Yanks
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Yanks (Film) | |
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Directed by | John Schlesinger |
Produced by | Joseph Janni Lester Persky |
Written by | Colin Welland (story and screenplay) Walter Bernstein (screenplay) |
Starring | Richard Gere Vanessa Redgrave William Devane and Lisa Eichhorn |
Music by | Richard Rodney Bennett |
Cinematography | Dick Bush |
Editing by | Jim Clark |
Distributed by | - USA - Universal Pictures - non-USA - United Artists |
Release date(s) | 1979 |
Running time | UK: 141 min. USA: 139 min. |
Country | UK / USA |
Language | English |
Allmovie profile | |
IMDb profile |
Yanks is a 1979 John Schlesinger film, set in World War II in the village of Dobcross, near Oldham, Lancashire, England. Starring Richard Gere, Vanessa Redgrave, William Devane, Lisa Eichhorn, and, in a lesser role, Tom Nolan.
The film was filmed on location in the North of England, and many scenes shot in Tameside and surrounding areas. The opening shot of the film is of a statue of Remembrance and this is in Stalybridge town centre, and throughout Glossop. The dance party scene was filmed at Hyde's Town Hall.
[edit] Plot Summary
In the build-up to the Normandy landings, thousands of American troops descend upon England. Near a small Lancashire town, a large US Army base is established and soon houses the rambunctious "Yanks" as they are known to the English. On leave in the town, young Arizona man, Matt Dyson (Richard Gere), encounters pretty young Jean Moreton (Lisa Eichhorn) and asks her out to the cinema. She is the girlfriend of a British soldier fighting overseas, and initially rebuffs his advances. He is quite persistent, and she was having her doubts about her relationship with her fiancé anyway. The handsome, brash American sergeant is in stark contrast to the restrained Englishmen she has known. Soon, she is keeping company with Matt, though it is largely platonic at first.
For her part, Helen (Vanessa Redgrave) is a bit more worldly in her affairs. John (William Devane), an American Army captain, comes to her estate often, and a relationship develops, though no actual love scenes are shown. They are both married, but her Naval officer husband is away at sea, and his wife is thousands of miles distant.
Eventually, the kind-hearted Matt Dyson is accepted by the Moreton family, though she is engaged to an English lad. They welcome his visits, when he often brings hard-to-find foods and other presents. But when news of Ken's death in action arrives, Jean's mother condemns their relationship as a kind of betrayal.
Helen and John travel to a Welsh seaside resort, where they make love. Almost immediately after, the Americans ship out by troop train to the south coast to prepare for the approaching D-Day. In a mad scene, many of the townswomen, some of them pregnant from liaisons with men they may never see again, scramble to catch one last glimpse of their American boyfriends before the train leaves town. Matt shouts from the train that he will return.
[edit] External links
- Yanks at the Internet Movie Database