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DESERT FOX (DVD/WAR CLASSICS/SENSORMATIC) DVD Movie

DESERT FOX (DVD/WAR CLASSICS/SENSORMATIC) DVD


1.33:1: Pre-1954 Standard

PN: 024543071990IE     Release: 05/13/2008
Starring: James Mason, Cedric Hardwicke, Jessica Tandy
Director(s): Henry Hathaway


The Desert Fox
The Desert Fox is a superb filmed biography of German general Erwin Rommel, concentrating on the period between his retreat from North Africa and his government-decreed death. A brilliant tactician, Rommel earns the respect not only of his own men but of the enemy. Unfortunately, Adolph Hitler (Luther Adler), laboring under the delusion that he too is a military genius, demands more of Rommel than he's able to provide. Ordered to stand his ground in Africa to the last man, Rommel realizes that it's more intelligent in the long run to retreat; this incurs Hitler's wrath, but Rommel is a war hero, and as such is virtually "untouchable". Increasingly disgusted by Hitler's behavior, Rommel joins in a plot to assassinate the Fuhrer. The attempt fails, and Rommel's complicity is discovered. He is given a choice: either face a horrible death by torture, or commit suicide, thereby saving his family and his reputation. Rommel opts for the latter; the official story given to the press is that Rommel died heroically of his war wounds. Also appearing in The Desert Fox are Jessica Tandy as Rommel's wife and Leo G. Carroll as an insufferably aristocratic Von Ruhnstedt. The film caused a critical stir in 1951 by providing a tense ten-minute dramatic sequence before the opening credits--a technique that is all but de rigueur today. The Desert Fox was based on the book by Brigadier Desmond Young, who narrates the film and appears as himself in the early scenes. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
Cast
James Mason as Erwin Rommel
Cedric Hardwicke as Dr. Karl Strolin
Jessica Tandy as Frau Rommel
Luther Adler as Adolf Hitler
Everett Sloane as Gen. Wilhelm Burgdorf
Leo G. Carroll as Field Marshal Von Rundstedt
George Macready as Gen. Fritz Bayerlein
Richard Boone as Capt. Hermann Aldinger
Eduard Franz as Col. Klaus Von Stauffenberg
Desmond Young as Himself
Charles Evans as Gen. Schultz
Walter Kingsford as Admiral Friedrich Ruge
John Hoyt as Field Marshal Wilhelm Keitel
Don de Leo as Gen. Ernst Maisel
Richard Elmore as Rommel's Driver in Africa
John Vosper as Maj. Walker
Dan O'Herlihy as Commando Captain
Scott Forbes as Commando Colonel
Victor Wood as British medic
Lester Matthews as British officer
Mary Carroll as Maid
Paul Cavanagh as Col. Caesar von Hofacker
Jack Baston as Gen. Alfred Jodl
Carleton Young as German Major
Freeman Lusk as German surgeon
Crew
Lyle Wheeler - Art Director
Maurice Ransford - Art Director
Edward Stevenson - Costume Designer
Henry Hathaway - Director
James B. Clark - Editor
Daniele Amfitheatrof - Composer (Music Score)
Ben Nye, Sr. - Makeup
Norbert F. Brodin - Cinematographer
Nunnally Johnson - Producer
Stuart A. Reiss - Set Designer
Thomas K. Little - Set Designer
Ray Kellogg - Special Effects
Fred Sersen - Special Effects
Eugene Grossman - Sound/Sound Designer
Roger Heman - Sound/Sound Designer
Nunnally Johnson - Screenwriter
Desmond Young - Book Author

The Desert Fox
This 1951 production was among the first post-World War II motion pictures to portray a German officer sympathetically -- in this case, Erwin Rommel, dubbed "the Desert Fox" for his wily tactics as a tank commander in the sands of North Africa. To fashion its portrait of him, the film uses a variety of devices: narration that presents him, dialogue that praises him, archival battle scenes that attest to his military genius, and staged episodes that demonstrate his mystique as a seemingly invulnerable combatant both feared and revered by the enemy. The opening of the film establishes Rommel as an Ubermensch. British submarine commandos sneak ashore at night and attack Rommel's North African headquarters, stabbing and shooting their way through sentries. After the skirmish, a dying British soldier looks up at a German and says, "Did we get him?" The German replies, "Are you serious, Englishman?" In one of his most acclaimed roles, James Mason plays Rommel with conviction, demonstrating to English-speaking audiences that Germans could be heroes, too. However, the film downplays Rommel's gigantic ego and his penchant for posing for cameras. Otherwise, the film generally follows historical accounts, including the fuzzy details surrounding his tacit support of the plot to overthrow the Fuehrer. Luther Adler brilliantly portrays a demonstrative, raging Hitler who upbraids Rommel, and Everett Sloane and Leo G. Carroll ooze venom as Nazi officers. The final scene -- when Rommel must choose between a vial of instant death or a public trial jeopardizing the welfare of his wife and son -- is poignant and memorable. ~ Mike Cummings, All Movie Guide
 
(no awards)

General Specifications:

Language Options:English, Spanish
Subtitle Options:English, Spanish
Sound Processing:DD1: Dolby Digital Mono
Additional Features:none specified
DVD Aspect Ratio:1.33:1: Pre-1954 Standard
MPAA Rating:NR
DVD Discs Included:1
DVD Sides:1
DVD DVD Region Code:1
Content Length:88 min
 

DVD Chapters:


Side #1 --
1. Credits/Night Raid
2. One Man's Quest
3. Tactical Genius
4. Victory or Death
5. Whispers of Discontent
6. Weakened Defense
7. The Conspiracy Grows
8. Tender Good-byes
9. D-Day
10. Too Old to Revolt
11. Reasoning With a Madman
12. Brush With Death
13. Two Choices
14. Final Farewell
15. A Soldier of Renown


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