poster

Attack on the Iron Coast (1968)

5.3 | Jun 05, 1968 (GB) | War | 01:29

They turned a dead ship into a live bomb and sailed it down the throat of the enemy!

The film depicts an account of Allied Combined Operations Headquarters commandos executing a daring raid on the German-occupied French coast during the Second World War. The story is based on the commando raid on the French port of St. Nazaire.

Featured Crew

Director
Screenplay

Cast

profile
Lloyd Bridges
Maj. James Wilson
profile
Andrew Keir
Capt. Owen Franklin
profile
Sue Lloyd
Sue Wilson
profile
Mark Eden
Lt. Cmdr. Donald Kimberly
profile
Maurice Debham
Rear Adm. Sir Frederick Grafton
profile
Glyn Owen
Forrester
profile
Howard Pays
Lt. Graham
profile
Walter Gotell
Van Horst

Reviews

avatar
Wuchak
6 | Nov 22, 2024
**_Cinematic account of Operation Chariot, aka the St Nazaire Raid_** In late March, 1942, the Brits concoct an audacious operation to destroy the Normandie dry dock at St Nazaire in German-occupied France, which would involve 611 Royal Naval personnel & commandos in a surprise attack against an embedded German force of 5000. Lloyd Bridges and Andrew Keir star as the key officers in the raid. "Attack on the Iron Coast" (1968) tackles what has been called ‘The Greatest Raid of All’ and is worthwhile if you don’t mind ‘B’ productions with unconvincing miniatures. I liked how the flick establishes that an operation like this is 78% planning, training, traveling and anticipation and 22% dynamic execution. I’m going by the fact that the actual raid in the movie involves only the final 18 minutes of runtime. While it can’t compete with WW2 greats from the 60’s like “The Dirty Dozen” and “Where Eagles Dare,” or even quality ones such as “The Devil’s Brigade” or “Anzio,” it nevertheless gives you a good idea on what went down, not to mention keeps the memory of the bold raid alive. It runs 1 hour, 27 minutes, and was shot at Millwall Dock, St Katharine Docks, and the London Docklands, along with studio work done at MGM British Studios in Borehamwood, northwest of London. GRADE: B-