Stalag 17
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- This article is about the film of this title. For the punk band, see Stalag 17 (band).
| Stalag 17 | |
Film poster |
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| Directed by | Billy Wilder |
|---|---|
| Produced by | Billy Wilder |
| Written by | Donald Bevan (play) Edmund Trzcinski (play) Edwin Blum Billy Wilder |
| Starring | William Holden Don Taylor Otto Preminger Robert Strauss Peter Graves Neville Brand |
| Music by | Franz Waxman |
| Cinematography | Ernest Laszlo, ASC |
| Editing by | George Tomasini |
| Distributed by | Paramount Pictures |
| Release date(s) | |
| Running time | 120 min |
| Language | English |
Stalag 17 is a 1953 war film which tells the story of a group of American airmen held in a German World War II prisoner of war camp, who come to suspect that one of their number is a traitor.
Produced and directed by Billy Wilder, it starred William Holden, Don Taylor, Robert Strauss, Neville Brand, Harvey Lembeck, and Peter Graves (Strauss and Lembeck both appeared in the original Broadway production); Wilder also cast fellow Austrian film director (and Jew) Otto Preminger in the role of the evil camp commander.
The movie was adapted by Wilder and Edwin Blum from the Broadway play by Donald Bevan and Edmund Trzcinski who were both prisoners in Stalag XVII-B. (Trzcinski appears in the film as a prisoner.) The play was directed by José Ferrer and was the Broadway debut of John Ericson as Sefton. It began its run in May 1951, continued for 472 performances and was based on the experiences of its authors, both of whom were POWs in Stalag 17B in Austria.
The film also provided the inspiration for the popular 1965-1971 television sitcom Hogan's Heroes.
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[edit] Plot synopsis
Stalag 17 begins on "the longest night of the year" in 1944 in a Luftwaffe prisoner-of-war camp located somewhere along the Danube River. The story of a Nazi spy in Barracks Four is narrated by Clarence Harvey "Cookie" Cook (Gil Stratton).
Prisoners Manfredi and Johnson try to escape through a tunnel the inmates have dug under the barbed wire. They are immediately shot when they emerge from the other end. The prisoners believe there is a spy in their midst since the Germans obviously knew about the tunnel, but the barracks security officer, Price (Peter Graves), fails to uncover his identity.
Price and his fellow prisoners believe that Sefton (William Holden) is the main suspect, as he barters openly with the German guards for eggs, silk stockings, blankets and other luxuries. He also organizes mouse races and various other profitable enterprises that net him his hoard of "luxuries". The other prisoners are suspicious of his fraternization with the enemy, though are envious of his dealmaking success. Sefton himself is portrayed as cynical, cold, and impersonal. He bets on whether Manfredi and Johnson will actually escape, then trades the cigarettes he wins to the Germans for an egg the next morning.
The lives of the prisoners are depicted in a somewhat sanitized way. They receive mail, eat terrible food, wash in the latrine sinks, and collectively do their best to keep sane and defy the camp's cruel and ruthless commandant, Oberst von Scherbach (Otto Preminger). They use a clandestine radio (shared by all the barracks) to pick up the BBC and the war news. (The antenna is their volleyball net.) Their German guard, Sergeant Schulz (Sig Ruman), confiscates the radio, another success for the "stoolie", whoever he is.
Sefton bribes the guards to let him spend the day in the women's barracks in the Russian section of the camp. The other prisoners spot him through Sefton's own telescope and conclude that this is his reward for informing the Germans about the radio. When he returns, he is accused of being a spy. At that moment, von Scherbach pays a visit to the barracks to apprehend new prisoner Lieutenant James Dunbar (Don Taylor), whom the Germans correctly suspect of blowing up a German ammunition train while he was being transported to the camp. The men are now convinced that Sefton is the spy and viciously beat him, after which he is ostracized. His considerable property is taken and redistributed to the rest of the prisoners. Sefton then decides to investigate and uncover the identity of the spy in order to clear his name.
