The Winds of War
- TV Mini Series
- 1983
- 2h 6m
IMDb RATING
8.1/10
4.8K
YOUR RATING
The trials of the Henry and Jastrow families in the early years of World War II.The trials of the Henry and Jastrow families in the early years of World War II.The trials of the Henry and Jastrow families in the early years of World War II.
- Won 3 Primetime Emmys
- 6 wins & 14 nominations total
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Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaRobert Mitchum was ill during filming and spoke of retiring from acting.
- GoofsThe modern maple leaf Canadian flag is seen in scenes shot in London. This flag was adopted in 1965. Prior to that the Red Ensign was the flag of Canada.
- ConnectionsEdited from December 7th (1943)
Featured review
The novel Winds of War is so engrossing that I've read it several times. The mini-series tries hard to put it on the screen, and has some notable success. The screenplay, written by Wouk himself, is faithful to the book; the location shooting and production values are first rate; and many of the performances are excellent. Unfortunately, several of the main characters are way too old for their parts.
Robert Mitchum is a tired looking 66 year old senior playing the part of a vigorous 50 year old naval officer. Jan-Michael Vincent is a 39 year old man playing a 23 year old youth. But the real stick-in-the-eye is Ali MacGraw. Not only is she a 45 year old woman playing a 30 year old, but she is so bad, so monotone, that it's like she was never in front of a camera. Very distracting, and puts a serious flaw in every scene that she ruins.
Lots of other performances are right on. Polly Bergen, Peter Graves, Topol, and David Dukes are all perfect in their roles.
In spite of the defects, the mini-series is like the book. Once you start watching, you're hooked.
Robert Mitchum is a tired looking 66 year old senior playing the part of a vigorous 50 year old naval officer. Jan-Michael Vincent is a 39 year old man playing a 23 year old youth. But the real stick-in-the-eye is Ali MacGraw. Not only is she a 45 year old woman playing a 30 year old, but she is so bad, so monotone, that it's like she was never in front of a camera. Very distracting, and puts a serious flaw in every scene that she ruins.
Lots of other performances are right on. Polly Bergen, Peter Graves, Topol, and David Dukes are all perfect in their roles.
In spite of the defects, the mini-series is like the book. Once you start watching, you're hooked.
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