The Battle of the Damned (1969) Poster

User Reviews

Review this title
6 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
6/10
Overly familiar, but entertaining with it
Leofwine_draca6 March 2015
An Italian WW2 flick that turns out to be decent rather than the usual decidedly average level for this sub-genre. The worst thing about BATTLE OF THE DAMNED is the storyline, which is full of the stock clichés, stock characters, and stock situations from a dozen other similar genre entries. Hell, even the plot is almost exactly the same as others I've seen.

The storyline sees a crack squad of American soldiers who are tasked with blowing up a German fuel depot deep in the desert. What transpires is a desert-set story of survival and death, with the usual incidents we see in these movies: the jeep breaks down, the survivors go on foot, have to deal with in-fighting and the wounded, before things pick up for a rousing, action-packed climax.

Director Roberto Montero has established a decent genre cast for his film, including recognisable faces like that of Giacomo Rossi-Stuart, Fabio Testi, and Luciano Catenacci; such actors can be relied upon to give tough, realistic performances and they don't disappoint with their roles here. Montero, who spent his career churning out war flicks, spaghetti westerns, gialli, and erotic movies, shoots his film ably and the action, when it hits, is well staged, particularly that climax. Despite the familiarity of the storyline and action there's little to dislike about this dependable Italian B-flick.
4 out of 6 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
A dull Italian war adventure
SgtSlaughter22 February 2003
Director Robert Bianchi Montero's first step into the war genre turns out to be something of a scared step – he has a good story to tell, but whenever he can take it in a new and unique direction, everything stalls and falls back on established, guaranteed clichés. That said, this is a pretty average desert-war flick.

The plot is a simple combination of two decent American war films, namely "Play Dirty", and also "Tobruk". A small band of misfit American commandos are assigned to head across the North African desert to blow up a huge German fuel depot. Why this fuel depot is important is explained in an overly long introduction, comprised of narrated black and white stock footage. That introduction is just a time-killer, but once it's out of the way, the fun begins.

Montero relies on his cast of young Italian actors to give the film its energy, and they pull it off masterfully. The only American in the batch is Dale Cummings, whose only other notable credit is in a later Bianchi war film, "The Rangers". Cummings plays Captain Clay, whose reputation as a dangerous commander precedes him. Marwell (Maurice Poli, "The Longest Day") tries to warn the others in the unit that Clay will get them all killed. Unfortunately, Montero fails to take this conflict anywhere substantial – he confines this conflict to some occasional verbal sparring between Marwell and Clay, and seems to disregard it altogether as the film progresses.

The supporting characters add some much-needed juice to supplement the leads. Sgt. Dean (Luciano Catenacci, "Hell in Normandy") tries to keep the dissension among the men at a minimum. Maurizio Tocchi and Fabio Testi (both co-starred in "A Place in Hell") provide good support, as well. As they trek across the desert, complication after complication threatens the success of the mission: a German plane strafes their jeeps, damaging one and wounding a man. Then there's a lack of water and inability to get in touch with the rear.

Montero pays close attention to getting the details of the time period and setting correct, and this adds a great deal to the realistic feel and tone of the film. The Germans are properly armed and wear the right kind of uniforms, as do the American commandos. The exteriors, shot in Egypt, make the vast Sahara desert look appropriately bleak.

Bianchi keeps the action to a minimum, focusing on the conflicts within the group and saving the German threat for the final act. This final act is a truly rousing and suspenseful finale, as members of the unit penetrate the colossal underground fuel dump and then must fight their way out before the explosive charges detonate. This finale is filled with nail-biting scenes and surprises, including the appearance of a key German character from earlier in the film. Only some of the good guys survive, and those who die go down like heroes.

What's unfortunate is that Montero doesn't do anything new and unusual with his film. Every line of dialog sounds very familiar to war film buffs and the action scenes have a very typical look and feel to them. It's too bad, because the cast was capable of handling much more sophisticated material – most of the main cast has proved this in their own right in other films.

When compared to other films, "Battle of the Damned" really has nothing new to offer. It's simply a good time-filler, with some fair action scenes and performances thrown in place it a notch above many other movies of the same time period. Montero would do somewhat better later on in "Thirty-Six Hours of Hell", a similarly-themed movie set in the Pacific with more substance.

