Patton (1970) [Blu-ray]
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close  Patton (1970) [Blu-ray]  (AFI: 89)
 (currently for information only)
Rated:  PG 
Starring: George C. Scott, Karl Malden, Frank Latimore, Michael Strong, Karl Michael Vogler, Stephen Young.
Director: Franklin J Schaffner
Genre: Biography | Drama | War
DVD Release Date: 06/03/2008

Winner of seven 1970 Academy Awards including Best Picture and Best Actor for George C. Scott, Patton is a riveting portrayal of one of the Twentieth century's greatest military geniuses. As rebellious as he was brilliant, George Patton (Scott) was the only general truly feared by the Nazis, yet his own volatile personality was the one enemy he could never defeat.

Cast Notes: George C. Scott (General George S. Patton Jr.), Karl Malden (General Omar N. Bradley), Stephen Young (Captain Chester B. Hansen), Michael Strong (Brigadier General Hobart Carver), Carey Loftin (General Bradley's Driver [as Cary Loftin]), Albert Dumortier (Moroccan Minister), Frank Latimore (Lieutenant Colonel Henry Davenport), Morgan Paull (Captain Richard N. Jenson), Karl Michael Vogler (Field Marshal Erwin Rommel), Bill Hickman (General Patton's Driver), Pat Zurica (First Lieutenant Alexander Stiller [as Patrick J. Zurica]), James Edwards (Sergeant William George Meeks), Lawrence Dobkin (Colonel Gaston Bell), David Bauer (Lieutenant General Harry Buford), John Barrie (Air Vice-Marshal Sir Arthur Coningham).

User Comment: Daniel R. Baker from United States, 8 September 1999 • A few years ago, I had the pleasure of reading "The Patton Papers," a collection of Gen. Patton's diary entries and letters edited by Martin Blumenson. Having seen the movie, I think that no actor has ever better captured the spirit of a man better than George C. Scott, nor has any movie better portrayed that spirit than PATTON.

Patton was a man who lived for war. World War II was the high point and culmination of his life. He didn't fight for any principles, he didn't fight to defend freedom or democracy or any abstract idea; he fought because he loved fighting. In his diaries you can read of his fear of flunking out of West Point; the prospect terrified him because he was certain that he would never be good at anything except being a general or a leader of a country.

As a leader of men, he was exceptional. His speech at the beginning of the movie is vintage Patton, an almost exact reproduction of a speech Patton actually gave to Third Army. It's tough, and no-nonsense; Patton lets you know in no uncertain terms that he is here to win, to destroy the enemy, and by God you'd better be too. I don't know if Patton actually directed traffic on the roads as he is shown doing in the movie, but it was a very Pattonish thing to do. Patton did on at least one occasion get out of his staff car and join a squad of G.I.'s in heaving a vehicle out of the mud. Try to imagine Montgomery doing that; the very thought is hilarious!

Patton's character explains his treatment of his men. To those who had been wounded fighting for him he was always kind and considerate. But to those whose minds could not stand the horrible strain that war imposed on them, he was merciless; he could not comprehend the fact that other people didn't share his love of violence for violence' sake. PATTON shows this aspect of his character very well.

Karl Malden's Omar Bradley is shown in an almost father-like role; he sees and recognizes Patton's immense talents as a general, and uses them in spite of Patton's natural ability to antagonize everybody around him. Not shown in the movie is Patton's unloveable characteristic of turning on his subordinates once they surpassed him in their careers. Patton had nothing but good to say about Bradley, until Bradley was promoted over Patton's head, whereupon Patton savaged Bradley in his diary. Patton did the same to Eisenhower.

A general can have no higher compliment than the fear and respect of his adversaries, and as PATTON demonstrates, Patton was more feared by the Germans than any other Allied general, at least on the Western front. As one German officer observes all too prophetically, "the absence of war will destroy him [Patton]." And although mankind's single greatest stroke of good fortune in the 20th century was that Russia and America never came to blows, it is still hard not to feel sorry for Patton as he desperately seeks his superiors' approval to carry the war on eastward into the Soviet Union - anything, just to have a war to fight. Patton is like an addict to a destructive drug.

Hollywood has rarely given us such a textured and human portrait of a great man: cruel, often foolish in his relations with others, rude, and psychopathically attached to violence, but brave, dedicated, and loyal. Certainly those who, like myself, have Jewish blood, or who were otherwise marked for death by the Nazi state, all owe him a great debt of gratitude for his pivotal role in destroying that state. And yet, had he been born German, Patton would surely have fought just as devotedly for the Nazi side. I'm glad he wasn't.

Summary: Fascinating portrait of the Allies' greatest general.

IMDb Rating (06/08/11): 8.1/10 from 43,874 users Top 250: #233

Additional information
Copyright:  1970,  20th Century Fox
Features:  Disc 1
• Introduction by Francis Ford Coppola

• Commentary by Francis Ford Coppola
Disc 2
History Through the Lens: Patton - A Rebel Revisited Documentary
Patton's Ghost Corps All-New Documentary
• The Making of Patton Documentary
• Production Still Gallery Accompanied by Jerry Goldsmith's Complete Musical Score
• Behind-the-Scenes Still Gallery Accompanied by Audio Essay on the Historical Patton
• Original Theatrical Trailer
Subtitles:  English SDH, English, Spanish, Mandarin, Cantonese
Video:  Widescreen 2.20:1 Color
Screen Resolution: 1080p
Audio:  ENGLISH: Dolby Digital 5.0
ENGLISH: DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1
SPANISH: Dolby Digital Mono
FRENCH: Dolby Digital Mono
Time:  2:50
DVD:  # Discs: 1 -- # Shows: 1
Coding:  [V5.0-A3.5] MPEG-4 AVC
D-Box:  No
Other:  Producers: Frank McCarthy; Directors: Franklin J Schaffner; Writers: Francis Ford Coppola, Edmund H rth; running time of 170 minutes; Packaging: HD Case.
One of the American Film Institute's Top 100 American Films (AFI: 89-n/a).

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