The Fighting Sullivans (1944) Poster

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8/10
Hollywood's Filmed Telling Of War's Greatest Single Tragedy
redryan6426 May 2014
Warning: Spoilers
IN BRINGING WHAT was surely as tragic a story that would come out of World War II in America, 20th Century-Fox did a great service; not only to the memory of the 5 young men and to the Sullivan Family; but also the Studio public credited the Armed Forces in general and the U.S. Navy in particular, by its making the movie going people aware of what dangers that our boys face daily.

THE CASTING OF the parts was one aspect of the film that was most expertly handled. Heading up the credits are the great Thomas Mitchell* (as the Father), Fox's up and coming Starlett Anne Baxter (Katherine Mary Sullivan), Trudy Marshall (Genevieve Sullibvan, sister), Roy Roberts (Father Francis, Parish Priest) and ever reliable Ward Bond as Lt. Commander Robinson, Naval Recruiter).

INTRODUCING A GROUIP OF relative newcomers in making up the Sullivan Boys proved to be a great plus in the film's believability and success. James Cardwell (George), John Campbell (Frank), John Alvin (Matt), George Offerman, Jr. (Joe) and Edward Ryan (Al) seemed to be a real family; turning in a commendable joint performance. Future Disney Star, Bobby Driscoll (SONG OF THE SOUTH, SO DEAR TO MY HEART) was among the uncredited players who portrayed the brothers as young kids.

THE STORY STARTS out with a series of Catholic Baptisms; culminating with the score: Sullivan Boys 5 Sullivam Girls 1. The story then quickly establishes the family household, their place in Blue Collar neighborhood and their Dad's position as a Railroad Conductor.

THERE IS A GREAT deal of time spent in the portrayal of the brothers doing all sorts of things Always, they are together. The incidents on the screen are always laden with irony; which had prophetic foretelling of what would be their fate in the War. Many references to the "Fighting" brothers, "Fighting" mad and, in particular, when the boys find an old row boat; which they repair, board, sail and nearly drown, when the craft abruptly sinks.

THE MANNER IN which the early portion of the story is propelled along is both unique and, perhaps, just a trifle too l-o-n-g. In the montage of juvenile activities portrayed, the movie looks like a series of OUR GANG/LITTLE RASCALS Movie Shorts. The technique does prove to be most effective.

MOVING ON TO the point where the Sullivans were young men, the story takes a decidedly improved and serious turn. Al meets Katherine Mary. They marry and have a son. Pearl Harbor is attacked, the boys all enlist in the Navy-together. Ultimately, of course, their tragic fate is portrayed to the audience; who,of course, knew what was coming all along.

THE FINALE OF this true life tragedy includes scenes of Lt. Commader Robinson's news bearing visit to the Sullivan home, Mr. Sullivan's tearful day at work with his passing places where he would often see his sons and a recreation of the launching of the new Naval Destroyer, USS The Sullivans.

IN A TOUCHING last scene & fade to black, the 5 slain men, all in their Navy uniforms, are shown going to Heaven; with youngest brother, Al, hurrying to catch up, as usual.

WE HAVE HEARD that this movie had a shortened original release; owing to the fear that the extreme sadness of its story would have an adverse effect on Wartime Morale.
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8/10
memories
tonight29 April 2006
I was a boy of 14 at boarding school in England when I saw this film on release. The memory of it is with me still at 75 so it must have had some merit emotionally if nothing else. The second world war was still on and we were all aware of the horrors daily being brought to notice. Fellow pupils were finding parent(s) and brothers/sisters lost in the conflict. The film I recall we who saw it went back a second time. Thomas Mitchell as the father was the dominant character in the film.I still think of him as a forerunner to characters played later by Ernest Borgnine who was in the same mould. Anne Baxter was not yet at her best but was a sympathetic player demanded by her sorely tested motherhood in this film.
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7/10
The Most Terrible News Any Parent Could Hear
bkoganbing14 November 2009
Warning: Spoilers
No true stories touched America during World War II as that of The Sullivans. The five Irish Catholic brothers who grew up in Ames, Iowa and had the all American boyhood that is idealized who all died in the same ship at the battle for Guadalcanal. It was inevitable that a film be made of their lives as soon as it was feasible to do so.

By that I mean that with war time restrictions on battle news the whole Solomon Islands struggle had to be well in the past before the Armed Forces would give out with any details. Although it's not spelled out in the film it was two months before the parents of The Sullivans were given details of what happened to all five of their sons. And it was two years before the film was made.

The story of The Sullivans and the film made from it had special significance of course to Irish Catholics. It was sixteen years before that the first Catholic candidate ran for president on a major party. At that time Alfred E. Smith's loyalty was questioned, the whole notion that a Catholic would have first allegiance to a foreign church headquartered in Rome came into play in that campaign. The story of The Sullivans had a special significance for the time that we in this new century can't possibly appreciate.

20th Century Fox opted to give five fairly unknown actors the roles of The Sullivans as adults. To have cast folks as Tyrone Power or Don Ameche as one or two of the brothers would probably have detracted from the story. Sad to say the five players, Edmond Ryan, John Campbell, James Cardwell, John Alvin, and George Offerman, Jr. stayed obscure even after the film was released.

The parents were played by Thomas Mitchell and Selena Royle with Anne Baxter as their sister who joined the WAVES after her brothers were killed. Not mentioned, but in real life she was married and lost a husband at Pearl Harbor. Ward Bond plays the Navy recruiter who signed up the five Sullivan boys and who also brings the most awful news that any parent could possibly hear.

The Sullivans still holds up well today as a fine piece of film making and a tribute to America's fighting spirit. Which we hope will never waver.
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10/10
Heroic and Touching
paulpsyche24 September 2005
The USS Sullivans is now anchored in a Naval Park in Buffalo, NY. This destroyer was named in honor of the Sullivan Brothers who all lost their life during the battle of Guadalcanal in 1942. After Pearl Harbor they all enlisted in the Navy with the condition of not being separated. While serving on the USS Juno they perished together. Shipmates reported that three of the brothers, when out of harms way, returned to the burning ship for their brothers when it went under. When news of this tragic loss was learned, the government instituted the rule that stands today, no brothers will serve in the same combat theatre. This was due to the Sullivans.

I saw this movie one night with my mother on late night TV in 1981. Let me tell you, the very memory of the ending of this movie brings me to tears. A mixture of pride and sorrow. Do not hesitate, purchase, and watch this film.
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Every Irishman Sees Red Once in a While
GradyQ21 June 2003
THE FIGHTING SULLIVANS, as it was known by the time I saw it, is a fantastic WW2 era film. It's more Americana than War film, but it's a truly engrossing story about the loyalty of family and the tragedy of sacrifice. The video box calls it a "story of the fighting navy!" That's not really true, half of the story takes place when the Sullivan brothers are boys, and the sinking of the Juneau is only a five minute scene at the end of the film. They're only in the navy for a few minutes of screen time. The relationships between the brothers and their distinct personalities is what makes this film stand out, and no person with a heart beating in his chest can sit dry eyed through the ending when the father goes to work as usual, even after hearing some devastating news. This film pushes all the right buttons and is a wonderful example of just how strongly a film can manipulate your emotions. I can't watch it without getting a lump in the old throat.
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10/10
KEEPING "THE SULLIVANS" AFLOAT
renfield5417 June 1999
This film is presented as vignettes of the boys at different ages, as if seen through a mother's loving eyes. It makes your heart particularly vulnerable to their inevitable fate. Especially poignant to the audiences of the day, note that it was released in 1944, during some of the darker days of World War II.

Five brothers DID die as the result of ONE enemy encounter. It was a terrible tragedy. It made one family's sacrifice TOO great. In their honor, there has always been a "USS The Sullivans" afloat. The newly commisioned ship can be seen, along with the "new" skipper (sometimes), on patriotic holidays when the movie is shown. They have him (and the ship) in the "bumpers" between segments. It adds a new dimension and reality to the film.

My younger children always gather round to watch the "Leave it to Beaver" type antics of the brothers growing up. They very much enjoy the "little troublemakers". They DO follow the film and understand what happens at the end. I'm glad they do. It's not lost on them. And we always salute, along with Pop Sullivan, at the end of the movie.....

REST IN PEACE, BOYS...........
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7/10
Most reviews spoil the ending - but not this one!!
Libretio7 March 2005
THE SULLIVANS

Aspect ratio: 1.37:1

Sound format: Mono

(Black and white)

A working-class couple (Thomas Mitchell and Selena Royle) raise six children - five boys and a girl - to adulthood, only to suffer an appalling tragedy during wartime.

When America finally entered the Second World War in December 1941, President Roosevelt was advised by British Prime Minister Winston Churchill to prohibit family members from serving together on active duty. It was not an idle warning: Within months of the attack on Pearl Harbor, headlines were generated across the world by a smaller - though no less tragic - incident which befell a hard-working Irish-American family from Waterloo, Iowa, an incident which forms the basis of Lloyd Bacon's flag-waving melodrama. Mary C. McCall Jr.'s episodic screenplay (based on an Oscar-nominated story by Jules Schermer and Edward Doherty) is imbued with the kind of homespun values craved by audiences during wartime, and follows the fortunes of the Suillivan brood from adolescence to young adulthood, charting a recognizable course through the ups and downs of their otherwise unremarkable lives. However, their world is changed forever by the onset of war, leading to the worst possible disaster. In fact, the last fifteen minutes of the film are so utterly heartbreaking (particularly the 'water tower' sequence), many theater owners refused to screen the movie until the end of the war, believing it would be too painful for families whose loved ones were still fighting on the front line. Half a century later, Steven Spielberg paid tribute to the Sullivan family by using their experience as a springboard for his own wartime drama, SAVING PRIVATE RYAN (1998).

Director Bacon (a veteran craftsman who began his career in silent films before gravitating toward sound-era classics like 42nd STREET in 1933) tells the story in straightforward fashion, employing close-ups and tracking shots purely for dramatic emphasis at key points in the narrative. He also uses an instrumental version of the old military standard 'Anchors Away' to particularly memorable effect during the latter stages of the film - some will find it corny, others will be deeply moved; either response is valid. Production values are economical but solid, and the cast is a mixed bag of veterans and newcomers, spearheaded by old-hands Royle (THE HEIRESS) and Mitchell (one of Hollywood's most celebrated character actors, usually a supporting player in A-list productions like GONE WITH THE WIND and IT'S A WONDERFUL LIFE), while Anne Baxter - so memorable in Orson Welles' THE MAGNIFICENT AMBERSONS - toplines the younger cast in a thankless minor role. The performances of the five Sullivan boys (all played by relative unknowns) are variable, though the young actors who play them as children aren't even credited on-screen! Chief amongst them is Bobby Driscoll (as the youngest family member), a hugely talented child star who won an Oscar for his role in Ted Tetzlaff's superb thriller THE WINDOW (1949) and later provided the voice of the title character in Disney's PETER PAN (1953). Further down the cast list in a small but crucial role is Ward Bond, playing a navy officer who utters the single most wrenching line of dialogue in the entire film ("All five"). Remembered fondly for his role in TV's "Wagon Train", Bond appeared in almost 300 movies during the course of his long career, lending an element of quiet dignity to every role he ever played. Also known as THE FIGHTING SULLIVANS.

NB. Shortly after the events described in this movie, President Roosevelt finally decreed that family members would no longer be allowed to serve together in the US military. This rule has been enforced ever since.
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10/10
Heart breaker
robertgiannola30 December 2005
This has to be the greatest tearjerker of all time. I was only an early teenager when I saw this (now 66), and I cried till the sun came up, as I lie in bed trying to sleep after seeing it. Thomas Mitchell was just too much as the bereaved father, and I have felt a close kinship to him because of what he went through for what seems like all of my life. I wanted to take him in my arms and comfort him somehow. His boys were so filled with wonder and joy, and so young and excited about life. The movie almost culminates everything that is so devastating about war, but makes the point that it has its place in the weaknesses of mankind, and the fact that we all are, after all, just human.
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6/10
All-American Irish-Catholics fighting the enemy together!
moonspinner5521 March 2009
So jaded our we as a nation that the scenario of this patriotic family drama today looks like it was created by aliens--foreigners who got the impression that WWII-era America may have resembled just this, conjured up through memories of spreads in the Saturday Evening Post. Close-knit, church-going kin with five sons and one daughter josh and rib and 'lick' each other throughout the 1930s, the children growing into fine, upstanding young adults by the dawn of the next decade. True story decked out with Hollywood trimmings, though most of the actors are so sincere that the sentiment doesn't feel heavy-handed. Still, these brothers (who march off in unison to the Naval Recruiter's office after the Japanese bomb Pearl Harbor) aren't given much individual character; we see them just as the director and scenarists hope we'll see them: as a fighting unit, so brave they don't even have second thoughts. These Fighting Sullivans were instant heroes to a rapturous war-time America, so much so that any hint of complexity in their characters has been scrubbed clean. Edward Ryan (as Al) looks a little puny taking womanly Anne Baxter into his arms, but Thomas Mitchell is wonderful as the patriarch of the family, and the child actors are each quite good. **1/2 from ****
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10/10
Absolutely Wonderful
lashes197211 January 2005
Warning: Spoilers
I first saw this movie about 10 years ago. I was sitting up late one night with my mother and she said that she wanted me to see it. At first, i wasn't interested but as i watched it, i became fascinated with this family. I thought they were just so All American and so very close. They were the kind of close that just doesn't exist now days. Anyway, i loved it. When all 5 brothers were killed and the man went to the house to tell the family (what was left), i thought my heart would bleed. I couldn't imagine losing all of my children like that. Watching them grow up was probably the best part though. I loved seeing them all play as children. I think my favorite part was when they decided to "re model" the kitchen. That was priceless! God Bless the Sullivan Family and to anyone who sees this movie.. GET Kleenex READY!
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7/10
A Five Sullivan Salute
wes-connors1 June 2014
Warning: Spoilers
First of all, be aware that several of the reviews here give away the ending of this story. Probably, at the time of release, most people knew about the tragic event, but you may want to enjoy the story without knowing what happens, exactly… In the years before World War II, small-town Iowa train conductor Thomas Mitchell (as Thomas "Tom" Sullivan) and his wife Selena Royle (as Alleta) raise five eventually draft-aged boys. When the Japanese attack American troops at Pearl Harbor, the US enters the war. Many young men volunteer. Close from birth to young adulthood, the Sullivan sons insist on serving together. Based on a true story, this film might qualify as the first five-handkerchief tear-jerker. It's manipulative and maudlin, but difficult to argue against...

