The Bridge at Remagen Comments

  • Hilma 2023-07-31 02:57:25

    There are quite a lot of bright spots. Although the main scene is just a big iron bridge, the blasting scene is completely different from the rough and simple model, and the smoke and dust in the sky are extremely shocking. The soundtrack is also a huge plus, it's almost like it's copied from some pasta. American and German soldiers were forced to exchange fire against a backdrop of war weariness and fatigue as the war was coming to an end. After the killing of the Youth Corps soldiers, the...

  • Fabian 2023-07-27 21:57:25

    The irony is that the bridge, which was taken with all his life, collapsed into the Rhine after ten...

  • Melyna 2023-07-15 12:26:25

    ...

  • Clemmie 2023-07-11 01:48:55

    In the 1960s without any computer special effects, it was not easy to shoot such majestic war scenes with real gunpowder machine...

  • Elyssa 2023-06-04 14:24:12

    Four stars are mainly given to war scenes, especially various explosion effects. One star was deducted because the crew forcibly added extra drama to the film that was originally a pure war drama: a chaotic hodgepodge, which slowed down the main line...

  • Jany 2023-05-19 16:26:46

    The German bridge building is so good...they didn't blow up...the careful and cautious German spirit can be...

  • Danielle 2023-05-10 06:00:06

    How does this look like a movie from 42 years ago? It's unreasonable to have such a low...

  • Edythe 2023-04-05 06:25:57

    It was the only film Yates produced during his time in Hollywood as a screenwriter. Not to brag as a Yates fan, the literary tone of the film is very good. In addition to the background description of the main traffic road Remagen Bridge, the American and German soldiers at the bottom of the war are also very detailed. Yates paid tribute to the German generals guarding the bridge and affirmed his behavior of caring for the people and uniting the war. In order to seize the bridge, the US...

  • Lexie 2023-04-04 06:59:42

    The literary tone of the film is very good. In addition to the background description of the Remagen Bridge, the main traffic road, the American and German soldiers at the bottom of the war are also portrayed in great detail. Yates paid tribute to the German generals guarding the bridge and affirmed his behavior of caring for the people and uniting the war. In order to seize the bridge, the US military ignored the life and death of the soldiers. The exhaustion of the soldiers also reflected the...

  • Elouise 2023-03-16 11:51:57

    As a World War II war movie, Remagen is somewhere between the Far Bridge and the Eight Warriors of Kieborg. Like the former, it is based on real events, but has a relatively small cast; like the latter, it has a strong anti-war sentiment, but insists that the realism dimension is not so literary. Three and a...

Extended Reading
  • Eloy 2022-10-22 18:28:07

    just thinking

    A rejoicing major, a weary second lieutenant, and a philistine 1st class captured an unimportant bridge with dozens of casualties. A major who sticks to his post, at all costs, hopes to complete the task, but forgets the basic duties of a soldier, and does not realize "who is the enemy" until he is...

  • Coralie 2022-10-22 19:37:27

    The bureaucracy of TMD!

    From the map, the bridge was the only way back for the Germans to retreat, and it was also a shortcut for the U.S. military to plug directly into Germany. So the bridge was given special significance by the heads of both sides.

    Office of the German leadership.

    The German marshal wanted to blow up the...

The Bridge at Remagen quotes

  • Major Barnes: Look, uh, Hartman, I know it's been a hard blow. It's always a shock to lose a buddy, a man you worked with and fought with. I mean, we're all human. I guess what I'm trying to say is... I realize Captain Colt was your friend. He was my friend, too.

    Lt. Phil Hartman: Bullshit.

    [Long pause]

    Major Barnes: Would you, uh... care to rephrase that, Lieutenant?

    Lt. Phil Hartman: You don't have any friends out here, Major. Neither do I. We can't afford them. Neither one of us.

  • Major Paul Kreuger: Germany has lost four million sons.

    Greta Holzgang: I pity them. But I pity most my own son.