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Cross of Iron (1977) [VHS]
 
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Cross of Iron (1977) [VHS] (1977)

Starring: James Coburn, Maximilian Schell Director: Sam Peckinpah Rating: R (Restricted) Format: VHS Tape
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (168 customer reviews)

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Editorial Reviews

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Sam Peckinpah weighs in on World War II--and from the German point of view. The result is as bleak, if not quite as bloody, as one expects, in part because the 1977 film was cut to ribbons by nervous studio executives. The assorted excerpts that remain don't constitute an exhilarating or even an especially thrilling battle epic. The war is grinding to a close, and veterans like James Coburn's Steiner are grimly aware that it's a lost cause. The battlefield is a death trap of sucking mud and barbed wire, and the German generals (viz., the martinet played by James Mason) seem to pose a bigger threat to the life and limbs of Steiner's men than the inexorable enemy. Not even Peckinpah's famous sensuous exuberance when shooting violence is much in evidence; the picture is a depressive, claustrophobically overcast experience. The bloody high (or low) point isn't a shooting; it's a wince-inducing de-penis-tration during oral sex. For a fun time with the men in (Nazi) uniform, try Das Boot instead. --David Chute

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168 Reviews
5 star:
 (83)
4 star:
 (41)
3 star:
 (18)
2 star:
 (15)
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 (11)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
4.0 out of 5 stars (168 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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122 of 123 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Great movie, atrocious Region 1 DVD release!, October 31, 2003
This review is from: Cross of Iron (Full Screen) (DVD)
Cross Of Iron is one war film that will take repeat viewings to truly absorb all the material. With that said, I won't elaborate on the film's strong points since they've already been mentioned by many before. And this DVD release from Hen's Tooth is not the one to view this film from. It is a shortened edited version and the transfer is Full-Frame, it doesn't even appear to be Pan & Scan...simply a dead shot down the middle of the film. The quality of this Hen's Tooth release is absolutely atrocious for the DVD format. It appears as though it's almost a VHS transfer, or a heavily worn film transfer at best. There are numerous scratches and dust artifacts, and the color saturation is very faded in many scenes. The sound on the DVD is equally terrible during the entire movie, it's very hard to understand much of the dialogue at times.

I've purchased bargain DVD's for $3 before that are 100% better in quality than this! Just by the sheer fact that the film is edited would have Peckinpah rolling in his grave. Hen's Tooth knows and have admitted that the transfer is horrible, yet they still charge $30 retail nearly 4 years after their DVD release?!?? There is no way that this disc is worth that much money. I would gladly pay the price if it was a Criterion edition, but not this poor edition.

If you have the technical capability I recommend ordering either the UK DVD or Japanese DVD of Cross Of Iron. It won't cost you much more (perhaps less) than this unworthy Region 1 DVD release. The imports both present the film in it's original anamorphic widescreen format, with vastly superior picture and sound. If you don't have the technical capability, then buy a VHS edition of Cross Of Iron.

5 stars for the film itself, 0 stars for the Hen's Tooth DVD...hence my 4 star rating.

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94 of 96 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A gruesome masterpiece -- intense, chilling, September 14, 2002
By Grant A Thompson (Canberra, ACT Australia) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Cross of Iron (Full Screen) (DVD)
Cross Of Iron is a masterpiece, one of the greatest anti-war, anti-authoritarian movies. It is one of director Sam Peckinpah's two finest works -- the other being The Wild Bunch. It deserves to be ranked in the same great war movie company as Apocalypse Now, Das Boot, Full Metal Jacket, Paths Of Glory, Saving Private Ryan, Seven Samurai, and Zulu. Its setting on the World War Two Eastern Front, its gruesomeness, and its risk-taking viewpoint on ugly combat from the German side, have tended to count against fair assessment of its considerable artistic achievements. Viewers wary of the morality of its German viewpoint and its explicitness might find that it is fundamentally about humanity in general as a victim of war. The film reflects on the humanity which may be found on all sides of conflict--including Russian humanity portrayed variously as relentless, innocent, brave, and feminine.

Cross Of Iron opens with an intense, chilling montage of nursery rhyme, propaganda, combat newsreel and atrocity. By the end of the main title the montage subtly introduces the central characters, a German reconnaissance unit patrolling on the 1943 Russian front.

This 1977 film set rarely matched standards of cinematic mayhem. Cross Of Iron explosions don't look merely like pretty fireballs -- they blast fragments, rocks and debris, leaving no doubt as to why blood gouts from stumps of limbs and shrapnel-shredded entrails... Amid the screams of wounded and dying, as dust subsides from a mortar barrage, an artillery piece shorn of its crew by a near hit swings across a pocked battlefield, its traversing wheel spinning under its own momentum. The carnage occurs in the choreographed slow motion which Peckinpah made his signature.

James Coburn turns in one of his finest roles as Rolf Steiner, a highly decorated NCO who leads a German reconnaissance squad. Steiner fights less for his country than for his comrades. He has low opinions of class and rank distinctions. He is contemptuous both of Nazism and the aristocratic Prussian arrogance of his new superior officer, Captain Stransky, played with great style by Maximilian Schell. But there are hints of a dark side. Although Steiner is articulate and philosophical he has no answer when his love interest during an enforced break from battle, nurse Eva (Senta Berger), bitterly accuses him of being afraid of what he would be without the war.

