The Battle of El Alamein

The Battle of El Alamein

196996 min
β˜…5.2/10
WarAction

Plot Summary

June 1942. As Rommel swept toward the Nile, the fall of Egypt and the capture of the Suez Canal seemed inevitable. Italian and German advance units raced toward Alexandria. Mussolini had given explicit orders: The Italians must arrive first!

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🎬 Demo Trailer

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πŸ‘₯Cast (19)

Frederick Stafford

Frederick Stafford

Giorgio Borri

Enrico Maria Salerno

Enrico Maria Salerno

Claudio Borri

George Hilton

George Hilton

Lieutenant Graham

Robert Hossein

Robert Hossein

Erwin Rommel

Michael Rennie

Michael Rennie

Bernard Law Montgomery

Giuseppe Castellano

Giuseppe Castellano

Character

Sal Borgese

Sal Borgese

Private Kapow

Nello Pazzafini

Nello Pazzafini

Italian Sergeant

Riccardo Pizzuti

Riccardo Pizzuti

Private Jailbird

GΓ©rard Herter

GΓ©rard Herter

General Schwartz

Ettore Manni

Ettore Manni

Italian Captain

Giuseppe Addobbati

Giuseppe Addobbati

Georg Stumme

🎬Crew

Director

Giorgio Ferroni

Writers

Remigio Del Grosso, Ernesto Gastaldi, Ernesto Gastaldi

Producers

Luciano Martino, Mino Loy, Sergio Martino

πŸ–ΌοΈGallery (1 images)

The Battle of El Alamein backdrop 1

🏷️Keywords

tanknorth africa

πŸ’¬Reviews (1)

C

CinemaSerf

6/21/2022

This could have been interesting, because it takes the perspective of the Italian troops charged by Mussolini with the capture of Alexandria in the 1942 North African campaign. It has a stab at drafting in an internationally recognised cast - Michael Rennie is Field Marshal Montgomery, and Robert Hossein features sparingly as Rommel, but for the most part this consists of a mediocre cast that I found made it quite difficult to distinguish between who was who, and on whose side! The dubbing didn't help, either, with the accents all but indistinguishable from each other and the quality of the production offered us visuals that are frequently just as confusing. There are plenty of pyrotechnics, and some quite well staged battles - especially with the foxholes and tanks towards the end, but the narrative is weak suggesting a disorganised and haphazard strategy from the Axis powers that did nobody any justice, historically. Sure, it doesn't help either that we all know what actually happened but I felt this could, with a bit more focus from the writing (and some quality talent in the dubbing suite), have offered us an interesting counter-balance to the accepted cinematic versions from this exciting and perilous theatre of WWII.

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