that's not a good thing, but it beats the hell out of Saving Private Ryan for laughs.)
3 - CR
Greatest movie ever.
4 - Vern Halen
I don't know about greatest movie ever, but it's good'n fer shure.
greatest movie ever: The Blues Brothers.