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The Dirty Dozen Poster

The Dirty Dozen

Train them! Excite them! Arm them!...Then turn them loose on the Nazis!
1967 | 149m | English

(82281 votes)

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Popularity: 3 (history)

Details

12 American military prisoners in World War II are ordered to infiltrate a well-guarded enemy château and kill the Nazi officers vacationing there. The soldiers, most of whom are facing death sentences for a variety of violent crimes, agree to the mission and the possible commuting of their sentences.
Release Date: Jun 15, 1967
Director: Robert Aldrich
Writer: Nunnally Johnson, Lukas Heller, E.M. Nathanson
Genres: Adventure, Action, War
Keywords based on novel or book, world war ii, nazi, castle, secret mission, us army, training, hand grenade, fistfight, mission, shootout, suicide mission, soldier, explosion, commando, behind enemy lines, military police
Production Companies Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, Seven Arts Pictures, MKH
Box Office Revenue: $45,300,000
Budget: $5,400,000
Updates Updated: Feb 01, 2025 (Update)
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
Trailers and Extras

International Posters

Full Credits

Name Character
Lee Marvin Maj. John Reisman
Ernest Borgnine Maj. Gen. Worden
Charles Bronson Joseph Wladislaw
Jim Brown Robert Jefferson
John Cassavetes Victor Franko
Richard Jaeckel Sergeant Bowren
George Kennedy Major Max Armbruster
Trini López Pedro Jiminez
Ralph Meeker Captain Stuart Kinder
Robert Ryan Col. Everett Dasher Breed
Telly Savalas Archer Maggott
Donald Sutherland Vernon Pinkley
Clint Walker Samson Posey
Robert Webber General Denton
Tom Busby Milo Vladek
Ben Carruthers Glenn Gilpin
Stuart Cooper Roscoe Lever
Robert Phillips Cpl. Morgan - MP Guard
Colin Maitland Seth Sawyer
Al Mancini Tassos Bravos
George Roubicek Pvt. Arthur James Gardner
Thick Wilson Gen. Worden's Aide
Dora Reisser German Officer's Girl
Michael Anthony German Officer in Staff Car (uncredited)
Leo Britt German General in Staff Car (uncredited)
Alan Chuntz French Servant (uncredited)
Gary Files Ambulance Driver (uncredited)
Judith Furse Drunken General's Wife (uncredited)
Hal Galili MP Master Sergeant / Hangman (uncredited)
Romo Gorrara Airborne Soldier (uncredited)
Willoughby Gray German Officer (uncredited)
Gerard Heinz Card-Playing German Officer (uncredited)
John G. Heller 2nd German Sentry at Chateau (uncredited)
George Hilsdon Medical Officer at Hanging (uncredited)
John Hollis German Porter at Chateau (uncredited)
Alf Joint German Sentry Wanting Light (uncredited)
Juba Kennerley German Officer (uncredited)
Hildegard Knef (uncredited)
Ann Lancaster Prostitute (uncredited)
Richard Marner German Sentry at Chateau (uncredited)
Dick Miller MP at Hanging (uncredited)
Lionel Murton MP Lt. Col. in charge at hanging (uncredited)
Suzanne Owens-Duval Prostitute (uncredited)
Mike Reid Sergeant at War Games HQ (uncredited)
Terry Richards Staff Sergeant MacIntosh Blake (uncredited)
Frederick Schiller Drunken German General (uncredited)
Richard Shaw German Officer Who Seals the Bunker (uncredited)
Warren Stanhope German Officer (uncredited)
Hedger Wallace German Officer (uncredited)
Theodore Wilhelm German Officer (uncredited)
Rocky Taylor Airborne Soldier (uncredited)
Burnell Tucker Army Doctor (uncredited)
Vicki Woolf Prostitute (uncredited)
Michael Segal Airborne Band Conductor (uncredited)
Gerry Crampton Staff Sergeant Alistair Clayton (uncredited)
Jack Carter Military Policman (uncredited)
Name Job
Robert Aldrich Director
Nunnally Johnson Screenplay
Lukas Heller Screenplay
Michael Luciano Editor
Edward Scaife Director of Photography
Frank De Vol Original Music Composer
Loren Janes Stunts
Roy Scammell Stunts
Rocky Taylor Stunts
Mike Reid Stunts
Paul Weston Stunts
Nosher Powell Stunts
Alf Joint Stunts
Romo Gorrara Stunts
Alan Chuntz Stunts
Cliff Richardson Special Effects
Franklin Milton Sound Designer
William Hutchinson Art Direction
E.M. Nathanson Novel
Julian Mackintosh Production Manager
Claude Hitchcock Sound Designer
Gerry Crampton Stunt Coordinator
Bert Batt Assistant Director
Wally Schneiderman Makeup Artist
Ernest Gasser Makeup Artist
Aaron Rochin Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Tim Hutchinson Set Designer
Colin Grimes Assistant Art Director
Van Allen James Sound Editor
William Parnell Assistant Editor
Jim Dowdall Armorer, Stunts, Stunt Double
Alan McCabe Camera Operator
John Poyner Sound Editor
Angela Allen Script Supervisor
Mickey Lennon Assistant Property Master
David Wynn-Jones Clapper Loader
Terry Richards Stunts
Terence Plummer Stunts
Maurice Marks Stunts
Rick Lester Stunt Driver
Mark McBride Stunts
Joe Dunne Stunts
Ken Buckle Stunts
Joe Powell Stunts
Bernard Barnsley Stunts
Larry Shaw Still Photographer
Name Title
Kenneth Hyman Producer
Raymond Anzarut Associate Producer
Organization Category Person
Venice Film Festival Best Supporting Actor Donald Sutherland Won
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 34 51 24
2024 5 34 46 27
2024 6 36 63 21
2024 7 39 58 28
2024 8 28 48 22
2024 9 32 59 23
2024 10 25 34 16
2024 11 26 61 15
2024 12 26 53 20
2025 1 24 41 18
2025 2 19 31 4
2025 3 7 26 2
2025 4 3 4 2
2025 5 3 4 2
2025 6 2 3 2
2025 7 3 3 2
2025 8 3 3 3

