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5.0 out of 5 stars Classic
Excellent movie. Highly recommend. A must see.
An American colonel who has never been in combat is tasked with creating a special forces unit from Canadian troops and a ragtag group of American misfits.
Published 23 days ago by beasville

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3.0 out of 5 stars Devil's Brigade a Waste
I always thought this movie a bit corny. The macho, kid stuff humor and rivalry between the Canadians and mis-fit Americans seems contrieved. This was made when the movies loved to show how a group of reject GIs could somehow beat the Wehrmacht! I question how accurate this movie is, despite all the praise for it from veterans who should know better! The scene where...
Published on Nov 8 2002 by Roger Kennedy


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5.0 out of 5 stars Classic, May 5 2012
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This review is from: Devil's Brigade (Widescreen) (DVD)
Excellent movie. Highly recommend. A must see.
An American colonel who has never been in combat is tasked with creating a special forces unit from Canadian troops and a ragtag group of American misfits.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Devil's brigade, Nov 10 2010
This review is from: Devil's Brigade (Widescreen) (DVD)
Got here quick and in good shape. Pretty good plot and not to miss if you're a fan of old war movies.
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4.0 out of 5 stars Die Teufelsbrigade, Jun 8 2007
By 
bernie "webviator" (Arlington, Texas) - See all my reviews
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)   
This review is from: Devil's Brigade (Widescreen) (DVD)
It is the height of the Second World War. Someone decided it was time to have a Joint Readiness Brigade. Many did not want to see it succeed so it was t consist of the bottom of the barrel US troops and crack Canadian troops. Naturedly to head this up was Lt. Col. Robert T. Frederick (William Holden), Maj. Alan Crown (Cliff Robertson), and Maj. Cliff Bricker (Vince Edwards).

The film is formula (a "Dirty Dozen" knockoff) where they must give a rag tag motley crew the incentive to become a cohesive fighting machine will a will to win in unorthodox ways. In the process they will become Die Teufelsbrigade or The Devil's Brigade.

I have to admit that this is fun to watch over again as we see the slow metamorphoses and ask what would I do in their shoes.
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4.0 out of 5 stars History vs Hollywood, Jun 26 2004
By 
This review is from: Devil's Brigade (Widescreen) (DVD)
The 1st Special Service Force really existed and accomplished far more than this film would indicate. Any critic who whines about "improbable events" is a gabbing ignoramus...

Having said that... Most veterans of the Force do not like the film. The idiots with checkbooks would only back the film if it was "rousing" (read Hollywood treatment) rather than lovingly accurate.

The chief technical advisor was Lt. General Frederic (ret) himself... so the producers and director certainly had the facts to hand. Many of those facts and much of the history never made it onto the screen.

What don't the Forcemen like? Well, the Americans certainly had more than their share of guardhouse sweepings and tough characters sent their way by other commands (though those who could not learn to accept discipline and bond with others were rapidly washed out...) and excellent Canadians... but the "border warfare" premise is essentially false.

U.S. uniforms for all but the Americans got higher pay... (different pay days for each group, so always borrowing from each other) When the drek was chased off both nationalities settled in quite well with each other.

Kiska was almost bloodless (Canadian and American troops did accidentally shoot each other when the Japanese proved to have pulled out... but not the Force... their fire discipline was superb...) One part of the Force was prepared to make a parachute drop into action... The Force had the "friction" of battle without the losses... This honed them to a fine edge... and the film ignored the whole episode.

Their jump training was almost ignored (except for jump boots and jump wings shown on the screen) along with their demolition and amphibious training. Their loving relationship with Helena and its people was reduced in the film to a night of whoring, boozing and brawling.

In short, many vets of the Force did not recognize themselves in the film. Relatively few people knew about the Force, and those seeing the film would either think it total fiction or else have a skewed view of what Winston Churchill called "The finest fighting force of its size ever fielded by North America..."

When viewed as a movie, rather than as history... Well the cast is pretty good. Many cameos (not "bit parts") by fading stars such as Grechen Wyler and Dana Andrews... give it a certain class.

