Never have so few taken so many for so much.
During World War II, former lieutenant Kelly (Clint Eastwood) learns that there’s gold bars worth $16 million hidden in a bank behind enemy lines, just waiting for him and his newfound partners to pick them up. This action-comedy opened the same year as MASH and is equally irreverent and anti-authoritarian, even casting “Hawkeye” himself as a hippie commander named “Oddball”. Eastwood gets to spoof his Italian westerns, Don Rickles delivers a few funny lines and all the explosions look very expensive… but it’s a long, uneven movie and kind of hard to care much for the mission.
1970-U.S. 145 min. Color. Widescreen. Directed by Brian G. Hutton. Music: Lalo Schifrin. Song: “Burning Bridges” (Mike Curb, Lalo Schifrin). Cast: Clint Eastwood (Kelly), Telly Savalas (Big Joe), Don Rickles (Crapgame), Donald Sutherland, Carroll O’Connor, Gavin MacLeod… Harry Dean Stanton.
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Masterpiece
Excellent
Good stuff
Worth a look
So-so
Bad
Useless