SunnyHello
Nice effects though.
Odelecol
Pretty good movie overall. First half was nothing special but it got better as it went along.
BelSports
This is a coming of age storyline that you've seen in one form or another for decades. It takes a truly unique voice to make yet another one worth watching.
Aneesa Wardle
The story, direction, characters, and writing/dialogue is akin to taking a tranquilizer shot to the neck, but everything else was so well done.
bkoganbing
Twilight's Last Gleaming is a rather far fetched and fanciful tale about a rogue general taking over a missile silo, isolating it from remote control at the Pentagon and White House and having 9 Titan missiles with atomic warheads at your command. Burt Lancaster who was railroaded into a murder conviction to silence him escapes with Paul Winfield, Burt Young, and William Smith and they take over the missile silo and issue demands.The film is fascinating in one respect how this crisis is isolated from the knowledge of the public. The deliberations over the Cuban Missile Crisis had nothing on this and even that went public. The closest real happening in our history was when Grover Cleveland went missing for about 5 weeks to have cancer surgery and that never came out in his lifetime. Of course it worked out far better for Grover than it did for this president.Charles Durning plays the fictional president David Stevens and what Lancaster demands of him is not just the usual money extortion. He wants a document read from a National Security Council meeting from the Vietnam war years which would have a calamitous impact on a lot of people and our national credibility involving our very reasons for being in Vietnam. Durning did not even know the existence of it as his presidency is way in the future. But sly old time Defense Secretary Melvyn Douglas knows and as it works in these cases his reputation and national security seem to blend in.Another sly man from the past is Air Force General Richard Widmark who was once Lancaster's superior. Other members of the cabinet include Secretary Of State Joseph Cotten and Attorney General William Marshall.Despite Oscar winners and big box office names like Widmark and Cotten, walking away with the acting honors here is Charles Durning as the president who is thrust into a crisis involving the distant past for him. His scenes with military aide Gerald O'Loughlin have some real feel and poignancy for both men.Twilight's Last Gleaming though far fetched is well worth a look.
ma-cortes
A renegade USAF general, Lawrence Dell (Burt Lancaster) and his band (Paul Winfield , Burt Young , William Smith) , escape from a military prison and take over an ICBM silo near Montana . They have invaded Silo 3 and are prepared to launch nine nuclear missiles . Head saboteur General Lawrence threatens to provoke World War 3 unless the government and President of the United States (Charles Durning , though Paul Newman was offered the role , but turned it down) carry out their conditions , as they demand the followings : ¨Ten million dollars , Air Force One (it was only painted on one side) and you Mr President¨ as he must reveal details of a secret meeting and confess the Vietnam policies and crimes . Thrilling film about nuclear threatening that contains noisy action , suspense , intrigue , thrills and being pretty entertaining . One of the very few films made in the late 1970's to be shown with an intermission and an extended use of split screens functioning to a large degree in tightening the intrigue . The movie's weakest point is the television style and some ridiculous dialogues as when an enemy appears and Paul Winfield tells ¨Perhaps he might be a midget¨and Lancaster responds : ¨There are no midgets in the United States Air Force¨. Based on a novel by Walter Wager titled ¨Viper three¨ with interesting screenplay from Ronald M. Cohen and Edward Huebsch . The secret policy is closely based on the 1957 book "Nuclear Weapons and Foreign Policy" by Henry Kissinger, in which the future Secretary of State outlines a strategy committing the US to promoting regional conflicts to deter the Soviets' initiating full-scale war. Top-notch acting by Lancaster as a thinking madman who holds America to ransom by kidnapping atomic missiles . Burt Lancaster initially turned the script down when he was first approached about the project, but eventually agreed to do it after Robert Aldrich became attached to the picture. This is Burt Lancaster's fourth collaboration with director Robert Aldrich, after Apache (1954), Veracruz (1954) and Ulzana's raid (1972). Very good support cast such as Roscoe Lee Browne as James Forrest , Joseph Cotten as Secretary of State , Melvyn Douglas as Zachariah Guthrie , Richard Jaeckel as Capt. Stanford , William Marshall as Attorney General , Gerald S. O'Loughlin as Brig. Gen. O'Rourke , Richard Widmark as Gen. Martin and final film of Charles McGraw , Lionel Murton and Leif Erickson . Atmospheric cinematography by Robert Hauser , all of the scenes were shot with two cameras running . Thrilling and suspenseful musical score by the master Jerry Goldsmith . The motion picture was professionally directed by Robert Aldrich , he even turned down a large salary and a 10% profit stake in ¨A bridge too far¨1977) in order to make this film and he finished the film ten days ahead of schedule . Here Robert Aldrich gave a tense and brilliant direction . Aldrich began writing and directing for TV series in the early 1950s, and directed his first feature in 1953 (Big Leaguer ,1953). Soon thereafter he established his own production company and produced most of his own films, collaborating in the writing of many of them . Directed in a considerable plethora of genres but almost all of his films contained a subversive undertone . He was an expert on warlike (Dirty Dozen , The Angry Hills , Attack , Ten seconds to hell) and Western (The Frisko kid , Ulzana's raid, Apache , Veracruz , The last sunset) . Rating : acceptable and decent movie , it's a must see for Burt Lancaster fans .
