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1968 - Where Eagles Dare

The mission, codenamed "Operation Unity," involves a team of commandos, including Major Wolfgang "Dutch" Bergman (Richard Dreyfuss), a German-American soldier, and several other operatives. The team must infiltrate the castle, rescue the prisoner, and escape undetected.

To understand Where Eagles Dare , you have to understand Richard Burton. By 1968, he was the highest-paid actor in Hollywood, largely thanks to his volcanic chemistry with Elizabeth Taylor. But he was also famously drinking himself through the late 1960s. where eagles dare 1968

But here is the truth: Where Eagles Dare is the perfect movie for a rainy Sunday afternoon. It understands its own absurdity. It knows you don’t care about historical accuracy; you care about Richard Burton outwitting a Gestapo officer while Clint Eastwood silently plants explosives. The mission, codenamed "Operation Unity," involves a team

Critics in 1968 were mixed. They called it “overlong” and “ludicrous.” They weren’t wrong. The plot is a Gordian knot of code names (Broadsword to Danny Boy, anyone?). The German soldiers have the aim of stormtroopers from Star Wars . And the ending, where the heroes casually fly away in a captured Nazi plane, defies all physics. By 1968, he was the highest-paid actor in

"Where Eagles Dare" received generally positive reviews from critics, with many praising the film's action sequences, cinematography, and performances. The movie was also a commercial success, grossing over $50 million at the box office.

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