Among the many fine supporting performances, James Mason plays the war-weary Colonel Brandt. He sees the immorality and futility of German war aims, but his sense of honour and duty about the prevailing struggle makes ceasing to fight unthinkable. David Warner plays Brandt's out-of-place and out-of-time adjutant, Captain Kiesel, who represents to his colonel the hope that a more enlightened postwar Germany might arise from the ashes of inevitable defeat.

War movie buffs irritated by the technical inaccuracies common in many examples of the genre will find some satisfaction in attention to authenticity of weaponry. A range of genuine WWII German and Russian small arms appears. The T 34/85 tanks are real, although the very picky might argue that this is at least six months premature, and that for the summer of '43 they should be T 34/76. Tactics at times deviate from the textbooks, but this is a drama, not a combat manual.

Cross Of Iron is a five-star movie. The Hen's Tooth Video release is a two-star DVD, with sub-standard picture and sound. But it is worth owning while this great film of a great American director lacks the high quality collectors' edition Zone 1 DVD release it deserves.

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64 of 67 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Realistic Russian Front Epic, Far Better than Stalingrad, December 17, 1998
By A Customer
Take it from someone who was an Army "grunt" for 12 years -- this movie was filmed as realistic as one could get without being on the battlefield, and during my time in service, Cross of Iron was one of the favorites of infantrymen and WWII buffs everywhere. Many wellknown (at least in Europe) German actors were featured in this film. It is one of the few movies I've seen that accurately depicts the spite and tension that exists between officers (seeking career advancement at the expense of their men) and enlisted men (just trying to survive). Having lived in Germany and conversed on many occasions with Wehrmacht veterans who were on the Russian front, I found Cross of Iron to be very close in detail to the conditions and experiences they described. A previous writer describes the movie's mood as depressing (not as much as Das Boot or Stanlingrad, IMHO!); yet it reflects exactly the realization of fighting for a lost cause that many German soldiers experienced. And hell, war IS depressing! Aside from the farmhouse scenes involving a female Soviet unit, this movie is as real as any German depiction of fighting on the Russian front that I have ever read, and there are many books in this genre. If you want to know what it was really like to fight in the elements in East Europe in WWII, in the mud, sweat, and shrapnel, and to understand what comaraderie is about (without all the surrealism and eccentricities of "Stalingrad") then this under-appreciated classic is the one to see! The artillery and trench warfare scenes are incredible, some of the best I've ever seen... Sam Peckinpah was able to effectively show all the sharp contradictions of war: courage and cowardice, sensitivity and crudeness, mercy and cruelty, and in the end, irony and justice.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars One of the Very Best Ever Made
CROSS OF IRON is one of the four or five best WW II movies ever made. I have studied WW II for over 50 years and, having lived in Germany on two occasions, once as an army... Read more
Published 1 month ago by T. Balkins

5.0 out of 5 stars CROSS OF IRON"
Easily one of the best or the best produced film so far about "the forgotten war" or the eastern front during World War II, between Hitler's Germany and Stalin's Russia. Read more
Published 4 months ago by L. Dequesada

5.0 out of 5 stars 'Where the Iron Crosses Grow'- A Great World War II film
This film is really Sam Peckinpah's last truly great work. I like his movies because films with guts aren't made a lot in Hollywood these days. Read more
Published 4 months ago by Chris

2.0 out of 5 stars "Aaaayaaaaahhhhhh... the phone is ringing!!!"
Another Peckinpah MESS!

First off, to all you idiots that took the time to write 5 star reviews, this is the most intelligent and thoughtful review by the entire lot... Read more
Published 5 months ago by Ghenghis

5.0 out of 5 stars it's good movie of war.
This movie is very famous war movie,but now it is not forsale in japan.I'm happy to watching "Cross of Iron".and this DVD's quality of a picture and sounds is good too.
Published 7 months ago by Shigeo Hiratsuka

5.0 out of 5 stars Very Good WWII Movie
This is a very good WWII movie with quite an interesting view from the German
soldier perspective. Read more
Published 8 months ago by P. Kelley

4.0 out of 5 stars 3 stars out of 4
The Bottom Line:

Not Peckinpah's best, Cross of Iron could have used tighter pacing (and an actual ending), but nonetheless offers an interesting and altogether... Read more
Published 11 months ago by One-Line Film Reviews

3.0 out of 5 stars I liked it in 1977 - not so much today
I saw "Cross of Iron" when it was in theatrical release in 1977 and thought it was a pretty good treatment of the German side of WWII. Read more
Published 16 months ago by John M Flora

4.0 out of 5 stars A nicely done Eastern Front movie
Overview
Cross of Iron is director Sam Peckinpah's look at the German Army on the Eastern Front in 1943. Read more
Published 20 months ago by N. Trachta

2.0 out of 5 stars Terrible video transfer; great story done badly
I saw this movie originally back in the 1970s. I received the movie the other day. Cross of Iron was a pretty good movie back in 1977 but now - after spending a good bit of time... Read more
Published 22 months ago by William A. Hensler

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