Rating: NR
Genre:
War
Release Date: 03/21/2006
SubTitles: English
Dubbed: English/French
Sound: DD1
Run Time: 120 Minutes
Flags: Adult Situations, War Violence
Distributor/Studio: Paramount
The scene is a German POW camp, sometime during the mid-1940s. Stalag 17, exclusively populated by American sergeants, is overseen by sadistic commandant Oberst Von Schernbach (
Otto Preminger) and the deceptively avuncular sergeant Schultz (
Sig Ruman). The inmates spend their waking hours circumventing the boredom of prison life; at night, they attempt to arrange escapes. When two of the escapees, Johnson and Manfredi, are shot down like dogs by the Nazi guards, Stalag 17's resident wiseguy Sefton (
William Holden) callously collects the bets he'd placed concerning the fugitives' success. No doubt about it: there's a security leak in the barracks, and everybody suspects the enterprising Sefton -- who manages to obtain all the creature comforts he wants -- of being a Nazi infiltrator. Things get particularly dicey when Lt. Dunbar (
Don Taylor), temporarily billetted in Stalag 17 before being transferred to an officer's camp, tells his new bunkmates that he was responsible for the destruction of a German ammunition train. Sure enough, this information is leaked to the Commandant, and Dunbar is subjected to a brutal interrogation. Certain by now that Sefton is the "mole", the other inmates beat him to a pulp. But Sefton soon learns who the real spy is, and reveals that information on the night of Dunbar's planned escape. Despite the seriousness of the situation,
Stalag 17 is as much comedy as wartime melodrama, with most of the laughs provided by
Robert Strauss as the
Betty Grable-obsessed "Animal" and
Harvey Lembeck as Stosh's best buddy Harry. Other standouts in the all-male cast include
Richard Erdman as prisoner spokesman Hoffy,
Neville Brand as the scruffy Duke,
Peter Graves as blonde-haired, blue-eyed "all American boy" Price,
Gil Stratton as Sefton's sidekick Cookie (who also narrates the film) and
Robinson Stone as the catatonic, shell-shocked Joey. Writer/producer/director
Billy Wilder and coscenarist
Edmund Blum remained faithful to the plot and mood the
Donald Bevan/
Edmund Trzcinski stage play
Stalag 17, while changing virtually every line of dialogue-all to the better, as it turned out (
Trzcinski, who like
Bevan based the play on his own experiences as a POW, appears in the film as the ingenuous prisoner who "really believes" his wife's story about the baby abandoned on her doorstep).
William Holden won an Academy Award for his hard-bitten portrayal of Sefton, which despite a hokey "I'm really a swell guy after all" gesture near the end of the film still retains its bite today.
~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
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A reviewer
from Fort Lauderdale, Florida
A Wartime Classic Parody.
Billy Wilder's brilliant film adaptation of Donald Bevan and Edmund Trzcinski's Broadway stage play. William Holden gives an Oscar-winning performance as a cynical American POW suspected of being a Nazi spy except the real spy is among the other POWs. Harvey Lembeck and Robert Strauss reprise their roles from the original Broadway stage production. Also starring Don Taylor, Otto Preminger, Richard Erdman, Peter Graves, Neville Brand, Sig Rumann, Ross Bagdasarian, and Gil Stratton, Jr.