Fear and Desire Page #4

Synopsis: A ficticious war in an unidentified country provides the setting for this drama. Four soldiers survive the crash-landing of their plane to find themselves in a forest six miles behind enemy lines. The group, led by Lt. Corby, has a plan: They'll make their way to a nearby river, build a raft, and then, under cover of night, float back to friendly territory. Their plans for getting back safely are sidetracked by a young woman who stumbles across them as they hide in the woods, and by the nearby presence of an enemy general who one member of the group is determined to kill.
Genre: Drama, Thriller, War
Director(s): Stanley Kubrick
Production: Joseph Burstyn Incorporated
  1 nomination.
 
IMDB:
5.6
Rotten Tomatoes:
79%
NOT RATED
Year:
1953
62 min
907 Views


when she was dying.

Come on out here,

bunch of half-witted cannibals!

I missed him, I think

he's only wounded!

We have to finish him off.

But they stopped shooting at the river.

They'll be here any minute.

I surrender!

Come on, let's go!

Please, please,

we don't have any time.

You going back?

Can I come?

I won't be any bother.

Sure, kid.

Hop on,

there plenty of room.

You look tired.

Yeah.

Thanks a lot for stopping.

There was so much noise in there...

All right, Mac. You rest.

I'll be quiet.

You know?

I lost my watch!

Mac, don't close your eyes!

The trees! They're naked!

They're naked, Mac!

And what happened to the Sergeant?

I don't know, sir.

He might make it.

Sir, with your permission, I'd like

to go down to the river

and watch for him

for a while.

Yes, sir, the same goes for me.

You most certainly have

the right to it if you wish.

Do you think he'll come back?

I don't know.

I'm not sure yet whether

even we've come back.

I think we've all travelled too far

from our own private boundaries

to be certain about

these other things anymore...

Or come back to ourselves.

Part of me is glad, but...

Yeah.

I'm glad in a way too.

And I feel free all of a sudden.

But somehow I don't want

what I wanted before.

I know it's good. There's

nothing else I can want.

I'm all mixed up...

I wish I could want

what I wanted before.

Is your head bugging you?

No, it's something else...

What's that?

I guess I'm not...

built for this.

Nobody ever was.

It's all a trick we perform

when we'd rather not die...

immediately.

Come on!

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Howard Sackler

Howard Oliver Sackler (December 19, 1929 – October 12, 1982), was an American screenwriter and playwright who is best known for writing The Great White Hope (play: 1967; film: 1970). The Great White Hope enjoyed both a successful run on Broadway and, as a film adaptation, in movie theaters. James Earl Jones and Jane Alexander both starred in the original Arena Stage production of the play in Washington, DC, then brought their roles to Broadway and later to the film version. Both Jones and Alexander received Academy Award nominations for their work in the movie. Born in New York City and a graduate of Brooklyn College, Sackler was the recipient of many awards and prestigious grants including both a Pulitzer Prize (1969), a Tony Award for Drama (1969), and a New York Drama Critics Circle Award for The Great White Hope. Prior to this, Sackler won the Maxwell Anderson Award (1954) and Chicago's Sergel Award. In addition, he was the recipient of grants from both the Rockefeller Foundation and the Littauer Foundation. The original production for The Great White Hope, produced at Arena Stage in Washington, DC, was substantially funded by two grants from the National Endowment for the Arts. The Broadway production, however, was funded, at least in part, by Sackler himself using $225,000 from his screenwriting proceeds for the film version.Sackler's work encompassed many other films and plays including the play Goodbye Fidel in 1980 and the films Jaws 2 in 1978 and Stanley Kubrick's Fear and Desire in 1953. His filmography also includes Gray Lady Down (1978) and Saint Jack (1979), which he co-wrote with Paul Theroux for Peter Bogdanovich. Sackler was also responsible for an uncredited rewrite of Peter Benchley's script for Jaws (1975), and conceived of Quint's "Indianapolis" monologue about the sinking of the USS Indianapolis during World War II.Sackler's plays have been produced throughout the United States, Europe, and South America. He also directed over 200 recordings for Caedmon Audio, various theater productions, and the LP version of an NBC television special entitled Shakespeare: Soul of an Age. His Caedmon productions included a vivid 1968 recording of John Dos Passos' 42nd Parallel.On October 12, 1982, Sackler was found dead in his studio in Ibiza, Spain, where he lived for the better part of the year. According to his New York Times obituary, there was no evidence of foul play, although an autopsy was to be performed. Sackler, survived by his wife and two children, was working on Klondike, a farcical play about the Gold Rush, when he died. more…

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Submitted on August 05, 2018

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