Cross of Iron

R 7.4
1977 2 hr 12 min Drama , Action , History , War

It is 1943, and the German army—ravaged and demoralised—is hastily retreating from the Russian front. In the midst of the madness, conflict brews between the aristocratic yet ultimately pusillanimous Captain Stransky and the courageous Corporal Steiner. Stransky is the only man who believes that the Third Reich is still vastly superior to the Russian army. However, within his pompous persona lies a quivering coward who longs for the Iron Cross so that he can return to Berlin a hero. Steiner, on the other hand is cynical, defiantly non-conformist and more concerned with the safety of his own men rather than the horde of military decorations offered to him by his superiors.

  • Cast:
    James Coburn , Maximilian Schell , James Mason , David Warner , Klaus Löwitsch , Vadim Glowna , Roger Fritz

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Reviews

Sameer Callahan
1977/05/20

It really made me laugh, but for some moments I was tearing up because I could relate so much.

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Frances Chung
1977/05/21

Through painfully honest and emotional moments, the movie becomes irresistibly relatable

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Darin
1977/05/22

One of the film's great tricks is that, for a time, you think it will go down a rabbit hole of unrealistic glorification.

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Scarlet
1977/05/23

The film never slows down or bores, plunging from one harrowing sequence to the next.

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dworldeater
1977/05/24

Cross Of Iron is a very good and different WW2 film that is very original and well done. This movie was'nt a big budget production by any means, but Sam Peckinpah got a lot of bang for his buck in his last great film. The film is gritty, bleak and depressing and is taken from the German soldier's point of view in the final days of battle on the Russian front. This film is mostly devoid of dogma or politics of the war, but very accurately conveys the horrors of war. James Coburn gives one of his finest performances as skilled German soldier Sgt. Steiner who is a killing machine, but hates the war and his superiors.(which mirrors Sam 's views on authority, especially producers, of which his battles are legendary) The film has excellent performers for sure with Maximillian Schell, James Mason and David Warner. The battle scenes are great and showcases a lot of Sam's signature slow motion shootouts. This is Sam Peckinpah's only war film and it is very unique and quite excellent that he comments on violence and ultra authoritarian governments. He does not beat the viewer over the head with this subtext, but the anti war message is there. Even with Peckinpah's alcohol and drug problems, he still is on the top of his game in this production and made a very memorable and effective anti war film.

