Black comedy and suspenseful action inside a German POW camp during World War II--a setting that was later borrowed for the TV sitcom Hogan's Heroes.
The great director Billy Wilder adapted the hit stage play, applying his own wicked sense of humor to the apparently bleak subject matter.
William Holden plays an antisocial grouse amid a gang of wisecracking though indomitable American prisoners.
Because of his bitter cynicism, Holden is suspected by the others of being an informer to the Germans, an accusation he must deal with in his own crafty way.
Holden, who had delivered a brilliant performance for Wilder in Sunset Boulevard, won the 1953 Best Actor Oscar for Stalag 17.
Very much his equal, however, is Otto Preminger, an accomplished director himself, who plays the strict, sneering camp commandant. --Robert Horton
Cast: William Holden, Don Taylor, Otto Preminger, Robert Strauss, Harvey Lembeck, Richard Erdman, Peter Graves, Neville Brand, Sig Ruman, William Pierson, Gil Stratton
About this movie
Title: Stalag 17 (1953)
Directed by: Billy Wilder
Date of birth: 22 June 1906, Sucha, Austria-Hungary
Date of death: 27 March 2002, Beverly Hills, California, USA
Writing credits: Donald Bevan, Edmund Trzcinski
Music: Franz Waxman, Leonid Raab
Year: 1953
Country: USA
Language: English | German
Color: Black and White
Runtime: 120 min.