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The
Bridge on the River Kwai (1957)
In David Lean's acclaimed, all-time great WWII epic
drama, and Best Picture-winning film about British P.O.W.'s forced
to construct a railway bridge in the Asian jungle of Burma from 1942-1943,
to connect the rail-line
from Bangkok to Rangoon:
- the opening title sequence was of the British soldiers
arrogantly marching into a sweltering jungle prison camp to
the whistling tune of the "Colonel Bogey March"
- Japanese Colonel Saito (Sessue Hayakawa) delivered
opening words to the POWs and their British Colonel Nicholson (Alec
Guinness) about Camp 16 in the jungle: ("There is no barbed
wire. No stockade. No watchtower. They are not necessary. We are
an island in the jungle. Escape is impossible. You would die. Today
you rest. Tomorrow you will begin. Let me remind you of General
Yamashita's motto: 'Be happy in your work.' Dismissed!")
- there was a battle to a standoff throughout the
film of the two stubborn wills of indomitable British Colonel Nicholson
and the Japanese Colonel Saito, about whether officers should work
along with the other men - after Nicholson called his attention
to Article 27 of the Geneva Convention and insisted: ("Belligerents
may employ as workmen prisoners of war who are physically fit,
other than officers...") - Saito responded harshly with a
slap: "You
speak to me of Code? What 'Code'? The coward's code! What do you
know of the soldier's code? Of bushido? Nothing! You are unworthy
of command!"; Nicholson persisted and refused to comply: "My
officers will not do manual labour"; Saito also stated: "Do
not speak to me of rules. This is war. This is not a game of cricket"
- in a late night supper scene,
camp commandant Saito invited Nicholson into his quarters for a
meal, and offered a compromise: ("I have been thinking
the matter over and have decided to put majors and above on administrative
duties, leaving only the junior officers to lend a hand")
regarding the labor required to build a bridge over the River Kwai
to connect the rail-line from Bangkok to Rangoon; Nicholson promptly
refused: "I'm afraid
not. The Convention's quite clear on that point"
- in a triumphant scene, Nicholson was removed
from a sweat-box and made an unsteady walk on his own rubbery legs
to speak to Saito, who had given in and declared - "You and
your officers may return to your quarters. As part of this amnesty,
it will not be necessary for officers to do manual labor";
Nicholson had won his freedom from the hot torture oven as a mass
rush of troops congratulated him: ("He's done it!") after
he had forced Saito to accept his terms
- during the building of the bridge, Nicholson had
a serious discussion with Major Clipton (James Donald) - expressing
his delusionary belief that he was serving a higher good and purpose: "A
good idea? Take another look. You don't agree that the men's morale
is high? Discipline has been restored? Their condition has been
improved? Are they a happier lot or aren't they?... They feed better
and they are no longer abused or maltreated... Honestly, Clipton,
there are times when I don't understand you at all"; Clipton
believed otherwise: "The fact is, what we're doing could be
construed as - forgive me, sir, collaboration with the enemy, perhaps
even treasonable activity... must we work so well? Must we build
them a better bridge than they could have built for themselves?";
Nicholson ended the conversation with his statement of pride in the
bridge: "Would you have it said that our chaps can't do a proper
job? Don't you realize how important it is to show these people that
they can't break us in body or in spirit. Take a good look, Clipton.
One day the war will be over. I hope that the people who use this
bridge in years to come will remember how it was built, and who built
it. Not a gang of slaves, but soldiers. British soldiers, Clipton,
even in captivity....You're a fine doctor, Clipton, but you've a
lot to learn about the army"
- Nicholson and Saito met mid-span
on the beautifully engineered, completed bridge as the sun set, exchanging
views and reflecting on its magnificent beauty: Nicholson:
"I've been thinking. Tomorrow it will be 28 years to the day that
I've been in the service, 28 years in peace and war. I don't suppose
I've been at home more than ten months in all that time. Still, it's
been a good life. I love India. I wouldn't have had it any other way.
But there are times when suddenly you realize you're nearer the end
than the beginning. And you wonder, you ask yourself, what the sum
total of your life represents, what difference your being there at
any time made to anything, or if it made any difference at all really.
Particularly in comparison with other men's careers. I don't know whether
that kind of thinking is very healthy, but I must admit I've had some
thoughts on those lines from time to time"
- in the suspenseful finale, Nicholson discovered
uncovered dynamite wires that had been secretly planted by his
Allied commando forces, led by cynical American
ex-prisoner and heroic escapee Commander Shears (William Holden)
and British commando Major Warden (Jack Hawkins).
- there was unbearable tension as the Japanese troop
train was heard approaching the bridge and the commandos prepared
to blow up the bridge
- Nicholson attempted to save his bridge, and uttered
his moral dilemma ("What have I done?"), and then fell
lethally-wounded on the dynamite plunger; the question arose: Had
he deliberately fallen on the plunger or was it accidental?
Nicholson's Last Words: "What have I done?"
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- the railroad bridge and the train were climactically
destroyed, with the film's final words spoken by Clipton: "Madness...madness,
madness."
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Stand-Off Between Two Commanders
Late Night Dinner Scene Between Nicholson and Saito
Col. Nicholson's Triumphant Release: "He's
Done It!"
Major Clipton Discussing Bridge Building With Nicholson
Nicholson Meeting Saito on Completed Bridge
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