Trending Position


Year Month High Avg
2025 7 541 679
Year Month High Avg
2025 6 389 747
Year Month High Avg
2025 5 384 740
Year Month High Avg
2025 4 374 616
Year Month High Avg
2025 3 434 704
Year Month High Avg
2025 2 569 768

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Reviews

talisencrw
9.0

I loved this. Right up there with my favourite Aldrich films (though maybe 'Kiss Me Deadly' is still my number one), and of the greatest performances of both Lee Marvin and John Cassavetes (who was nominated for Best Supporting Actor at both the Golden Globes and Oscars for his work here). This h ... earkened back to the heady times when if you got a great cast and director together, you were virtually guaranteed you'd come out of it, because of comparatively little studio interference, with a bonafide classic piece of cinema. People thought the studio system was broken and needed fixing, by films such as 'Easy Rider'? THIS, along with other fine Aldrich works from this period, age a lot better and hold up much finer today than Dennis Hopper's so-called 'masterpiece' and its ilk.

Jun 23, 2021
John Chard
10.0

One of the most quintessential macho movies of all time. The Dirty Dozen is directed by Robert Aldrich and adapted for the screen by Nunnally Johnson & Lukas Heller from the novel by E. M. Nathanson. It stars Lee Marvin, Ernest Borgnine, Telly Savalas, Charles Bronson, John Cassavetes, Donald Su ... therland, Richard Jaeckel, Robert Ryan and Jim Brown. 1944, just prior to D-Day…. Major Reisman (Marvin) is a none conformist kind of guy and he riles the higher brass no end, so it comes as no surprise to him that he is the man assigned the unenviable task of assembling a suicide squad of army criminals for a mission to destroy a château in France. This particular château has no military value as such, but as it is used by many of the Nazi big chiefs, destroying it whilst they relax inside will upset the German plans immensely. But can this rag tag band of murderers, rapists and thieves shape up into something resembling a fighting force? Their reward, should they survive the mission, is amnesty, but Reisman for sure has his hands full on both sides of the war. "One: down to the road block, we've just begun.. Two: the guards are through.. Three: the Major's men are on a spree.. Four: Major and Wladislaw go through the door.. Five: Pinkley stays out in the drive.. Six: the Major gives the rope a fix.. Seven: Wladislaw throws the hook to heaven.. Eight: Jiménez has got a date.. Nine: the other guys go up the line.. Ten: Sawyer and Gilpin are in the pen.. Eleven: Posey guards points five and seven.. Twelve: Wladislaw and the Major go down to delve.. Thirteen: Franko goes up without being seen.. Fourteen: Zero-hour, Jiménez cuts the cable, Franko cuts the phone.. Fifteen: Franko goes in where the others have been.. Sixteen: We all come out like it's Halloween..." The Dirty Dozen has become one of those films that is a perennial holiday favourite like The Great Escape, Zulu and The Magnificent Seven. Which while it most definitely deserves such big exposure, it's a little surprising it's part of the holiday viewing schedules given its cynicism and amoral core, something which is one of the many great & intriguing things about Aldrich's testosterone laced movie. Met with mixed reviews on release, with the negative side of the fence bemoaning its nasty violence and preposterous plot, The Dirty Dozen none the less performed great at the box office where it was the fifth highest grosser of the year and the number one money maker in terms of profit to budget. Coming as it did during the middle of the Vietnam War, it was evident that the paying public quite easily bought into the thematics of it all. Over 50 years since it first lured people into the picture houses, Aldrich's