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Robert Siegel's Golden Hollywood

Robert Siegel - Main Page

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A Bridge Too Far

Film appreciation by Robert Siegel of The Digital Bits

Operation Market Garden lasted just nine days in September of 1944. Thirty-two years later, producers Joseph E. Levine (who himself provided some of the film's financing) and Richard P. Levine, along with director Richard Attenborough, spent the entire spring, summer and autumn of 1976 re-creating the event for the $27 million film A Bridge Too Far, which has been released on Blu-ray Disc by MGM/UA Home Entertainment, a film for which almost 3 million feet of film were originally shot.

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A Bridge Too Far one sheet

The film is based on the late Cornelius Ryan's international best-seller, which chronicles the ill-fated airborne assault - the largest in the history of warfare - which was aimed at terminating the Second World War by the end of 1944. Operation Market Garden was masterminded by Field Marshal Bernard Montgomery and sanctioned by General Dwight D. Eisenhower, and was a bold plan calling for 35,000 U.S. and British paratroops to drop into Eastern Holland and there secure the six major bridges leading to the German border.

A Bridge Too Far publicity shots

The casting for A Bridge Too Far became something of an obsession with producer Levine, in his desire to mount an all-star cast that would be recognizable by surnames alone. Listed alphabetically they are Dirk Bogarde, James Caan, Michael Caine, Sean Connery, Edward Fox, Elliot Gould, Gene Hackman, Anthony Hopkins, Hardy Kruger, Laurence Oliver, Ryan O'Neal, Robert Redford, Maximillion Schell and Liv Ullman. Fourteen Oscar winners were associated with this movie, though none of the actors in the fourteen were nominated for this film. Changes were made in casting from the starting phase of production, in which Steve McQueen, Audrey Hepburn and Roger Moore were originally to be cast. Word was that Hepburn wanted much too large of a salary which was impossible due to the salaries of so many well-known actors and that McQueen was only accepting starring roles and United Artists refused him top billing. Moore's schedule did not allow him to be cast as he was going into production on another United Artists title The Spy who Loved Me.

The film was shot on locations which were situated on the real battlefields of Market Garden - at Eindhoven, Grave, Nijmegan and the crucial drop zones surrounding Arnhem. The only newcomer was the 8th Century city of Deventer, which became the film company's permanent base of operations. Arnhem itself, with its infamous bridge, is today an ultra-modern metropolis and Deventer, 40 kilometers to the north, by coincidence had a similar circular arched bridge and period architecture that escaped war damage. In housekeeping terms, the film's statistics are staggering. World War II uniforms came from every costume house in Europe, and aircraft, tanks, armored vehicles, jeeps, cannons and guns of every description were culled from museums, veterans organizations and private collectors. Leading survivors of Market Garden like Horrocks, Maj. General Robert Urquhart, Gavin and Lieut. Colonel Jonnie Frost fine-tooth- combed the final shooting script, making sure things were as accurate as possible, so they were hired as consultants for the film. Upwards of 1,500 Dutch extras - mostly local villagers - were on standby call for battle scenes throughout production. An important contingent of 104 hand-picked young actors was signed in London to perform the minor speaking roles of the British troops. The work that went into the production took many hard months for all of the actors involved. The production of this film was aided by the governments of the United States, Great Britain, The Netherlands, Belgium and Denmark. They pooled their expertise and knowledge in assembling the necessary equipment to restage the great military operation.


Director Richard Attenborough, who actually has a cameo in the film, got his start one weekend afternoon when he went to see a Charlie Chaplin movie. From that point-on, he was hooked on film. He was born in Cambridge, England, and after a scholarship student to the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art when he was 16, his first full movie experience came in Noel Coward's In Which We Serve. At this screening, the master Coward greeted the anxious newcomer with the words "You must be Richard Attenborough, you don't know me but my name is Noel Coward." Since that experience, he has never strayed far from the camera. A star of more than 70 films, he also produced four of Britain's more successful motion pictures. In 1968, he changed direction once again and took on the task of directing Oh What a Lovely War. With producer Joe Levine he devoted two years to the planning and production of A Bridge Too Far without compromising all of his other commitments, which at the time included Chairman of Capital Radio, President of the Muscular Dystrophy Group of Great Britain, Chairman of the Actor's Charitable Trust, Governor of the National Film School and Vice-President of the British Academy of Film and Television Arts. Remaining the same breezy extrovert who burst to the top with the dust of drama school still in his hair, he was knighted by Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II in the 1976 New Year's Honors List.

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A Bridge Too Far poster art

A Bridge Too Far one sheet

The screenplay for A Bridge Too Far was written by William Goldman from the book by Cornelius Ryan. Goldman was a novelist for ten years before he turned his acute gaze on the cinema. Born in Chicago in 1931, Goldman is the author of Boys and Girls Together, No Way to Treat a Lady, Father's Day and a standard work in the theater The Season: A Candid Look at Broadway. An early screenplay of Harper which starred Paul Newman led to his writing Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid. Goldman's association with Robert Redford continued with The Hot Rock, The Great Waldo Pepper and All the President's Men. Other screenplays he is known for are The Stepford Wives and Marathon Man. For cameraman Geoffrey Unsworth, who entered the film industry in 1932, when cinematography in English studios was still dominated by the Americans, he made steady progress from slate boy to focus puller and camera operator with Victor Saville and Alfred Hitchcock. He then spent some years with the Technicolor Organization which supplied not only the film, but cameras using it and the crew to run them. After the war, Unsworth helped fashion MGM's A Yank at Oxford, The Life and Death of Colonel Blimp and A Matter of Life and Death. He then joined the Rank Organization, then in fullest flood and shot most of the early Dick Bogarde films, staying thirteen years. When Rank switched its energies away from production, he found himself on an open market. A triple British Oscar winner, he used the same two-man camera team almost exclusively for quite a few years in such films as Becket, 2001: A Space Odyssey, Murder on the Orient Express and The Return of the Pink Panther.

The film, which cost almost $27 million dollars, a very high cost for a film at the time, ended up doubling that amount at the U.S. boxoffice alone. It has since generated over $8 million more in video sales.

Release Details:

Theatrical Release: June 15, 1977 by United Artists
Filming Locations: England, The Netherlands
Category: War Adventure
Original Running Time: 175 minutes
Original Specs: 35mm Panavision, Technicolor, 70mm (blow-up)
Soundtrack on LP, CD: Ryko Disc RCD 10-746
Awards: BAFTA Awards: Best Film Score, Best Cinematogrophy, Best Soundtrack, Best Supporting Actor (Edward Fox)

Blu-ray Disc Release: June 3, 2008
Blu-ray Disc Specs: English Dolby Digital 4.0, DTS HD Master 5.1, Spanish Dolby Digital Mono, French Dolby Digital 5.1, Subtitles: English, Spanish, Korean, Cantonese
DVD Release: Special Edition - October 25, 2005
DVD Specs: Special Edition - English Dolby Digital 5.1, Dolby Digital Stereo, French Dolby Digital 5.1, Subtitles: English, French
Click here to order A Bridge Too Far on Blu-ray from Amazon

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