|
Alec Guinness | Colonel Nicholson | |
Jack Hawkins | Maj. Warden | |
William Holden | Cmdr./Maj. Shears | |
Sessue Hayakawa | Col. Saito | |
Ann Sears | ||
James Donald | Maj. Clipton | |
Geoffrey Horne | Lt. Joyce | |
Harold Goodwin | Pvt. Baker | |
Percy Herbert | Grogan | |
Peter Williams | Maj. Reeves | |
John Boxer | Capt. Hughes | |
André Morell | Col. Green | |
Peter Williams (II) | ||
John Boxer (II) |
Director |
|
||
Producer | Sam Spiegel
|
||
Writer | Michael J. Wilson
Carl Foreman Pierre Boulle Michael Wilson |
||
Cinematography | Jack Hildyard
|
||
Musician | Malcolm Arnold
|
|
When British P.O.W.s build a vital railway bridge in enemy-occupied Burma, Allied commandos are assigned to destroy it in David Lean's epic World War II adventure The Bridge On The River Kwai Spectacularly produced, The Bridge On The River Kwai captured the imagination of the public and won seven 1957 Academy Awards, including Best Picture, Best Actor (Alec Guinness), and Best Director. Even its theme song, an old WWI whistling tune, the "Colonel Bogey March," became a massive wordwide hit. The Bridge On The River Kwai continues today as one of the most memorable cinematic experiences of all time. |
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||