movie shows no sign of aged frayed edges, or better still, and more remarkable, the enjoyability factors it holds has not diminished. What makes it a great film, then? First off is the all-star macho cast assembled by Aldrich and his team, big hitters like Marvin (stepping in when John Wayne balked at the script), Borgnine, Kennedy, Ryan and Bronson were already names to the public, but these are also supplemented by soon to be "stars" like Cassavetes, Sutherland and Savalas (also stepping into a role vacated by another, this time Jack Palance who didn't like the racial aggression of the character) & stoic performers like Jaeckel & Robert Webber. Into the mix is curio value with the casting of singer Trini Lopez and Gridiron star Jim Brown. Throw Clint Walker into the pot as well and you have got a considerable amount of beef in the stew! Secondly the film led the way for a slew of movies that featured bad guys as heroes, so with that Aldrich's film holds up well as being a hugely influential piece. Then thirdly is that not only is it intermittently funny as the violence explodes on the screen, but that it's also chocked full of action and adventure. All that and for those so inclined you can find questionable morals under scrutiny and see the "war is hell" banner firmly flown during the nastiness of the missions' culmination. Split into three parts - meet the guys - see them train - and then the mission, pic has been criticised for its lack of realism, but is that really needed in what is essentially a male fantasy piece setting out to entertain? Besides which, lets applaud it for acknowledging that brutality and atrocities were committed on both sides of the fence, rest assured, The Dirty Dozen still had enough edginess about it back in the 60s! It's also true enough to say that the characters, are in the main, stereotypes, and that the unravelling story is a touch clichéd, but these are men that men want to be (okay maybe not Savalas' religious maniac rapist!) and men that women can cast a flirtatious eye over - there's plenty of character here to hang your hats and undergarments on as they appeal to the inner rebel hidden away in many a viewer. The messages in here are not sledge hammered into the story (Aldrich always said he wasn't making a message movie, just a film about camaraderie and unlikely heroes), and the construction of the action is top notch from one of America's most under appreciated directors. It's nicely shot in 70mm MetroColor/MetroScope by Edward Scaife (Night of the Demon/Khartoum) and features a suitably boisterous music score from Frank De Vol (Cat Ballou/The Flight of the Phoenix). It's a far from flawless picture, of that there is no doubt, but it's loved by millions and continues to gain an audience yearly by those who are willing to view it on its own entertaining terms. As a boy I wanted to be Lee Marvin because of this film, as a middle aged man now, I still want to be Lee Marvin in this film. That's yet another reason why The Dirty Dozen is so great. 10/10

May 16, 2024
Geronimo1967
7.0

Lee Marvin is charged with a mission to drum a dozen criminals and reprobates into some sort of cohesive military unit with a view to destroying an heavily guarded chateau that serves as a respite for high ranking Nazi officers. The challenge looks impossible as the band are assembled - a bigger cro ... wd of cowards, thugs and zealots you would never hope to see; but with the assistance of his stoic sergeant (Richard Jaeckel) he manages to get the wacky zealot Telly Savalas, Charles Bronson, Sonny Bono, Jim Brown and a woefully sleazy John Cassavetes to pull in the same direction. It's all good stuff, with plenty of humour to keep it all going nicely. Maybe a bit too long, but a good wartime action drama that builds well to a strong conclusion.

Jul 15, 2024