6/10
5 out of 9 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
Would be a standard Macaroni Combat if not for the lack of much combat.
ofpsmith27 August 2019
The Battle of the Damned follows a group of American (although on the poster I saw they were British) soldiers who are ordered to blow up a Nazi base in North Africa. That's really it. It kind of reminds me of Commandos, another Macaroni Combat with Lee Van Cleef, only switch an Italian base with a German one. Most of the movie is just them driving to the base and eventually getting there. There's also some beef between the Captain in charge of the mission and one of the men. Like I said, that's basically everything. Not terribly interesting and there are similar movies to watch that'll provide better entertainment.
1 out of 3 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
3/10
A movies for men special
clmrshll-203-37003520 March 2015
Warning: Spoilers
Previous comments praise the producer for accurate realism but within seconds of turning this film on I spotted that the one of the 'jeeps' was a post war British Landrover. The US commandos were armed with Garrands and Thompsons but also with a British Bren gun not the BAR you'd expect. The German Aircrew were flying a Canadian Post war DH Chipmunk unarmed trainer and the flying suits were decidedly not tropical issue. Many other films have portrayed the battle between the men, the enemy and the desert much better. 'Ice cold in Alex' being the benchmark and 'Sea of sand' aka 'desert patrol' being a superior example.
1 out of 3 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
Suicidal Military Manuevers in the North African Desert in W.W. II
zardoz-1325 April 2024
Warning: Spoilers
"The Rangers" director Roberto Bianchi Montero fared much better with "The Battle of the Damned," his sophomore entry into World War II men on a mission genre than he did with his initial actioneer "The Rangers." Fewer problems crop up with his North African combat epic that borrows liberally from Armando Crispino's "Commando" (1968), starring Lee Van Cleef and Jack Kelly and Andre de Toth's "Play Dirty" (1969) with Michael Caine and Nigel Davenport. According to IMDB. COM, the release dates for "Battle of the Damned" are inconsistent. First, it was released as early as April 1969 in Italy, and then later showed up on screens in the Netherlands in April 1970, then in France May 1970, and finally in West Germany during September 1972. Later, this movie was re-released in Spain in December 1973.

In "The Battle of the Damned," an experienced, combat savvy U. S. Army officer, Captain Bruce Clay (Dale Cummings of "Samurai Cop"), receives orders to deploy with a squad of soldiers into the scorching North African desert to destroy a remote Nazi fuel dump for enemy tanks. Basically, Captain Clay is reminiscent of the officer in "Commandos" that Jack Kelly played who is ridiculed by his sergeant for being a glory seeking leader willing to sacrifice men so he can win a medal. One of Clay's team, Corporal Marwell (Maurice Poli of "Two Faces of a Dollar") complains about his commanding officer's willingness to sacrifice his men so he can attain higher rank. Derivative as it is, "The Battle of the Damned" qualifies as one of those nihilistic military epics where everybody winds up dead at fade out in the grand tradition of suicidal mission movies such as the Oscar-winning "The Bridge on the River Kwai" (1957) "633 Squadron" (1964) and "Play Dirty." Interestingly, Montero lensed his movie in Egypt. According to IMDB. COM, the Egyptians loaned the filmmakers surplus British Archer tank destroyers to substitute for German Panzers. As many as six of these massive vehicles are seen in the big battle sequence. Basically, the Americans plunge into the desert during the day rather than under the cover of nightfall, which would make made better sense. However, had they gone in under cover of darkness, the eagle-eyed aviators in a two-seater 'Messerschmitt' aircraft roaming the desert would never have spotted them. The suspense grows initially out of the clash between the Americans on the ground and the Germans in the air. A similar crisis confronted Richard Burton and his commandos in Henry Hathaway's "Raid on Rommel" (1971) when an Allied fighter attacked his men in the desert during the day. Although our heroes knock the Messerschmitt out of the sky, they fail to kill these two pilots. These two tenacious souls follow them doggedly on foot to an oasis and later manage to reach the same objective that our heroes have been sent to destroy. Colonel Kleist (Gérard Herter of "Hornet's Nest"), the lead officer in the Messerschmitt, doggedly pursues the commandos. Eventually, Kleist shows up at the fuel dump and warns his fellow Germans about these saboteurs, but even this early warning comes tragically too late. At one point, however, the Germans look like they had a chance to thwart the Americans, particularly when Sergeant Dean (Luciano Catenacci of "The Biggest Battle") must die to repair the damage done to his explosives. Among the cast, future Spaghetti western and crime star Fabio Testi plays Private Terry Wilson, the soldier responsible for maintaining radio contact with their home base.

"The Battle of the Damned" won't go down in history as an especially memorable entry in the annuals of World War II actioneers, but it is tolerable enough to watch once. Completists in the European World War II movie genre will appreciate this adventure more than most spectators.
0 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
1/10
The Battle of the Dummies
Oslo_Jargo2 May 2024
Warning: Spoilers
*** This review may contain spoilers ***

*Plot and ending analyzed*

This was an incredibly revolting movie experience. I wonder how in the world that a movie so idiotic could be made and sent out to theaters.

The beginning lacked just about everything that resembled an actual movie. Twenty minutes into the movie and you are asking yourself where did your time go? Why has nothing happened? Forty minutes into the movie and you know nothing good is going to come out of the movie experience.

It starts off really slow and boring. You get to meet a crack team of American soldiers. But none of them actually look like genuine soldiers. All of them are numbnuts. On top of that, they are vile, nagging, inconsiderate, and disloyal.

Anyways, they spend their time driving a few miles in the desert. Get attacked by a training plane that is supposed to be a German Messerschmitt ME 109 fighter. Find an oasis with water with relative ease. Then walk a few minutes, and they miraculously reach the German Africa Korps fuel depot, kill a bunch of guards, then blow up the bloody fuel tanks.

At least none of them came out alive.

Incredibly stupid.
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed