The Guns of Navarone: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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* [[Giant Wall of Watery Doom]]: During the landing on Navarone.
* [[Giant Wall of Watery Doom]]: During the landing on Navarone.
* [[Hand Signals]]
* [[Hand Signals]]
* [[Hey, It's That Guy!]]: The heroes are captured by [[James Bond|General Gogol]].
** Richard Harris as the squadron leader who details the impossibility of destroying the guns from the air.
* [[I Will Fight No More Forever]]: "Butcher" Brown
* [[I Will Fight No More Forever]]: "Butcher" Brown
* [[I Will Only Slow You Down]]: Major Franklin after his leg is broken.
* [[I Will Only Slow You Down]]: Major Franklin after his leg is broken.

Revision as of 02:33, 19 January 2015

First, you've got that bloody old fortress on top of that bloody cliff. Then you've got the bloody cliff overhang. You can't even see the bloody cave, let alone the bloody guns. And anyway, we haven't got a bloody bomb big enough to smash that bloody rock. And that's the bloody truth, sir.
RAAF Squadron Leader Howard Barnsby

The Guns Of Navarone is a book by Alistair MacLean, published in 1957, and more famously a classic 1961 film adaptation. The events depicted take place during World War 2 but are entirely fictional. A contingent of British soldiers are stranded on an island in the Aegean Sea and rescue by ship is impossible due to the large battery of anti naval guns located at the cliffs of Navarone. Due to the embedded position of the guns in the cliffs, destroying them by air strikes proves impossible. A British major (Anthony Quayle) assembles a commando team and convinces a reluctant captain (Gregory Peck) to join. The movie chronicles the squad's attempt to sneak into Greece and blow the guns. Also stars David Niven and Anthony Quinn.

It won the Academy Award for Best Visual effects. It was also nominated for, Best Picture, Best Director, Best Original Score (nominated but lost in same category for a Grammy as well), Best Sound, Best Writing Adapted Screenplay.

Also notable around these parts for being one of the films that Hideo Kojima, creator of the Metal Gear franchise, has cited as a source of inspiration for his games.


The Guns of Navarone provides examples of: