When Trumpets Fade
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When Trumpets Fade | |
---|---|
Written by | W.W. Vought |
Directed by | John Irvin |
Starring | Ron Eldard Frank Whaley Zak Orth Dylan Bruno |
Music by | Geoffrey Burgon |
Country of origin | United States |
Original language | English |
Production | |
Producer | John Kemeny |
Running time | 92 minutes |
Production company | HBO NYC Productions |
Original release | |
Network | HBO |
Release | June 27, 1998 |
When Trumpets Fade is a 1998 HBO television movie directed by John Irvin and starring Ron Eldard, Frank Whaley, Zak Orth, and Dylan Bruno. First released on June 27, 1998, the film is set in World War II during the Battle of the Hürtgen Forest.[1]
Plot
[edit]Private David Manning of the 28th Infantry Division survives the Battle of the Hürtgen Forest and is given a battlefield promotion to sergeant, with a new platoon of green recruits. He tries to get out of it, saying he is unqualified for the position, but his company commander, Captain Roy Pritchett, disagrees. Manning then tries to back out of responsibility by asking to be discharged under Section 8 (designating him mentally unfit due to combat stress), to no avail.
Manning dutifully takes command and leads his unit back onto the American line. The next morning, while on patrol, Manning puts Private Warren Sanderson on point. However, Sanderson goes forward too quickly and gets separated from the squad, before narrowly avoiding contact with the enemy. Manning eventually decides the squad must leave without Sanderson right before the latter returns. After this incident, Manning is scorned by his peers and berated by newly assigned First Lieutenant Terrence Lukas. Manning's company makes a push toward the town of Schmidt in order to take and hold a key bridge. However, they move into an enemy minefield and are fired on. The company retreats, and Pritchett comes to Manning with a volunteer mission to destroy the enemy's guns, before promising to grant Manning a Section 8 if he volunteers for and succeeds on the mission.
During the mission, Private Sam Baxter panics and starts to flee. The other men follow suit. To stop them, Manning shoots Baxter, hitting the flamethrower he is carrying on his back, which causes it to explode and burn him to death. Horrified by this, the men resume their attack on the German guns. Led by Sanderson, the group succeeds in destroying the guns. Manning's company secures the bridge after suffering heavy casualties but is soon attacked by German tanks and forced to retreat. During the retreat back to the American lines, Lonnie is killed and Despin is captured. Manning and Sanderson escape. Pritchett, who has also survived the ordeal, cracks under pressure and is ordered off the lines before he can uphold his promise to Manning.
When the battalion commander, Lieutenant Colonel George Rickman, asks him about the status of his platoon, a traumatized Lukas snaps and assaults him. Manning confronts Rickman as Lukas is led away, picks up the mass of blood-soaked dog tags Lukas dropped, and presses them against Rickman's chest as his answer to the platoon's status. Despite Manning's insubordination, Rickman has no choice but to promote him again, this time to lieutenant, and order him to take the disgraced Lukas' position as platoon leader.
Talbot and Corporal Toby Chamberlain confront Manning for shooting Baxter. In the ensuing altercation, Manning reveals a plan to destroy the German tanks the night before the assault. Chamberlain states they have no proof that Manning will not just shoot them as he did Baxter. Sanderson, who survived the retreat, defends Manning's conduct. Manning informs them that the battalion is making another push in the morning, and that if they do not destroy the tanks, then the whole force stands to be wiped out.
Manning leads Talbot, Chamberlain, and Sanderson in a pre-dawn raid on the German tanks, without the battalion's knowledge or support. Manning clears a minefield and cuts a barbed wire obstacle, enabling the group to continue on, before they destroy the tanks with a bazooka. The operation costs the lives of all but Sanderson and Manning, who is left severely wounded. While being carried back to friendly lines by Sanderson, Manning loses consciousness from his wounds. An epilogue states that after three months of heavy combat, the Battle of the Hürtgen Forest claimed more than 24,000 dead and wounded and most historians today agree that there was little to no strategic justification for so great a sacrifice because German reinforcements ultimately thwarted the American offensive. The battle itself was overshadowed by the Battle of the Bulge soon afterward.
Cast
[edit]- Ron Eldard as Private / Sergeant / Second Lieutenant David Manning, who progresses from greenie, to squad leader, to platoon leader in C Company
- Zak Orth as Private Warren "Sandy" Sanderson, a replacement in Manning's squad
- Frank Whaley as Corporal Toby Chamberlain, a medic attached to C Company
- Dylan Bruno as Sergeant Patrick Talbot, a squad leader in Lukas' platoon
- Devon Gummersall as Private Andrew Lonnie, a replacement in Manning's squad
- Dan Futterman as Private Doug Despin, a replacement in Manning's squad
- Steven Petrarca as Private Sam Baxter, a replacement in Manning's squad
- Dwight Yoakam as Lieutenant Colonel George Rickman, the battalion commander of First Battalion
- Martin Donovan as Captain Roy Pritchett, the company commander of C Company, First Battalion
- Timothy Olyphant as 1st Lieutenant Terrence Lukas, the leader of Manning and Talbot's platoon
- Jeffrey Donovan as Private Robert "Bobby" Miller, a fellow soldier of Manning's
- Bobby Cannavale as Captain Thomas Zenek, the new commander of C Company
- Frank-Michael Köbe as Oberfeldwebel, a German Army patrol leader
Production
[edit]When Trumpets Fade was filmed on location in Budapest, Lake Balaton, Hungary, and in Calgary, Alberta, Canada. US troops supporting Operation Joint Guard, stationed in Taszar, Hungary, were used as extras on the set.
Awards
[edit]John Irvin won the Silver FIPA Award for Best Director for the film at the Biarritz International Festival in 1999.
The film was also nominated for best cinematography (by Thomas Burstyn) by the American Society of Cinematographers and best sound editing by the Motion Picture Sound Editors, and Ron Eldard was nominated for best actor at the Seattle International Film Festival.
References
[edit]- ^ Gates, Anita (June 26, 1998). "TV WEEKEND; From Prep School to the Projects: Checking in at Age 14". The New York Times. New York. Retrieved May 3, 2017.
External links
[edit]- Western Front of World War II films
- 1990s war films
- American war films
- HBO Films films
- 1998 television films
- 1998 films
- Films directed by John Irvin
- Films produced by John Kemeny
- Films set in Germany
- Films set in 1944
- Films shot in Budapest
- Films shot in Hungary
- Films shot in Alberta
- World War II films based on actual events
- 1990s American films