The Fifth Day of Peace (1970) Poster

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7/10
sad idiocy of war
SnoopyStyle24 April 2024
At the end of WWII in Holland, Bruno Grauber (Franco Nero) and Reiner Schultz (Larry Aubrey) have dumped their uniforms. They are caught and placed in a POW camp run by Canadian soldiers. Captain Miller (Richard Johnson) is the Canadian in charge. Colonel Von Bleicher (Helmuth Schneider) is the senior German officer. The strict German career soldier insists on brutal disipline to maintain order. When the deserters are discovered, the Germans put them on trial.

This is the non-sense of war. Unbelievably, it's based on a true story. It is sad in its idiocy. It is really a mental battle between the two senior commanders and only one side wants to win. Both actors are doing great work. Franco Nero is also a standout.
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10/10
I can only say superb!
SgtSlaughter7 November 2002
Most of the Italian war flicks from the late 1960s and early 1970s were filled with action, adventure and familiar cliches. However, THE FIFTH DAY OF PEACE does just the opposite -- it's an antiwar drama with virtually no combat.

It's the beginning of May, 1945. Captain Miller (Richard Johnson) takes command of a POW camp in Holland. He must deal with Col. von Bleicher (Helmut Schneider), the senior German POW, who insists on maintaining a military system of discipline amongst the POWs. Soon, two deserters (Franco Nero and Larry Aubrey) are taken captive. Bleicher wants them shot for desertion; Miller could care less since the war is over.

The movie features a fine leading cast. Richard Johnson is excellent as the war-torn Canadian Captain. Helmut Schneider is equally great and very believable as the authoritarian German Colonel. Franco Nero's performance as an anti-Hitler, quick-to-anger deserter is incredibly good and quite over-the-top. It's a pity his voice was dubbed. In support is Larry Aubrey, who I have yet to see in another film. His performance as the innocent young German deserter is good, but doesn't hold a candle to Nero's. Bud Spencer is decent as the kindly Canadian Corporal Jelinek, but he only appears in a few scenes.

There is no combat in the entire film. The action takes place within the camp. There are no escape attempts; it's more psychological warfare between von Bleicher and Miller. The two deserters are just the catalysts. The film does a magnificent job of showing how innocent people are often the victims of circumstances beyond their control. The cinematography is marvelous; while practically the whole movie takes place within the camp, it's established quite early that's a muddy, dirty and horrible place to live. The musical score by Ennio Morricone is quite unusual and fits perfectly. The ending is unexpected and very well set up; at an appropriate moment, the story is simply over.

The DVD release is a waste of money. It is of poor quality and has no special features. I would recommend the video from Congress, although it's not much of an improvement.

The BEST Italian war movie I've seen so far. I give it an 8/10.
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8/10
On the dawn of the fifth day
dbdumonteil3 August 2014
This is the French title and it's really a well-chosen one;it's on the fifth day of PEACE (WW2,13th May 1945) that the two unfortunate deserters were executed ;it is based on a true story and it's a brilliant Reductio Ad Absurdum of the absurdity of war and its rules.

Absurd is the keynote:although the Nazis are now prisoners of the allies in a former concentration camp ("Arbeit Macht Frei" on the gate),the German Officers ,still faithful to their Führer's Third Reich (which was to last a thousand years),still believing in their rites,want their men to be obedient ,disciplined ;their brainwashing is so convincing that the privates themselves ,although the war is over,do not ask themselves any questions (scenes of the noise they make): the military hierarchy knows that they despise deserters ,draft dodgers and they take advantage of it. Two deserters prisoners are court-martialled and the judges are themselves prisoners !

The (British) officer is taken over by events :what's the point of shooting two men when the war is over?but his general is a clairvoyant man :he knows that desertion is not a German problem ,it is something that jeopardizes their army ,and that two poor privates can set an example ;there are no more nations ,but one sacred institution ,the Army ,the duty,the military service :one should remember that when the movie was made in 1970,the draft was existing almost everywhere in Europa (except in the UK)and conscientious objection was still a taboo . Vietnam war had become very unpopular in America.

This shows how very topical Montaldo's movie was !And like Losey's "For king and country" ,Kubrik's "paths of glory" or Trumbo's " Johnny got his gun" ,it is still relevant today.

Too bad that this movie should be forgotten today !Only Morricone 's haunting wistful melody is known around the world and is included in almost all his compilations .It is not used very often though,the director preferring the musician's martial compositions .

NB:Montaldo's follow-up to " Gott Mit Uns" was also a mockery of a trial :the Sacco and Vanzetti affair (we are sure today that at least one of them was totally innocent);in this 1971 work, Morricone asked singer activist Joan Baez to write words to the songs from the movie and she used words taken from the letters of Vanzetti.
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not a bad little flick
trigler89 December 2001
Nice piece of mellow lefty Italo-Yugoslavian agit-prop from the late 1960s. Victorious Allied troops face the daunting task of dealing with the aftermath of WWII. Canadian soldiers, led by a career-minded captain, are put in charge of an internment camp for captured Nazi soldiers. When the Nazis organize their little hovel in traditional teutonic fashion, their keepers are impressed. Things get weird quickly, however, when the Nazis desire to execute two soldiers for desertion.

One nice surprise: soundtrack courtesy of Ennio Morricone.

The DVD appears to be little more than a sloppy transfer from a bad videotape.
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8/10
War By Other Means
boblipton23 March 2024
It's Victory in Europe for the Allies, particularly Canadian captain Richard Johnson. He's in charge of the POW camp where Colonel Helmut Schneider is the ranking German prisoner. Given Schenider's insistence on discipline among his troops and his always wanting to discuss things with Johnson, at times it's hard to tell who's actually in command. Especially when two men show up who deserted from the Wehrmacht.

Giuliano Montaldo's movie can be viewed as a gloss on THE BRIDGE ON THE RIVER KWAI, but shocking to my eyes to see the tables turned. Schneider gives none of the crazy energy that Alex Guinness offered in his equivalent role Instead, we get a general view of the military officer's mind, in which they are all about their world. Indeed, Michael Goodliffe, as Johnson's superior, has a monologue about how the war belongs to the army.... and the peace too. With Franco Nero, T. P. McKenna, and Bud Spencer.
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