Of the five sons, the camera focus mainly on youngest Edward Ryan (as Albert "Al" Sullivan); he is played by Bobby Driscoll as a boy. Only Mr. Ryan gets a real romance – with pretty Anne Baxter (as Katherine Mary Roof). Secondary story concern goes to Buddy Swan (as George Sullivan); he is played by James Cardwell as a young man. Otherwise, the ten actors are treated as a unit, which certainly seems appropriate. Producer Sam Jaffe presents it as Americana –blissful family interaction with mishaps; notably, Mr. Mitchell's father has some management problems when it comes to disciplining his children. Director Lloyd Bacon guides the story well; the bracketing scenes involving Mitchell on his train, looking for his sons on a water tower, are beautifully done.

******* The Sullivans (2/3/44) Lloyd Bacon ~ Edward Ryan, Thomas Mitchell, Anne Baxter, Selena Royle
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10/10
Hits deep in the core of your heart...
dant5117 March 2005
I understand this movie did not do well when it was released (1944). At that time, when American hearts were so tender with pain, it is understandable. Today, it reminds us of the magnitude of sacrifice of human life and grief it cost families across this nation.

I have acquired a deeper appreciation for those who went before us so that we can enjoy the freedoms we have today.

I hope everyone who reads this will have the opportunity to see this movie. Though a classic it has not lost its ability to stir the mind and heart.

May God hold and keep all those who have lost loved ones in the conflicts this nation has faced in the past and today.
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7/10
Nice schmaltzy propaganda.
planktonrules15 July 2011
Warning: Spoilers
Like so many Hollywood films of the era, "The Fighting Sullivans" begins with a real-life story and embellishes it heavily in order to make an entertaining and teary movie. In this case, the very famous five Sullivan brothers who served aboard the same ship--and who all died during the invasion of Guadalcanal. It was a terrible tragedy that was exploited for propaganda--to try to solidify the folks at home behind the war effort.

The film begins when the Sullivans are boys. Nothing especially exciting happens during this portion but it serves to emphasize how the brothers cared for each other and makes the viewer connect with them and care for them. Then, the film jumps ahead. Now the five are young adults--full of dreams and love for each other. And, of course, the war arrives and the rest is history. Interestingly enough, the war itself is only a small portion of the film--most of it is just leading up to it. And, while it's heavy on the schmaltz (in other words, heavy on sentimentality), it is effective--unless you a really cynical sort. And naturally, when tragedy strikes, you can't help but get misty-eyed because the film so effectively led to it...and because the story of the boys is amazingly sad. Well worth seeing...even if it does seem that an awful lot of liberties were taken with their lives--especially when they were lads.

