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The Eagle Has Landed

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The Eagle Has Landed - 1976 | 134 mins | War, Adventure | Colour

The Production Team

Director: John Sturges.
Producer: David Niven Jr. and Jack Wiener.
Script: Tom Mankiewicz. (from the novel by Jack Higgins)
Cinematography: Anthony B. Richmond.
Art Direction: Charles Bishop.
Editing: Anne V. Coates.
Costume Design: Yvonne Blake.
Makeup Department: Eric Allwright, Betty Glasow, Mike Jones, Paul Rabiger and Freddie Williamson.
Sound Department: Jonathan Bates, Robin Gregory, Gerry Humphreys and Terry Sharratt.
Music: Lalo Schifrin.

The Cast

Michael Caine - Colonel Kurt Steiner
Donald Sutherland - Liam Devlin
Robert Duvall - Colonel Max Radl
Jenny Agutter - Molly Prior
Donald Pleasence - Heinrich Himmler
Anthony Quayle - Admiral Canaris
Jean Marsh - Joanna Grey
John Standing - Father Verecker
Judy Geeson - Pamela
Larry Hagman - Colonel Pitts
Treat Williams - Captain Clark

Plot Synopsis

John Sturges' entertaining adaptation of the Jack Higgins novel starts from a similar premise to that of Alberto Cavalcanti's Went the Day Well?

Michael Caine is Colonel Kurt Steiner, a rebellious soldier imprisoned and awaiting sentence for striking a fellow German Officer, when Nazi colonel Max Radl (Robert Duvall) offers him the chance to save both his own life, and that of his men. Steiner is offered the opportunity to lead his men on what appears to be a daring, yet suicidal mission to kidnap Winston Churchill. They are parachuted into a small English village dressed as Polish soldiers, misleading the locals into believing they are Allies on military exercises. While the commando’s await the arrival of the Prime Minister at a nearby country house in Norfolk, one of Steiners men rescues a young boy who has fallen in the river, the young boy is rescued but the soldier is killed on a water-wheel and his Nazi uniform revealed to the watching villagers. Steiner and his men decide to retreat to the safety of the village church and await the arrival of both Churchill and the now informed local allied forces, the first to arrive on the scene is the amateurish Colonel Pitts but it isn't long before a more experienced officer appears to contest Steiners men's resistance.

This is a boy's-own adventure story, full of war-movie clichés, but there are plenty of colourful character turns. Donald Pleasence is a gimlet-eyed, psychotic Heinrich Himmler, Donald Sutherland is the shifty Brit-hating IRA man. Larry Hagman as a US colonel, drawling out his one-liners, sounding as if he has just wandered off the set of Dallas.