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3/10
Awful Italian WW2 movie
SgtSlaughter9 August 2002
Italian war movies are usually a lot of trash. And this Italian war movie is definitely among the worst of the subgenre. Ettore Manni stars as a an Allied soldier who leads an escape from a German POW camp. The escaped POWs hook up with French partisans and aid them in capturing a German General.

The movie starts out with an incredibly long credits sequence, which is just stock footage with the names of the actors and director scrolling by. Then we get about 40 minutes of hand-held camera action showing the prisoners move throughout the "camp". The "camp" consists of about 2 different rooms, a dozen prisoners and maybe four or five Germans. And during the first 40 minutes or so there is also some annoying music playing lightly in the background for no apparent reason.

Then there was the very long "nightmare" sequence, which is just a whole bunch of B&W stock gun camera and airplane footage. Thrown in for no reason.

Then there's another thing I don't get. Whenever the Germans are talking, it's evident that their lines were dubbed from Italian to German. Quite evident and embarrasing. And we don't even get subtitles to know what the Germans are discussing.

Klaus Kinski, billed as a "star", appears only in the last few minutes of the movie. He's constantly referred to as "General" although he wears an SS Colonel's uniform.

The American escapees also had far too easy of a time getting into that German high command building. No security checks or anything.

The battle scenes were filmed on a tight budget, only allowing a few actors to grace the screen at one time or another and only a couple of explosions.

Granted this movie isn't as bad as BRIDGE TO HELL but it's definitely near the bottom of the barrel.
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3/10
Below average Macaroni combat movie with embarrassing action scenes , short budget and lousy director
ma-cortes24 October 2021
In World War II, some soldiers are captured by the Germans and thrown into a prison camp where are mistreated, harassed and punished by a feared commandant (Luciano Rossi) . Finally the soldiers (Ettore Manni as a doctor and Lars Bloch) make a great getaway and after that , they are assigned to a dangerous mission, as they go undercover to attempt to kidnap an evil Nazi general (Klaus Kinski) , but things go wrong.

Ettore Manni is the leader in this ordinary wartime movie about a commando goes in action , shot in very low budget . Being a ridiculous European war film that lost continuity with US cuts . This moving film packs frantic thrills , perilous adventures , relentless feats , and buck-loads of explosive action and violence . The noisy action is uniformly bad made , with rip-roaring final scenes in which the motley group is really besieged , including some spectacular shootouts , bombing and along the way a lot of stock-footage about aviation . The first half of the film allows the colorful cast of character actors to have their fun as they get their tails whipped into shape and develop a complex and tense relationship . The final part is all action , as the brave commando wreak havoc and then run for their lives . Stars Ettore Manni, here appears a few familiar faces from Spaghetti Westerns, Eurothrillers, Giallos and other sub-genres, such as : Lars Bloch, Luciano Rossi, Garofalo, Attillio Dotessio, Paul Muller, Roberto Dell'Acqua, Rosemarie DeLindt , Prieto Torrisi or Peter McCoy and, of course, Klaus Kinski. This one belongs to a numerous group of Italian/Spanish WWII films , these types of B-war films have never enjoyed enormous popularity in Italy because they were made mostly just to make money , especially with foreign distribution in poor countries and little conviction on the part of the producers. These were films made in De Paolis (Rome), Lacio, Italy , Morocco, Libya, the Egyptian desert or Almeria , Spain. These movies follow the American style and usually directed by José Luis Merino , Leon Klimovsky , Umberto Lenzi , Roberto Montero, Bitto Albertini , Al Bradley and including tarnishing Hollywood stars , such as ¨The legion of no return¨ with Tab Hunter , ¨Hell's brigade¨ with Jack Palance , ¨Command attack¨ with Michael Rennie . All of them supported by local armies that lent tanks , weapons , soldiers and extras to make these films . The typical team was made up of an Italian director, Italo-Spanish technical staff, and a cast of Italian and Spanish actors and sometimes German and French, sometimes a fading Hollywood star. This is a wartime typical vehicle and into the ¨warlike commando sub-genre¨ , in USA style which also belong the American classics as : ¨Dirty Dozen (Robert Aldrich)¨ ,¨ Where eagles dare (Brian G. Hutton)¨ , ¨Kelly's heroes (Hutton)¨, Navarone Guns (J. L. Thompson), ¨Tobruk (Arthur Hiller)¨ , ¨Devil's Brigade (Andrew V McLagen)¨ and many others.

