The Green Berets - crew, film crew

The entire team, the film crew of the film "The Green Berets"
The Green Berets (1968)
Timing: 2:22 (142 min)
The Green Berets - TMDB rating
5.735/10
162
The Green Berets - Kinopoisk rating
5.584/10
518
The Green Berets - IMDB rating
5.6/10
15000

Film crew

Director

Producer

Editor

Otho Lovering
Editor

Costume Design

Jerry Alpert
Costume Design

Stunts

Roy K. Ogata
Stunts

Production Design

Walter M. Simonds
Production Design

Set Decoration

Ray Moyer

Ray Moyer
Set Decoration

Makeup Artist

Dave Grayson
Makeup Artist

Original Music Composer

Photo Miklós Rózsa #74010

Miklós Rózsa

Miklós Rózsa
Original Music Composer

Director of Photography

Winton C. Hoch
Director of Photography

Script Supervisor

Crayton Smith
Script Supervisor

Screenplay

James Lee Barrett
Screenplay

Construction Coordinator

Hendrik Wynands
Construction Coordinator

Special Effects

Sass Bedig
Special Effects

Assistant Director

Joe L. Cramer
Assistant Director

Playback Singer

Photo Robert B. Shepard #185663Photo Robert B. Shepard #185664Photo Robert B. Shepard #185665
Robert B. Shepard
Playback Singer

What's left behind the scenes

  • Based on the work by Robin Moore.
  • The film crew received full support from the Pentagon, which allowed them to feature aircraft and helicopters actually used in Vietnam, absent from many later films on this topic.
  • During filming, Aldo Ray's fondness for alcohol was a constant problem. Sometimes it came to the point where other actors had to deliver some of his lines.
  • In 1967, director and actor John Wayne wrote a letter to US President Lyndon Johnson of the Democratic Party requesting assistance in filming a movie about the Vietnam War. The US Department of Defense had already provided assistance to filmmakers on the films “Sands of Iwo Jima” (Allan Dwan, 1949) and “The Longest Day” (Ken Annakin, Andrew Marton, Gerd Oswald, Bernhard Wicki, Darryl F. Zanuck, 1962). Jack Valenti, then president of the Motion Picture Association of America, supported his request in a personal conversation with Johnson. Johnson ordered that assistance be provided in working on the film, and “The Green Berets” – one of the most controversial films of all time – was born.
  • The character of Colonel Mike Kirby, played by John Wayne, is based on Lauri Törni, a captain in the Finnish army who participated in the Winter War (the conflict between the USSR and Finland, 1939-1940) and the so-called Continuation War (the Soviet-Finnish War, 1941-1944), and later served in the Vietnam War as part of the US Army.
  • Some of the Vietnamese village sets were so realistic that they were not dismantled after filming, and were subsequently used for training troops destined for Vietnam.
  • The Vietnamese representing opposing armies in the film are armed with single-shot rifles. Automatic weapons are practically absent from the film. This was indeed the case in the early period of the Vietnam War, and many Viet Cong had weapons from World War II manufactured by Britain or the United States, acquired from the Chinese. The AK-74 assault rifle began to appear only in the mid-1960s, but there were few of them in Hollywood prop stores, so they were not used as props.
  • The management of Warner Bros. had some doubts about approving John Wayne as the director of the film due to the box office failure of his previous directorial effort – the adventure drama 'The Alamo' (1960), which cost the studio a substantial sum. Therefore, he was allowed to direct only on the condition that a second director be present on set, and Ray Kellogg was appointed to this position. Previously, Kellogg had only directed 'B' movies, but had already proven himself as a second unit director on several major projects.
  • In reality, a significant portion of war correspondents initially supported the US government and its involvement in the Vietnam War, but subsequently changed their opinions to the opposite, especially after traveling to Vietnam on assignment and seeing everything that was happening there with their own eyes.
  • Merwin LeRoy later recounted that he was approached by producers and asked to help John Wayne with directing. LeRoy agreed, but on the condition that Wayne himself ask him to do so. Wayne did ask, and LeRoy became the film's third director, though his name was not mentioned in the credits.
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