Kieran Green
Set in 1981 (the near future for this 1977 release) former US Air Force General Lawrence Dell Burt Lancaster imprisoned for being an outspoken advocate against Vietnam, he is also framed on a manslaughter charge and sent to prison. he escapes with three inmates Paul Winfield, Burt Young, and William Smith and take over a nearby SAC base in Montana, Once in control of the base, and armed with the launch codes, Dell non-negotiable demands from the SAC Command Center that U.S. President (Charles Durning) reveal the truth about the Vietnam War to the American people by reading a National Security document on television. If his demands are not met Dell promises, at the turn of two keys, to send the nine Titan missiles to their targets in the Soviet Union. 'Twilight's Last Gleaming' Directed by Robert Aldrich. Boasts an all star cast, Richard Widmark, Melvyn Douglas, Roscoe Lee Brown. It's a shame that Warner have neglected to release this on DVD. a shame really since many more of Aldrich's films are available.became a vocal advocate of disclosing the truth behind US involvement in Southeast Asia and Indochina in the hope that a post-Watergate America would forgive its Regarded as a dangerous embarrassment by the higher-ups,
Deusvolt
Burt Lancaster, Richard Widmark, Joseph Cotten, Melvyn Douglas Charles Durning - among the most memorable actors of the '40s and '50s. I thought it a blessing that they were still in pictures in 1977 and truth to tell, most of the people below 30 in the theatre with me weren't familiar with them. Thematic spoiler ahead: The general run amuck with a noble purpose portrayed by Burt Lancaster wanted the government to reveal the real reason for engaging in the Vietnam War. According to the film the reason was that it was all a game of "chicken" all along. The US war hawks wanted to show the Soviets that America was willing to do anything - including sacrificing the lives of thousands of American soldiers not to mention essentially innocent Vietnamese lives, to stop the spread of communism. The reason seems plausible even now but I think that was not it.Contrary to conventional wisdom, I don't think the Cold War with the Soviets and the accompanying proxy hot wars during that period was about ideology. Just as the earlier two world wars, and practically all wars for that matter, it was a contest for resources. Ho Chi Minh, after all, assiduously courted American support in his guerrilla war against the invading Japanese (he asked for weapons) but was ignored by US officials. He even drafted a constitution for his country blatantly copied from the US constitution. Why was he snubbed by the US officials? Ostensibly,because they didn't want to tick off the French from whom Ho also wanted to free his country. But by that time WWII was already well under way and France had already fallen to Nazi Germany. So it was not as if France was still a valuable ally or could make any demands on the US. I believe the US did not like Ho Chi Minh because, although he was not yet a Soviet or Mao style communist at that time, he was a committed nationalist and socialist. That made him anathema to Wall Street type capitalists or Big Business. In their equation, he was a threat to US interests and with their influence in the military-industrial complex they made him out to be an enemy of the American people. This is the same mind-set that led American operatives to back the strongman Pinochet in Chile which led to the assassination of Allende. This is the same reason why apart from the economic and diplomatic sanctions against the racist former white regime in South Africa, the US ruling classes could not bring themselves to act decisively and directly against the brutalities of the apartheid regime. What really brought down Boer ruled South Africa were not economic sanctions and diplomatic isolation by the West but the active Cuban support of socialist guerrilla movements in countries like Angola and Mozambiqe surrounding South Africa. That put a lot of pressure on the white government whose members realized that they had to capitulate to black rule to firewall the conflagration of popular nationalist revolutions in their region of Africa. Nelson Mandela himself acknowledges this which is why to this day he is in awe of Fidel Castro, who by the way just like Ho was simply a dedicated nationalist out to do the best for his own people thus earning the opprobrium of the Mafia and US Big Business. Just like Ho,the US-educated Castro was initially strongly pro-American. Ho in his struggle against the Japanese and the French had nowhere to turn to but the Russians. Castro, in his struggle against the US banks and the American capitalists who owned and run his country's public utilities and dictated the prices of their chief exports, sugar and tobacco, also had to turn to the Soviets for succor.In any case, this film was great food for thought not only about the inherent dangers of nuclear war readiness but of the politics of fear and the economics of greed.