William Holden would have been perfect in the part... a dozen years earlier when he was doing Bridge on the River Kwai... Frederic was almost a "boy general" by the time he left the Force... Holden was a bit long in the tooth and tired... On the positive side, he conveys authority and was quite happy to get his hands dirty making the film.

Cliff Robertson is fine as Major Crown and most of the rest of the cast is good. Claude Akins is fine in his role as Rocky... but for all of his size, strength and toughness... his character is a waste... he gets captured on the earlier raid and rather than do what all good soldiers must in an assault... keep moving... he bounces around a critically wounded soldier, kills his prisoner and is absent from where he is needed. His love of Peacock is believable, but is mawkishly displayed on the screen.

So having said all of the above, why would *I* give the film a (qualified) rating of 4 stars (an unqualified five would go to Lawrence of Arabia...)? In part because of the subject matter... However much the Hollywood treatment and however mucked up the history... the Force was one of the most remarkable units ever fielded.

The director (Andrew V.) had some fine films to his credit, but too many of the other kind... to the point where some would call him a "hack director..." But it is obvious in The Devil's Brigade that he had a fondness for the unit and the men who served in it. The cliches and overly broad humor can't hide this.

Most of the cast (and assigned soldiers) give the impression that when the cameras stop rolling that they really felt like part of a team doing something special (even if a few of them refused to follow Holden into the pyrotechnic strewn fields...)

While the film could have been better... to truly tell the story of the First Special Service Force... a multi-part effort such as Band of Brothers would be required to do the subject (and the surviving Forcemen) justice...

I have served with Canadians in two wars... While there are some very real differences, at the "sharp end" the teamwork is outstanding... Never more true than with the 1st Special Service Force...

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5.0 out of 5 stars Great war picture!!!!......Great DVD, Mar 21 2004
By A Customer
This review is from: Devil's Brigade (Widescreen) (DVD)
The title says it all. The Devil's Brigade is a great war to watch. The movie is based on a true story in WWII, where a unit of American soldiers and a crack unit of Canadian troops formed the 1st Special Service Force a.k.a. the first special forces group. This movie has great acting, great cinematography, great battle scenes, and great actors, like William Holden, Cliff Robertson, Vince Edwards, Richard Jaeckel, Claude Atkins, Andrew Prine, Richard Dawson, Robert Watson, and in some bit parts, Dana Andrews, Carrol O'Conner, and Michael Rennie. If you want to see a great war movie, give Devil's Brigade a try. I recemend it to WWII movie fans.
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4.0 out of 5 stars A darned good war flick about special ops., Jun 11 2003
By 
Roger J. Buffington (Huntington Beach, CA United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Devil's Brigade (Widescreen) (DVD)
William Holden, Cliff Robertson, and Vince Edwards turn in their customary fine performances in this excellent story about one of the early Special Operations units. The storyline is simple enough. A Special Ops unit is formed for a specific mission in Norway (the mission is eventually changed. Nice bit part by Michael Rennie as General Mark Clark). For reasons I was never quite clear on, the unit is comprised of equal parts of American misfits and Canadian elite troops. (This is said to be historically accurate). My favorite part of the movie is the interaction between the American rogues and the more cultured, but equally tough, Canadian troops. There are some hilarious scenes that take place during pre-combat training which show how the unit gelled together into an elite force.

The action scenes are very well done, and the attitude of the regular army units towards the unconventional Special Ops unit is true-to-life. Special Ops units have traditionally, at least until recently, been the orphans of the army, and that is brought out very well in this fine movie.

If you like a straightforward, well-acted war movie, this is one of the better ones.

