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sexta-feira, 5 de abril de 2013

WITCH WAY TO THE FRONT (1970) (Qual o Caminho para a Guerra?) I PARTE



From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Which Way to the Front?
Whichwaytothefront.jpg
Theatrical release poster
Directed byJerry Lewis
Produced byJerry Lewis
Written byGerald Gardner
Dee Caruso
StarringJerry Lewis
Jan Murray
Willie Davis
Joe Besser
Kathleen Freeman
Paul Winchell
Sidney Miller
Distributed byWarner Bros.
Release date(s)July, 1970
Running time96 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Which Way to the Front? is a 1970 film starring Jerry Lewis. It would be Lewis' last released film for eleven years (Lewis' first film for Warner Brothers and his second and last one being 1983's Cracking Up[clarification needed]), until 1981's Hardly Working. The unreleased The Day the Clown Cried was filmed in the years between. Which Way to the Front? was released in July 1970 by Warner Bros.

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[edit]Plot

Brendan Byers III (Jerry Lewis) is a rich playboy who enlists to fight in the war against the Axis powers, but is classified 4-F. He really wants to fight, so he enlists other 4-Fs and some loyal volunteers from his own service staff and forms his own army. He finances their training and equipment. Once completed, they travel to the front in Italy, with Byers impersonating a Nazi general named "Smiling Albert" Kesselring.
The plan is to pull back the German lines, since the front has remained static for too long, enabling the Allies to push forward again. The mission does not go smoothly and they must overcome several obstacles, including the fiery wife of the local mayor who is the real Kesselring's lover, and the real Kesselring's involvement in an assassination attempton Hitler. Afterwards, they face their next mission: infiltrating the Imperial Japanesecommand to influence the outcome of the Battle of Kwajalein.

[edit]
Production

Which Way to the Front? was filmed from November 30, 1969 through February 1, 1970 and received a G rating from the MPAA.[1]
All-Star Los Angeles Dodgers Centerfielder Willie Davis appeared as Lincoln in the film and played Brendan's driver. Actor Dick Miller, who also wrote the film's story (credited as "Richard Miller"), has a brief speaking cameo as a lost car driver whose vehicle is shot up by Byers' crew during their training.[2]


Which Way to the Front? (1970)


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