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  They Were Expendable is the greatest American film of the Second World  War, made by America's greatest director, John Ford, who himself saw action from the Battle of Midway through D-day.  Yet it's been oddly neglected.  Or  perhaps not so oddly: for as the matter-of-fact title implies, the film  commemorates a period, from the eve of Pearl Harbor up to the impending fall  of Bataan, when the Japanese conquest of the Pacific was in full cry and U.S.  forces were fighting a desperate holding action.  Although stirring movies  had been made about these early days (Wake Island, Bataan,  Air Force), they were gung ho in their resolve to see the tables  turned. They Were Expendable, however, which was made when Allied victory  was  all but assured, is profoundly elegiac, with the patient grandeur of a tragic  poem.  "They" are the officers and men of the Navy's PT boat service, an  experimental motor-torpedo force relegated to courier duty on Manila Bay but  eventually proven effective in combat. Their commander is played by Robert Montgomery, who actually served on a PT and later commanded a destroyer at  Normandy; James Agee called his "the one unimprovable performance" of 1945. In addition to giving it, Montgomery codirected the breathtaking second-unit  action sequences (and took over the first unit for a week when Ford broke his leg).  John Wayne's costarring role as Montgomery's volatile  second-in-command initially looks stereotypically blustery, but as the drama  unfolds--the death of comrades, a friendship-that-never-gets-to-be-a-romance  with an Army nurse (Donna Reed)--Wayne sounds notes of tenderness and  vulnerability that will take Duke-bashers by surprise.   They Were Expendable is a heartbreakingly beautiful film, full of  astonishing images of warfare,  grief, courage, and dignity: the artificial "rainfall" that lashes the  beached Wayne as his PT boat explodes in the surf; the glow around a  communally improvised dinner for nurse Reed; an old ship-repairer (Russell  Simpson, The Grapes of Wrath's Pa Joad) settling in grimly to wait for  the Japanese, with "Red River Valley" as benediction; the propeller spray  that hangs over a jungle inlet, like the dust from one of Ford's cavalry  pictures, as the PTs round a bend and disappear into history.  This is a  masterpiece. --Richard T. Jameson
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