Operation TNT

Twenty-odd years ago, beginning in the mid-90s, TNT (Turner Network Television) would run nothing but war movies for Memorial Day weekend and the week following. The selections ran from classic dramas like From Here to Eternity and The Bridge on the River Kwai—which presumably made the cut because of its one American character—to the old-fashioned big-picture story-of-a-battle films like The Longest Day and Tora! Tora! Tora! to the John Wayne war subgenre with Sands of Iwo Jima and They Were Expendable to pure action entertainment like The Dirty Dozen and Kelly’s Heroes.

For a movie-loving kid with an emerging interest in World War II “Operation TNT” was a godsend. Films I’d seen mentioned in World War II magazine or had recommended by the veterans at church would appear on the lineup. The challenge—in that age before on-demand streaming or even the DVR, when finding a rare movie meant literally finding it at a flea market or a store at a mall two hours away—was to be watching TNT when The Devil’s Brigade or The Bridge at Remagen finally aired.

You’ll notice that all of the movies I’ve mentioned so far are World War II movies. Operation TNT did air movies about other conflicts—I’m pretty sure I remember catching Sergeant York, and, in its later years, a heavily redubbed Platoon—but the preponderance of films dramatized the last “good war.” It was meant as a tribute, after all.

And Operation TNT did pay tribute. Veterans’ stories would be read and letters and reminiscences were solicited during commercial breaks. Here’s someone for whom this meant enough that they recorded it and, years later, uploaded it to YouTube. The theme throughout was earnest and patriotic but, above all, appreciative. It’s hard to imagine something like it airing now.

And, indeed, Operation TNT withered away over the years. When I first remember tuning in, often during trips to the beach, when my parents would have to order me to the pool and away from the movie lineup, the marathon lasted all week. Eventually I noticed it had shrunk to the long Memorial Day weekend. The last I remember Operation TNT, it was a single day of programming on the holiday itself. I don’t remember noticing it disappear.

So in the spirit of Operation TNT, let me propose a movie marathon for your next Memorial Day—or any day for which good movies about men worth remembering are suited.

A proposed Memorial Day movie marathon

The following eleven films cover about a century of American warfare. I’ve tried to pick some lesser known or—in my opinion—underappreciated or unfairly maligned films that still offer entertaining and edifying viewing, and have arranged them in the chronological order of the events they depict:

The Lost Battalion (2001)—A World War I film based on a real incident in which a battalion of New York draftees ended up trapped behind German lines and held out despite heavy losses. A relatively low-budget TV movie, but clearly made with reverence and respect for its subject and the men involved, especially the hundreds who were lost. The commander, Charles Whittlesey, was one of seven who earned the Medal of Honor during the battle but took his own life in 1921.

Midway (2019)—Outnumbered pilots in outclassed planes make a desperate stand and win. Exposition-heavy dialogue, some cheap special effects, and a handful of hammy performances don’t detract from this detailed, earnest, and suspenseful dramatization of the battle that took the United States off the defensive and turned the war against Japan. This film also makes the cost of the war abundantly clear right from the beginning, making this perhaps the most appropriate Memorial Day movie on this list. I wrote a full review here after the pleasant surprise of seeing it in theatres.

Merrill’s Marauders (1962)—One of the rare World War II films that even acknowledges the war in Burma, this film follows a special unit that spent months fighting the Japanese in punishing jungle and mountain environments. Directed by WWII veteran Sam Fuller with less melodrama and a greater degree of authenticity and grit than a lot of comparable movies from the same period.

Battleground (1949)—The first great Battle of the Bulge film, this depicts a small group of paratroopers from the 101st Airborne in the combat around Bastogne and pays special attention to the cold, dark, hunger, general discomfort, and danger of their situation, as well as the heavy losses taken even in a successful defense. Well-trodden ground now, but few other films have told this story with the unromanticized simplicity of Battleground.

Fury (2014)—A solid war drama with powerful religious themes unfairly dragged by internet experts. Fury vividly and authentically dramatizes the desperation of the tail-end of the war in Europe, when Hitler has clearly been beaten but ragtag, borderline amateur units of SS fight on, and suggests that the men who survived had a hard time talking about it not just because of what they saw but because of what they did.

The Great Raid (2005)—A strong dramatization of the successful liberation of a POW camp in the Philippines, with special attention given to Japanese brutality toward the prisoners, the role played by Filipino guerrillas in the American recapture of the islands, and the weight of the cost of every campaign as the war neared its end. Be sure to watch the director’s cut.

Pork Chop Hill (1959)—Probably the great Korean War film, a stripped down, unvarnished war drama in which both the heroism of the soldiers involved and the unbelievably high losses taken in capturing the holding the hill both receive attention. I wrote a full review of the film last year.

Go Tell the Spartans (1978)—An early Vietnam film and an unusual one in that it tells a story from the advisory stage of the war circa 1964, this movie stars Burt Lancaster as a superannuated, put-upon officer leading a small MAAG unit and a larger South Vietnamese force in an effort to secure a remote rural area against the Viet Cong. It doesn’t go well.

Hamburger Hill (1987)—A solid war drama based on the real Operation Apache Snow in 1969, in which paratroopers patrolling a remote area close to the Laotian border took heavy losses in a literal uphill battle against dug-in NVA troops. As in Battleground, the other 101st Airborne story on this list, the characters are fictional but the film captures the reality of their experiences well.

BAT*21 (1988)—A story from 1972, late in the Vietnam War, when US Air Force officer Iceal Hambleton was shot down behind enemy lines, the only survivor of his plane’s crew. He not only survived but was rescued thanks in part to the efforts of a scout plane pilot, who kept in touch with Hambleton by radio and helped guide him to safety and rescue. The film takes liberties partly for Hollywood reasons and partly because some crucial information about the incident was still classified at the time, but BAT*21 nevertheless offers a good look at an unusual story from the war and the risks and losses involved not only in combat, but in rescuing the lost.

The Outpost (2019)—The story of the defense of Combat Outpost Keating in Afghanistan in 2009. The only genuinely great film to come out of the War on Terror, I think, one that tells a true story well and without either softening the ugliness and horror or romanticizing the men and their actions involved. I wrote a longer review here in 2020.

Conclusion

That’s eleven films totaling just over twenty-one hours altogether, and even if y’all don’t watch all of these—much less one after the other for an entire day—I hope you’ll check out at least a couple of them and watch them not only for entertainment, but to remember. The best of them, as Operation TNT originally recognized, are designed for both.