|
Frank Sinatra | Capt. Tom Reynolds | |
Gina Lollobrigida | Carla Vesari | |
Peter Lawford | Capt. Grey Travis | |
Steve McQueen | Cpl. Bill Ringa | |
Richard Johnson | Capt. Danny De Mortimer | |
Paul Henreid | Nikko Regas | |
Brian Donlevy | Gen. Sloan | |
Dean Jones | Sgt. Jim Norby | |
Charles Bronson | Sgt. John Danforth | |
Philip Ahn | Nautaung | |
Robert Bray | Col. Fred Parkson | |
Kipp Hamilton | Margaret Fitch | |
John Hoyt | Col. Reed | |
Whit Bissell | Capt. Alofson - Psychiatrist | |
Richard Lupino | Mike Island |
Director |
|
||
Producer | Edmund Grainger
|
||
Writer | Tom T. Chamales
Millard Kaufman |
||
Cinematography | William H. Daniels
|
||
Musician | Hugo Friedhofer
|
|
Sinatra And McQueen Give Their All For The Kachin Resistance In World War II Burma! Frank Sinatra told the director to give the newcomer a break. John Sturges (The Great Escape) obliged, providing favorable camera angles for Sinatra's young co-star. In his first big-budget film, Steve McQueen was ready to grab the movie world's attention. McQueen plays Bill Ringa, one of the O.S.S. combatants harassing the enemy in World War II Burma. Sinatra is Capt. Tom Reynolds, leading the guerilla fighters and risking court martial while doing so. Also among Never So Few's many are Charles Bronson, Peter Lawford and in her first Hollywood film, Gina Lollobrigida. About McQueen, the New York Herald Tribune's reviewer wrote: "He possesses that combination of smooth-rough charm that suggests star possibilities." A star is born in Never So Few. |
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||
Features
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||