By the way, one part of the film was handled poorly. At the end, when Ward Bond arrives to break the news to the family that all five brothers were killed, he walked in the door smiling--and did so for about 30 seconds before breaking it to them. This made no sense unless Bond was portraying a sociopath! They really should have re-shot this pivotal scene.
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3/10
Too corny for its own good
eddie-17725 January 2006
A series of country-fried, saccharine-sweet vignettes follow the growth of my hometown's own Sullivan brothers from quickly-angered little boys to grown men getting sunk on a battleship.

The film has little substance aside from being a great example of morale boasting propaganda designed to pick up a nation's spirits as the battle for the Pacific got bloodier and bloodier. The childsploitation of the nauseatingly cute brothers-as-children is the most shameless this side of John John's salute, and the tales of family togetherness and the accepting of traditional roles are so predictable that they allow no room for real character growth-or real characters, for that matter. I felt about as sad at the end of this film as I would have had it been nothing more than a shot of five cardboard cutouts being burned. The walking-on-the-clouds ending was laugh-out-loud corny and the scenes leading up to it ranged from boring to mildly amusing.

That's not to say that the picture didn't have any good points. Some scenes are genuinely amusing and, when they're not going too far overboard, those kids are genuinely cute, but still its flaws outweigh its positives.
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A touching tribute to the 5 Sullivan brothers who lost their lives together in WWII.
gitrich29 October 1998
Warning: Spoilers
The Sullivan brothers grew up together in a small town in Iowa. They would eventually join the Navy after Pearl Harbor was attacked and would be killed in action. The story is a true one and heart wrenching to say the least. Thomas Mitchell is perfectly cast as the father. A very young Bobby Driscoll plays little Al, the youngest of the 5 Sullivan boys. Anne Baxter and Ward Bond were magnificent. Get yourself a box of Kleenex for this one folks. It will stay with you for a long time.
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9/10
Memorable one Liner!
ciceropig-431 January 2004
If Ward Bond is not remembered for one word in his long career in movies his line in "The Sullivans" should be. "All Five" when he is asked which one it was that was killed in the Pacific. A truly memorable movie by all. Tearjerker? It would rank number one!
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10/10
Finest movie
vhjedi14 September 2003
This is a must see movie to truly apreciate the sacrifices made for our country by the "greatest generation". The heart of the movie is the lives of the brothers growing up. If the film were made today it would probably focus too much on the actual death of the boys, instead this film instead focuses on the lives that were lived by 5 great american men. If you have never seen this film, get a copy of it and watch a cinematic triumph in storytelling.
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7/10
Movie Review
tomwal27 September 2009
Sure. This is a slice of Americana made during the war years. I'm sure that a bit of dramatic licence was used, but that shouldn't detract from a stirring,emotionally made movie.A true story about five brothers who served and died on the same ship at the same time,still delivers a jarring note,even when seen today. Compare it with a similar scene in Saving Private Ryan,when a mother is told about the loss of her sons in battle. The cast of The Sullivans is perfect,as is the screenplay.The scene where Ward Bond informs the Sullivan family of the deaths of the five brothers still packs a emotional wallop.Thomas Mitchell leads the cast as the elder Sullivan,who teaches the boys the ways of life.There's touches of Irish wit and wisdom that adds humor to the film. Rating: 7 out of 10 stars.
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9/10
Always in my memory
rungmc30 June 2005
Very seldom when I was small, we would be allowed to sit up late to catch a movie, but always to the distaste of my mother, who was adamant that bedtime was bedtime, movie or not. So I'll never forget the night that we were actually called out of bed to come up and watch this, the fighting Sullivan's. We sat, engrossed in the lives of these young men, convinced that it was a comedy we were watching. The little rascals-esquire capers of the boys always stuck with me, especially the "dentist" scene. As the Sullivan's grew, we grew closer and closer to them, until the tragic finale; words cannot describe the wave of emotion that flowed over me. In the end, i turned to my dad, teary eyed, to ask him if it really was a true story; more sensitive parents would have said yes, its all made up... A truly special movie, one for everybody.
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7/10
"We Sullivans stick together!"
classicsoncall18 July 2016
Warning: Spoilers
Imagine the inconsolable grief of a family that loses five siblings in a single action during World War II, or any war for that matter. Just the thought manages to bring a tear to one's eye, the sort of situation that any parent would dread if it involved even a single offspring. I can't imagine what the real life Sullivan Family must have felt or gone through when they got the news. In the movie I thought it was handled just a bit poorly as the naval officer (Ward Bond) who delivered the news entered the Sullivan home with a smile on his face. Handling that bit of grim news certainly should have required more tact, and if the director was clueless about it, I wonder why Bond himself didn't suggest an alternative to the scene. Similarly, the idea that the Sullivan patriarch (Thomas Mitchell) opted to go to work right after receiving the news seemed unconscionably inconsiderate, if no more than to offer consolation to his grieving wife, daughter and daughter-in-law. The only justification for that scene was to set the viewer up for the man's patriotic gesture to the unseen soldier sons atop the water tower where they often greeted their Dad with their daily sendoff as kids. With the Second World War still going on when the movie was released, I presume the film established one family's courage and sacrifice in the face of the enemy and was deemed an appropriate call to patriotic action.
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10/10
I was a young boy when I seen the movie
Ducko13730 December 2006
I remember when I was a young boy and seeing this movie. It had all the fun and sadness of that time frame. I related to the father since my dad worked on the railroad. The boys receiving their first communion and I begin catholic and my brother in law serving in the navy. I know it had a sad ending and of course it wasn't till later in life did I realize the importance of the story. I have seen it a couple of times over the past years on T V but its been awhile now. I recommend that any father and mother if they can rent or buy this movie for their sons and daughters to watch they should do it. It is truly an Inspiration to America.
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6/10
I ... erm ... appreciate the thought
mik-1917 February 2005
Warning: Spoilers
I would like nothing so much as to tell you how much I loved 'The Sullivans'. Only, I didn't like it much. I appreciate the function it had in the mobilization during WW2, I recognize the heart and good will that went into its making, and I applaud the number of unexpected solutions the film-makers opted for in the first and largest part of it.

