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Message from Dean - May 8th 2007
I am currently testing out a new version of the APF Bridge Component - If you notice any errors within this demo store please drop me a line.
Price: $26.75 Prices subject to change.
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Audience Rating: NR (Not Rated)
Binding: VHS Tape
EAN: 9786301979764
Format: NTSC
ISBN: 6301979761
Label: MGM (Warner)
Languages: EnglishUnknownAnalogEnglishOriginal LanguageAnalog
Manufacturer: MGM (Warner)
Number Of Items: 1
Publisher: MGM (Warner)
Release Date: September 01, 1998
Running Time: 112 minutes
Studio: MGM (Warner)
Theatrical Release Date: 1949-02
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Editorial Review:
Amazon.com: Command Decision (1949) takes on the kind of questions that Hollywood could never have raised during the war--questions about the cruel responsibilities of command, including the responsibility to spend a great many lives to save thousands more in the future. In 1943, from an American airbase in the English countryside, a campaign of daylight bombardment is being waged against aircraft factories in Germany. For much of the way to their targets and back, the bombers are bereft of fighter escort and at the mercy of the Luftwaffe. The mortality rate is shocking--but perhaps, for reasons that are not widely known, necessary. Clark Gable (himself an air war veteran) plays the commandant who has to call the next day's target, and the film never leaves command HQ; the closest we get to combat is a scene of an untrained crewman trying to land a crippled plane. Command Decision is earnest but outshone by the similarly focused Twelve O'Clock High. The main problem is that it's based on--and essentially remains--a play, static in setting and schematic in its arguments. Still, those arguments should be heard. --Richard T. Jameson
Average Rating: 
Rating: -
I have always liked this movie for its intensity and historic value. The acting is first-rate. It is an excellent study on the heavy responsibility of command. Unfortunately this version has several minutes cut out of it. I saw it recently on Turner Classic Movies and those minutes were included in their version.
Rating: -
One of the earliest attempts to show the politics and terrible strain on a leader's conscience as America debates the effectiveness of daylight bombing. Great dialogue, made more intense by Clark Gable, Walter Pidgeon, and Brian Donleavy. Not much in the way of plane shots.....I suggest Twelve O'Clock High for more of that, and we do not see the leaders crack as they do in Twelve O'Clock High. Not much in the way of extras.
Rating: -
Gable's best postwar effort. Gripping war film with superb supporting cast.
Neal Robertson
Rating: -
Good movie if you like the older post WWII movies, especially if you liked 12 O'Clock high. Clark Gable is very good in this one.
Rating: -
While the story line is good, the acting is stiff and memorized. Van Johnson gives the best performance, playing the part of "top kick" sargent that I would want to have working for me. Walter Pidgeon and Clark Gable are just repeating their lines, until the end when Gable catches on to his character. This film doesn't come close to Twelve O'Clock High.
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