The motion picture was lousily directed by hack director Joe D'Amato or Aristide Massaccessi . He was a prolific cameraman/writer/producer/director who made all kinds of genres . His first directing work was in 1972's low-budget Scansati... a Trinità arriva Eldorado (1972), co-directed by Diego Spataro, under the pseudonym Dick Spitfire, but it was a commercial failure. As he directed hardcore , soft-core, erotic films starring Laura Gemser, such as Emmanuel and francois (1975), Emanuelle and the Last Cannibals (1977), Emanuelle in América (1977), Emanuelle and the White Slave Trade (1978), Erotic Nights of the Living dead , L'alcova (1985) . Gialli and Terror movies : Gomia , Hitcher in the dark , Death Smiles on a Murderer , Buio Omega . Scifi and Sword-witchery : Ator , Ator l'invincibile, Ator 3 , 2020 Texas Rangers , Bronx Endgame, and many others. Rating : 2.5/10 . Inferior warlike movie.
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4/10
Uninteresting Italian WW2 cheapie
Leofwine_draca5 May 2017
Warning: Spoilers
HEROES IN HELL is a very low budget Italian WW2 movie directed by the one and only Joe D'Amato. Despite the standard battle violence it must be one of the tamest films he ever made. The first half of the movie is an endlessly long-winded prisoner of war camp saga following the fortunes of a bunch of goonish characters at the hands of the Nazis as they suffer the usual abuse and mental degradation. D'Amato seems obsessed with having them traipse endlessly from one room to another.

The second half of the film involves the leads escaping in order to get their hands on a feared Nazi general, played by a cameoing Klaus Kinski in what amounts to a stock and stereotypical role. The action is low rent in the extreme and D'Amato seems to make very little effort in staging his production, instead shooting in close-up throughout. The visuals lack flair and the jaw-dropping inclusion of black and white stock WW2 footage during a ten minute 'dream' sequence is quite laughable. The ending feels lacklustre and too well telegraphed in advance.
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Another Bad Italian Rip-Off
Michael_Elliott24 July 2017
Heroes in Hell (1974)

* (out of 4)

Rather boring Italian attempt at THE GREAT ESCAPE and various other war pictures. This one here centers on a couple men who are captured by the Germans and thrown into a prison camp. The two eventually make a great escape and they go undercover to try and kill an evil Nazi leader (Klaus Kinski).

This film was directed by the one and only Joe D'Amato. I've seen well over one hundred films by the famed Italian director and there are a lot of really, really bad movies. Sadly, this WWII drama falls into that category as there's really not too much going on here and the film drags extremely bad for something that clocks in at just 84-minutes.

The only real entertainment comes from some of its low-budget issues. For starters, there's a lot of "action" that is clearly just stock footage shot during the real war. There doesn't seem to have been much of an attempt to match the footage up so trying to pass this off as something that was really happening in the film just doesn't work. Once we get to the real action, well, it's really not that much better and there's certainly nothing good about it.

The majority of the cast members are easily forgettable and that includes Ettore Manni in the lead. Kinski gets the top=billing and his face is all over the posters but he doesn't appear until the final ten-minutes of the movie. I wish I could say he gave the film a jump start but he doesn't. It's clear he was just picking up a paycheck as he doesn't add any memorable.
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2/10
A waste of money and time
jmills-6536526 January 2022
Omg this movie is just awful. You can actually hear the Italian accent when the nazis speak. You'd think they could have put forth some kind of effort.
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5/10
Heroes in Hell!
BandSAboutMovies16 December 2021
Warning: Spoilers
Written, directed and filmed by Joe D'Amato - using the name Michael Wotruba - this film wasn't seen much in the U. S. until Lightning Video released it in 1985 as Heroes In Hell.

Look, I saw the poster and I know that this was the second movie in a row that D'Amato made with Klaus Kinski, but I have to tell you, when Klaus strode on screen as SS-Brigadeführer Kaufmann, dressed in the finest death's head costume that a beyond low budget Italian film can get, I jumped out of my chair and yelled, "Klaus Kinski is here!" Honestly, it's such a good thing that we moved to country and not the city where neighbors heard frequent screams of "Kinski! It's Kinski!" and "I love Joe Don Baker!" and "I want to be George Eastman's best friend!"

A group of American POW's played by mostly Italians* have escaped from a German POW camp into the French countryside and are part of a plan to capture Kinski that involves stolen uniforms and escaping the very same soldiers that captured them before. And like Shakespeare, well, nearly everyone dies.

But you know, for forty minutes of B-roll footage, you get ten minutes of Kinski flipping out over Renaissance artwork, so you know, I'll pay that fee.

*I mean, Lars Bloch - AKA Carlos Ewing - is Danish. Paul Muller is Swiss. And Rosemarie Lindt is German. The funny thing is, Both Block and Ewing's names are in the credits even though they're the same person. But hey - Kinski's name is listed as Klaus Kinsky.
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7/10
Deceptively well done
drystyx13 February 2010
This is an action war film, and the amount of realism thrown out the window is no more than most, probably equivalent to the more famous "Force 10 From Navarone". This is another partisan against Nazi film, by the way.

At first, this looks like another silly foreign film full of cliché shots that echo, and characters who all try to talk tougher than any one else.

We realize the doctor, a sort of anti-hero, will be the major character early on, as the characters begin in a prisoner of war camp. There is the inevitable escape, and then more action, as six escapees join the partisans against the Nazis.

What could have been very cliché turns into very unpredictable and fresh material. We get a very good look at a multitude of interesting characters which makes this film come very alive, and show the waste of war very well. This is an excellent script, and was well directed. All parties involved did a good job, and this is one foreign war flick you will probably enjoy a bit.
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