Five brothers and one sister grow up in a tight-knit family that is none too well-off, in this story that is quite authentic. The boys, because they are the ones we follow, get into scrapes, get black eyes, try out their first cigarettes and first dates, and have their first communions. By 1939 they are big boys with day jobs and dangerous hobbies, and then comes Pearl Harbor, and they are off to the Pacific, even Al the kid brother, Small Change as he is called. He was supposed to be the first of the family to get an education, but was the first to marry and have a baby. But off they are ...

The ending is classical American lore and weighs heavily on the heart. The problem with all the rest of it is, it is pretty standard 'Our Town' stuff, only not done with a lot of style or substance. It all gets a bit boring, and the acting and direction is a bit generalized and bland. "This should learn us Sullivans to stick together", Pa Sullivan says after a skirmish with big brother George, and that remains the sympathetic message of a rather simplistic film.
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10/10
Incredible true story
mls418218 November 2021
This starts out as the story of a family with five sons. It is sweet and entertaining. Then the war starts ...

I'm not going to say any more other than have a handkerchief ready. This country has been through some rough times in our lifetime, but at least we didn't have to live through the Great Depression and WWII.
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5/10
The Fighting Sullivans (1944)
protapadhikari30 September 2013
Warning: Spoilers
The Fighting Sullivans, originally free as The Sullivans, is a 1944 American biographical combat film going to by Lloyd Bacon and printed by Edward Doherty, Mary C. McCall Jr. and Jules Schermer. It was chosen for a now-discontinued arts school Award for Best tale.

The tale follows the lives of the five Irish-American Sullivan brothers, who grow up in Iowa through the days of the enormous Depression and serve jointly in the United States Navy through World War II. Their ultimate deaths in the Pacific theater on the ship the light police car USS Juneau (done for on November 13, 1942 through the Naval Battle of Guadalcanal) are too chronicle in this movie, which is base on the brothers' accurate life tale. http://fullmovieonline85.blogspot.com
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Simply great
drosse6725 November 2001
This is one of the few movies I've seen that really made me cry. I agree with others who wrote about this and would definitely put it up there with The Best Years of our Lives as one of the great World War II pictures. Saving Private Ryan didn't move me as much as this mainly because we really don't get to know Private Ryan (or his brothers, for that matter). In this movie, we get to know all of the brothers, especially the oldest and the youngest. It did feel a bit like the Waltons in the first hour (were homes really that apple pie in Iowa in the 30s?) But watching the boys come of age and struggle with basic teenage issues, and then watching them enlist, made their fates all the more powerful. Yes, I knew what was going to happen but I was moved all the same. This movie should be required viewing for everyone who adored Saving Private Ryan.
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