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4.0 out of 5 stars A Brigade of Character Actors, April 14 2003
By A Customer
This review is from: Devil's Brigade (Widescreen) (DVD)
A movie noteworthy mostly because of the supporting cast of character actors. Most notable are Richard Jaeckel (THE DIRTY DOZEN), Claude Akins (RIO BRAVO, tv's SHERIFF LOBO), Luke Askew, Andrew Prine (tv's V-THE MINISERIES/THE FINAL BATTLE), and even Richard Dawson (tv's HOGAN'S HEROES, FAMILY FEUD). Otherwise this is a basic WWII action flick with some big name stars (William Holden, Cliff Robertson, Carrol O'Conner, Micheal Rennie, Vince Edwards). An Allied special forces commando unit is hastily created to enter the early days of WWII to keep the Germans occupied until the actual American forces can send troops. This commando unit consists of misfit American GI's and elite Canadian soldiers. Part of the movie is a cliched plot where the ragtag Americans must get along with the posh Canadians. At first the two groups hate each other until fisticuffs at a local bar againts lumberjacks unites the two groups. Then, when this happens they become a fine tuned fighting unit. Pretty predictable stuff, but entertaining nonetheless with some great war action sequences and cliched characters. Standout performances by Richard Jaeckel as Pvt. Omar Greco (supposedly an acrobatic circus performer), and Claude Akins as Rockman.
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2.0 out of 5 stars Surprisingly flat "action" flick, Mar 19 2003
By 
Gary Cross (Auckland New Zealand) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Devil's Brigade (Widescreen) (DVD)
I wasn't expecting a lot from this movie - but I thought "what the heck, an action movie from the guy who made Chisum and The Wild Geese can't be all that bad." But no. The battle scene (and yes, there's only one battle in the whole movie), when it finally does come in the last twenty minutes of so of this two plus hour movie, is surpisingly dull. The photos I'd seen of extras flying through the air are nowhere to be seen. What you get are too many long-shots of small figures scuttling around amidst too much smoke and dust (which makes it difficult to figure pout who is where and doing what). Now and again we'll go in for a close-up in time to see one of the main actors get killed, but before you know it the Germans have surrendered and William Holden is blahing on about losing too many men (a fact which isn't apparent on the screen). You're probably thinking I'm focussing too much on the action - that there should be more to a movie than this. But let's face it - The Devils Brigade is designed to be an action movie (the characters are all one dimensional and the dialogue between the fueding Canadians and American's is pretty trite stuff, and that, folks, is essentially the plot), so on that level it has to be considered a failure.
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4.0 out of 5 stars Not a Dirty Dozen ripoff!, Feb 7 2003
By 
T O'Brien (Chicago, Il United States) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Devil's Brigade (Widescreen) (DVD)
The Devil's Brigade is a WWII story about the formation of a Special Forces unit meant to help the war effort in Europe. A ragtag bunch of Americans and a crack unit of Canadian troops are brought together to train to form this unit. Excellent cast with William Holden, Cliff Robertson, Vince Edwards, Dana Andrews, Carroll O'Connor, Richard Jaeckel, Claude Akins, Jeremy Slate, Andrew Prine, Luke Askew, and Richard Dawson in a pre-Family Fued role.

Critics said The Devil's Brigade is a ripoff of The Dirty Dozen, but it really isn't. While the storylines are similar, the overall idea of the movie is much different with the The Devil's Brigade dealing with a true story. This movie is a great guy film with excellent performances by much of the cast. There are some funny scenes as the Yanks and the Canucks get used to each other before the mandatory bonding scene during a barroom fight with a group of lumberjacks.

The DVD presentation is good with the widescreen presentation and the theatrical trailer. As another reviewer pointed out, the trailer contains Richard Jaeckel screaming as he falls from the cliff, something not in the movie. Excellent World War II adventure story with great cast and good action scenes. Don't miss it!

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4.0 out of 5 stars "Brigade" is a Good Movie, Jan 27 2003
By 
P. Pattison (United States) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Devil's Brigade (Widescreen) (DVD)
Here's the thing. This is a MOVIE. It is NOT an actual historical documentary. So consider that when viewing this fine movie. So just try to enjoy it for what it is and don't expect it to be something it is not.

William Holden, Cliff Robertson, Claude Akins, and the rest of the cast really give inspired performances. They all come across as tough and proud and determined which is exactly what you expect from Special Forces soldiers.

I would recommend this movie to anyone who likes the WW II genre and an action oriented movie. It is not Saving Private Ryan, but it is still good entertainment.

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Devil's Brigade (Widescreen)
Devil's Brigade (Widescreen) by Andrew V. McLaglen (DVD - 2003)
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