On Christmas Day, the men find out that SS men are coming to take Dunbar to Berlin, to be interrogated for his act of sabotage. The entire camp creates a distraction and Dunbar is freed and hidden. Among the prisoners, Hoffy (Richard Erdman) knows of but refuses to divulge Dunbar's whereabouts, while the guards unsuccessfully search for him. The men then decide they need to get Dunbar out of camp and, excluding Sefton and Joey (who suffers from shell shock), plan to draw a name from a hat to see who among them will help him escape. When "security officer" Price volunteers for the job, Sefton reveals Price as the spy, who von Scherbach has planted in the barracks (Sefton had stayed behind during a fake "air raid" and eavesdropped on Price speaking with Schulz in German). Sefton shows how messages were passed between Price and Schulz, then asks him, "When was Pearl Harbor?" Price knows the date of course, but Sefton traps him by quickly asking what time he heard the news. Without thinking, Price betrays himself by answering 6 p.m. — the correct time of the attack in Berlin, Germany. After that, Sefton reaches into Price's jacket pocket and extracts the "mailbox" used to exchange messages with the Germans, a hollowed-out black chess queen.
With his fellow POWs convinced of Price's guilt, Sefton decides to take Dunbar out of the camp himself, first because he likes the odds of escape and second due to the reward he can expect from Dunbar's wealthy family. The men give Sefton enough time to get Dunbar out of his hiding place, the water tower above one of the camp latrines, then throw Price out into the yard with tin cans tied to his legs. The ruse works: Price is killed in a hail of bullets (to the consternation of von Scherbach and Schulz) by camp guards who believe him to be Dunbar or one of the other prisoners, while Sefton and Dunbar cut through the barbed wire and make their escape.
[edit] Cast
| Actor | Character |
|---|---|
| William Holden | Sefton |
| Don Taylor | Lieutenant Dunbar |
| Otto Preminger | Von Scherbach |
| Robert Strauss | Stanislas "Animal" Kasava |
| Harvey Lembeck | Harry Shapiro |
| Peter Graves | Price |
| Sig Ruman | Sergeant Schulz |
| Neville Brand | Duke |
| Richard Erdman | Hoffy |
| Michael Moore | Manfredi |
| Peter Baldwin | Johnson |
| Robinson Stone | Joey |
| Robert Shawley | Blondie Peterson |
| William Pierson | Marko |
| Gil Stratton | Clarence Harvey "Cookie" Cook (Narrator) |
| Jay Lawrence | Bagradian |
| Erwin Kalser | Geneva Man |
| Mike Bush | Dancer |
[edit] Casting
Both Charlton Heston and Kirk Douglas were considered for the role of Sefton. Holden was reluctant to play Sefton as he thought the character was too cynical and selfish. Wilder refused to make the role more sympathetic and Holden actually refused it, but was forced to do it by Paramount.
[edit] Location
The prison camp set was built on the John Show Ranch in southwestern Woodland Hills, California.
[edit] Reception
The film was well received[1][2] and is considered, along with The Great Escape and The Bridge on the River Kwai, among the greatest World War II Prisoner of War films.
[edit] Awards and nominations
Holden won the Academy Award for Best Actor in a Leading Role. His acceptance speech was the shortest on record ("Thank you"), until Alfred Hitchcock said "Thanks" upon receiving an honorary Oscar in 1968. Holden's speech was not planned to be brief; by the time he received his Oscar, the show was running long — and the TV broadcast had a strict cutoff time — which forced Holden's quick remarks. Frustrated, Holden paid for a personal ad in the Hollywood trade publications to thank everyone he wanted to on Oscar night.
In addition, Wilder was nominated for the Best Director Oscar, and Strauss for Best Supporting Actor.[3]
[edit] References
[edit] External links
- Stalag 17 at the Internet Movie Database
- Stalag 17 at Allmovie
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