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"Wherein have I done wrong?"
General Broulard (Adolphe Menjou)
"Because you dont know the answer to that question, I pity
you."
Colonel Dax (Kirk Douglas)
"One of the greatest antiwar films ever made."
THE MOTION PICTURE GUIDE

Stars: Kirk Douglas, Ralph Meeker, Adolphe Menjou, George Macready
Director: Stanley Kubrick
Fast Facts:
- Kubrick first read Humphrey Cobbs 1935 novel Paths of Glory
when he was 14.
- Cobb based his novel on a true incident that took place in the French
army during World War I, when five enlisted men were unfairly executed
for mutiny. Years later the mens families sued the army and
won, but were awarded only two francs for damages.
- Sidney Howard, the primary screenwriter on Gone with the Wind,
adapted the novel into a play, which ran briefly on Broadway in 1935.
- In 1956, Kubrick and producer James B. Harris bought the film rights
to the novel from Cobbs widow for $10,000.
- Among the actors considered to play Colonel Dax were Richard Burton,
James Mason, Gregory Peck and Kirk Douglas, who eventually won the
role.
- Early drafts of the script contained a happy ending, with Colonel
Dax blackmailing General Broulard and freeing the condemned men. However,
as filming neared, Kubrick and his collaborators agreed that this
would undermine the films antiwar message and they returned
to the books bleak ending.
- Although the story takes place in France, the film was shot at the
Geiselgasteig Studios near Munich, Germany.
- The German girl who sings near the end of the movie was played by
a young actress named Susanne Christian, who later married Kubrick.
Safe in their picturesque chateau behind the front lines, the French
General Staff passes down a direct order to Colonel Dax (Kirk Douglas):
take the Ant Hill at any cost. A blatant suicide mission, the attack
is doomed to failure. Covering up their fatal blunder, the Generals
order the arrest of three innocent soldiers, charging them with cowardice
and mutiny. Dax, a lawyer in civilian life, rises to the mens
defense but soon realizes that, unless he can prove that the Generals
were to blame, nothing less than a miracle will save his clients from
the firing squad.
>A compelling masterpiece from world-class director/writer Stanley
Kubrick and screenwriters Calder Willingham and Jim Thompson, Paths
of Glory is a blistering indictment of military politics and "an
unforgettable movie experience" (Newsweek).
FAQ's
*****
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