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Tag Archives: Crime Wave (1953)
Playing dirty: war as a criminal enterprise
Towards the end of last year I posted on my love for the 1968 espionage/war thriller, Where Eagles Dare. My first post for 2019 continues what is becoming an unofficial series of sorts on this site, ‘in praise of films I watched with my parents on the television on Sunday night when I was young’. This time, I want to briefly pay tribute to the incredibly hard-boiled late sixties revisionist war film by Hungarian emigre, Andre De Toth, Play Dirty.
I am not sure exactly what was going on with war films in the late 1960s – I assume it was the influence of the radical tenor of the times – but there was a whole crop of them that really took the gloves off in terms in their cynical, gritty depiction of the utter corruption and folly of war. Think Jack Cardiff’s The Dark of the Sun (1968), and Phil Karlson’s Hornet’s Nest (1970), as well as the aforementioned Where Eagles Dare, just to name a few I have featured on this this site previously.
Set on the North African front during World War II, I reckon Play Dirty is up there with the most hard-boiled and cynical of them. Plus January 1 was the 50th anniversary of its release, a milestone that went totally unmentioned anywhere, so the time is right to give it a bit of love.… Read more
Posted in Andre De Toth, Michael Caine, Robert Aldrich, War film
Tagged Andre de Toth, Crime Wave (1953), Day of the Outlaw (1959), Hardboiled war films, Harry Andrews, House of Wax (1953), Jack Cardiff, Micheal Caine, Nigel Davenport, Nigel Green, Play Dirty (1969), Robert Aldrich, The Dirty Dozen (1967), Where Eagles Dare (1968)