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virek213
1977/05/25

When it came to Sam Peckinpah as a filmmaker, there was never an easy way of doing things, and a penchant for doing nothing the way Hollywood wanted. When he wasn't battling with studio chiefs and producers (which was a great deal of the time), he was frequently battling with critics who liked to nail him for his graphic violence and the complex approach he took to that violence, especially with films like THE WILD BUNCH and STRAW DOGS. It earned him the fairly distorting misnomer "Bloody Sam", which didn't really begin to explain the depth for which he cared about filmic art. And probably no other film of the fourteen he made was quite as infuriating as his 1977 World War II film CROSS OF IRON.Based on the novel of the same name by Willi Heinrich, the film is set along the Eastern Front of World War II, where in 1943 the battle between Stalin's Soviet forces and Hitler's German forces was becoming the personification of a meat grinder war. James Coburn, a Peckinpah favorite, gives another extremely probing performance as Sergeant Rolf Steiner, the leader of a vastly outmanned and outgunned platoon of German foot soldiers, who learns that his particular squad is about to be taken over by the very autocratic Captain Hauptmann Stransky (Maximillian Schell). For reasons that are quite selfish, namely the desire to get the German equivalent of the Purple Heart or Bronze Star, the Iron Cross, Schell forces Coburn to go into battle against a regiment of the Soviet army that literally cuts their platoon to pieces. As is par for the course in a Peckinpah film, we have two men in conflict with one another, both practically two sides of the same German coin, only one of them (Coburn) cares more for the lives of his men, and Schell just cares about getting that damned Iron Cross, and is so blatant about that ambition that he tells Coburn, "I will show you how a true Prussian fights." Coburn then retorts, quite rightly, "Then I will show you where the Iron crosses grow." It is not too surprising that the battle and action scenes in CROSS OF IRON are distinct from every other filmmaker that has ever lived; we are, after all, talking about Sam Peckinpah here. And he certainly doesn't make things easy; besides the carnage that he shows, he is as precise as ever at showing how the horrors of war affect the men that have to fight it, and how alienated and anesthetized they can be to death and killing on a mass scale we hope never to revisit. Coburn, of course, is brilliant in his role as the humane Steiner whose only concern is for the men he leads and not for the officer corps, especially not the vainglorious Schell (another fine performance). Both actors are supported by a great cast that includes, among others, Senta Berger (who played the love interest in the director's 1965 Civil War western MAJOR DUNDEE), David Warner, and James Mason.Unfortunately, CROSS OF IRON failed to find much of an audience outside of continental Europe because Peckinpah depicted World War II in such a politically incorrect way: from the point-of-view of German foot soldiers, as opposed to Americans and/or Brits, something that clearly seemed to alienate people just wanting to see a standard-issue war film where good guys and bad guys are clearly distinguishable. But that's John Wayne theatrics of the worst kind; and in real war, the line between good and bad is not only a thin one but it's a line that is also frequently crossed. In any case, Coburn, Schell, Mason, Warner, and their fellow German soldiers are frontline soldiers in the heat of battle, not the Nazi commandants who gassed six million Jews with impunity in the concentration camps. They may be wearing the uniform of a country and a leader with a (to say the least) unjust cause, but that by itself doesn't diminish the reality of the horrors they experience, and in that respect it makes them no different from the Americans, the British, or even the Soviets.Helped immensely by a crew that includes the great British cinematographer John Coquillon, who had already worked with Peckinpah on STRAW DOGS and PAT GARRETT AND BILLY THE KID, CROSS OF IRON is one of those films that ranks with the best films about any war ever made, whether it's about World War I (ALL QUIET ON THE WESTERN FRONT; PATHS OF GLORY), World War II (SAVING PRIVATE RYAN), or Vietnam (BORN ON THE FOURTH OF JULY; PLATOON; FULL METAL JACKET). Even with a few flaws in it, this is a movie that needs to be restored to its full original, and extremely disturbing, glory and power, especially for how it adds to Peckinpah's reputation as an ultimate seeker of the truth of Man's contradictions, no matter how disturbing or politically incorrect he is in doing so.

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Sam Peckinpah
1977/05/26

Attractive sensual Eva utters ''Long live Germany''.This is the best film depicting ordinary Germans fighting for regime that has no moral ground. ''Long live Germany'' are crucial words, crucial because many Germans fought for Germany and not for Adolf Hitler, although he changed the oath not for Germany but for himself personally. Miserable Bohemian corporal had the nerve to spit on German military tradition and patriotism and destroyed the moral ground of the people, country and army. That moral bankruptcy and corruption shapes the whole atmosphere of this great film, and strife for survival of ordinary troopers becomes deeply existential drama where the only thing they are fighting for are their lives, or, when officer caste member is in question, vague sense of duty and honor shaped into piece of metal called Cross of Iron.

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gilligan1965
1977/05/27

WHEN HAS SAM Peckinpah EVER DIRECTED A BAD MOVIE...OR, EVEN ONE THAT WAS 'JUST O.K?' "NEVER!" This is probably the best World War II movie ever made! As far as effects and story go, this movie even gives "Saving Private Ryan;" "A Bridge Too Far;" and, "The Longest Day" a run...and, they are all "PERFECT" movies, too! This is just a terrific war movie with a lot of action; but, it's also a great and deep story of military corruption, lying, manipulation, and, of how the rich and privileged so easily take advantage of the poor and unprivileged and bully them because they're vulnerable.Although this movie is of and about the German Army in Russia during World War II...in many ways it's about "all armies;" and, about many corporations and businesses that have nothing to do with war at all.It's really about human nature and about who can get what from whom; and, whom can get what from who...by throwing their weight around.THIS IS A GREAT MOVIE! :)

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