Where Eagles Dare
- PG
- Year:
- 1968
- 158 min
- 3,663 Views
1
MAN:
All ready here, sir. Crew standing byand awaiting your word. Over.
Right. Over and out.
[SIREN WAILlNG]
MAN :
Our man was brought downat 2 a.m. this morning.
SHAEF, in their all-knowing wisdom,
didn't let us know until 10 a.m.
Damned idiots.
Damned idiots for not letting us know.
DoubIe damned idiots
for ignoring our advice in the first place.
Anyway, here he is...
...in a town called Werfen...
...at the Schloss AdIer,
And believe me, it's well-named,
because only an eagle can get to it.
Ourjob is to get inside there
and get him out as soon as possible...
...before they can
get the information from him.
How are you so sure that he's there, sir?
The Mosquito he was in
crash-landed only 10 miles away.
The Schloss Adler is the headquarters ofthe
German secret service in southern Bavaria.
Where eIse would they take him?
-How did the plane crash, sir?
-Through the most damnable ill luck.
We carried out a saturation raid
on Nuremberg last night.
There shouldn't have been a German fighter
within 100 miles ofthe Austrian border.
A wandering Messerschmitt patrol
got him.
Anyway, that's not important.
What is important is that
we get him out before he talks.
Or I should say, you get him out.
What about paratroops, sir?
The Schloss Adler
is inaccessible and impregnable.
It would require a battalion
of paratroops to take it.
We haven't got the time.
SteaIth and secrecy are our only hope...
...and you gentlemen are,
I trust, stealthy and secretive.
We realize of course that you've never
worked together before as a team...
...but you're familiarwith one another,
except for Lieutenant Schaffer here.
You probably noticed
that Lieutenant Schaffer...
...wears the shoulderflashes
ofthe American Ranger division.
I think that speaks for itself.
Major Smith wiIl lead the group in.
Now, you're alI expert
at survival behind enemy lines.
Smith, Lieutenant Schaffer...
...Sergeants Harrod and MacPherson
in their military capacities...
...the rest ofyou in other duties.
You've been trained
in different types of combat.
If anybody has a chance
of getting him out, you have.
There is, of course, another way, sir.
A way with a 100 percent guarantee
of success.
NeitherAdmiral Rolland or I
claim to be omniscient or infallible.
Is there an alternative that we've missed?
Whistle up a pathfinder squadron
of Lancasters with 10-ton bombs.
I don't think anybody in that castle
would ever talk again.
Nor do I think that you grasp
the realities ofthe situation.
The captured man, General Carnaby,
is an American.
Ifwe were to destroy him,
then l think General Eisenhower...
...might launch his second front against us
rather than against the Germans.
There are certain niceties to be observed
in our relationship with our allies.
Very well, then, gentlemen.
Ten o'clock tonight at the airfield.
-No more questions, I take it?
-Yes, sir.
Begging the colonel's pardon, sir.
What's aIl this about?
I mean, why is this man
so damned important?
-Why should--?
-That'll do, sergeant.
You have alI the information you require.
to what may be his death...
...he has a right to know why.
It's painfully simple, sergeant.
General Carnaby is one
ofthe overall coordinators...
...of planning for the second front.
He set out last night to meet
his opposite numbers in the Middle East...
...to finalize the plans
for the invasion of Europe.
The rendezvous with the Russians
was to have been in Crete.
Now, unfortunately, his plane
didn't get through.
Now, ifthe Germans can make him talk...
...it could mean no second front
this year.
-Do you understand, sergeant?
-Yes, sir.
-I'm sorry, sir.
TURNER:
That's aIl right, sergeant. Forget it.Now, ifyou have any more questions,
That's all, gentlemen.
PILOT:
Get them ready.We're approaching the drop area.
Stand by!
Green on! Go!
Where's Harrod?
Well, last time I saw him, he was drifting
towards those trees over here.
All right. Spread out.
Let's go and find him.
Major!
-His neck's broken.
-Damn it.
Well, what do we do now?
Do we bury him or do we leave him here?
We Ieave him here. The snow
will cover him in a coupIe of hours.
Get back and pick up the equipment.
I want to see ifthe radio's still working.
Well...
...the radio works aIl right. There's a barn
about a mile down the valley.
We'll use it to check our equipment.
-What about the people who live in it?
-There aren't any.
This is a high alpine pasture.
They bring the cattle up in May
and take them down in September.
The rest ofthe time,
the place is totally deserted.
Come on. Let's go.
Somehow, you know, thisjust isn't me.
It's not any of us, Jock.
You're the cook. Cook...
...some hot food and some hot coffee,
and then call London on the radio.
Damn it. I left that codebook
in Sergeant Harrod's tunic.
-I'lI go and get it for you.
-No, it's all right. It's my own stupid fauIt.
Sounds as if it's still blowing a bIizzard.
Yeah.
Well, if I'm not back in an hour...
...signal me with a flare pistol
four times every five minutes.
That should bring a blind man home.
Might aIso bring the best part
of a German regiment.
There's not a German within five miles.
Nobody leaves here until I come back.
-Jock, save me some coffee.
-It'll be cold by then.
They say that's an advantage.
You can't taste cold coffee.
[GUN CLlCKS]
WOMAN:
Halt.
Turn around.
You took your time getting here,
didn't you?
Things to attend to.
-You enjoy your trip?
-Lovely.
in that damn plane.
Why couldn't you have suppIied some hot
water bottles or an eIectrically heated suit?
-I can't help what you think.
You managed to bring your gear.
Is that all the greeting I'm going to get?
I'm afraid so, for the time being.
My radio operator was kilIed in the drop.
What happened?
Something struck him
in the back ofthe neck.
Either the haft of a knife
or the butt of a gun.
The skin was unbroken,
but badly discolored.
It means someone
broke his neck afterwards...
...to make it look like an accident.
Now listen, l'm taking the group at dawn
over the ridge into the next valley.
We'll stop in the woods until about 7.
Now, don't stumble into us.
As soon as it's dark,
we'lI move into the village ofWerfen.
In the village, there's a gasthaus
calIed Zum Wilden Hirsch.
Behind it and to the right,
there's a woodshed.
I'll meet you there
at exactly 8:
00 tomorrow night.-And after that, what?
-I'lI let you know when the time comes.
Ah.
-I see you've come fully prepared.
-Never mind about that.
How do you know about all these things,
Zum Wilden Hirsch and the shed?
I'm entitled to know.
You're entitIed to know nothing.
We've worked together for three years.
I'm a professional.
So am I.
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"Where Eagles Dare" Scripts.com. STANDS4 LLC, 2024. Web. 18 Dec. 2024. <https://www.scripts.com/script/where_eagles_dare_23337>.
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