FILM 1124: THE GREAT ESCAPE
TRIVIA: Donald Pleasence had
actually been a Royal Air Force pilot in World War II, who was shot down,
became a prisoner of war and was tortured by the Germans. When he kindly
offered advice to the film's director John Sturges, he was
politely asked to keep his "opinions" to himself. Later, when another
star from the film informed John Sturges that Pleasence had actually been a RAF
Officer in a World War II German POW Stalag camp, Sturges requested his
technical advice and input on historical accuracy from that point forward.
During the climatic motorcycle
chase, John Sturges allowed Steve McQueen to ride (in
disguise) as one of the pursuing German soldiers, so that in the final
sequence, through the magic of editing, he's actually chasing himself.
During production, Charles Bronson met and
fell in love with David
McCallum's wife, Jill Ireland,
and he jokingly told McCallum he was going to steal her away from him. In 1967,
Ireland and McCallum divorced, and she married Bronson.
Charles Bronson, who
portrays the chief tunneler, brought his own expertise and experiences to the
set: he had been a coal miner before turning to acting and gave director John Sturges advice on how
to move the earth. As a result of his work in the coal mines, Bronson suffered
from claustrophobia just as his character had.
Steve McQueen held up
production because he demanded that the script be rewritten to give his
character more to do.
The film was shot entirely on
location in Europe, with a complete camp resembling Stalag Luft III built near
Munich, Germany. Exteriors for the escape sequences were shot in the Rhine
Country and areas near the North Sea, and Steve McQueen's motorcycle
scenes were filmed in Fussen (on the Austrian border) and the Alps. All
interiors were filmed at the Bavaria Studio in Munich.
The real-life escape preparations
involved 600 men working for well over a year. The escape did have the desired
effect of diverting German resources, including a doubling of the number of guards
after the Gestapo took over the camp from the Luftwaffe.


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