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  1. The Bridge on the River Kwai

    The Bridge on the River Kwai

    PG1957 · War · 2h 41m

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  1. "The Bridge on the River Kwai" (1957) is one of the few that focuses not on larger rights and wrongs but on individuals. Like Robert Graves' World War I memoir, Goodbye to All That, it shows men grimly hanging onto military discipline and pride in their units as a way of clinging to sanity.

  2. This complex war epic asks hard questions, resists easy answers, and boasts career-defining work from star Alec Guinness and director David Lean. Adaptation of the Pierre Bouelle novel about POWs...

    • (105)
    • David Lean
    • PG
    • William Holden
  3. The Bridge on the River Kwai is now widely recognized as one of the greatest films ever made. It was the highest-grossing film of 1957 and received overwhelmingly positive reviews from critics. The film won seven Academy Awards (including Best Picture) at the 30th Academy Awards.

  4. Full Review | Jun 15, 2023. Mark Johnson Awards Daily. One of the great, action-packed epics of the late 50s, The Bridge on the River Kwai is an exceptional case study about the hysteria...

  5. The Bridge on the River Kwai: Directed by David Lean. With William Holden, Alec Guinness, Jack Hawkins, Sessue Hayakawa. British POWs are forced to build a railway bridge across the river Kwai for their Japanese captors in occupied Burma, not knowing that the allied forces are planning a daring commando raid through the jungle to destroy it.

    • (234K)
    • Adventure, Drama, War
    • David Lean
    • 1957-12-14
  6. Bombarded with awards, Bridge on the River Kwai is typical Oscar-winning fare, particularly for the conflicted political climate of the 1950s. It can be read as a damning critique of war, but also enjoyed as a gripping action film.

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  8. Sep 21, 2010 · September 21, 2010. David Lean’s The Bridge on the River Kwai is the last of the director’s films to not succumb to bloat. Despite its grand, Oscar-bait stature, the 1957 epic subtly develops its themes about the irrationality of honor and the hypocrisy of Britain’s class system without ever compromising its thrilling war narrative.

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