Battle Stations | |
Director: | Lewis Seiler |
Screenplay: | Crane Wilbur |
Based On: | a story by Ben Finney |
Producer: | Bryan Foy |
Starring: | John Lund William Bendix Keefe Brasselle Richard Boone William Leslie |
Cinematography: | Burnett Guffey, A.S.C. |
Music: | Mischa Bakaleinikoff (conducted by) |
Studio: | Columbia Pictures |
Distributor: | Columbia Pictures Corporation |
Runtime: | 81 minutes |
Country: | United States |
Language: | English |
Battle Stations is a 1956 American war film directed by Lewis Seiler and starring John Lund, William Bendix and Keefe Brasselle.[1] It was produced and distributed by Columbia Pictures. It took inspiration from the 1944 documentary film The Fighting Lady.[2]
Writing in AllMovie, author and film critic Hal Erickson described the film as "a standard wartime melodrama with the usual assortment of cliches," noting that "the economies in Battle Stations extend to its opening-credit music, which has been lifted bodily from Max Steiner's score for The Caine Mutiny."[3] Film review site The Movie Scene described the film as having "that same sense of patriotism and propaganda about it which those movies made during WWII had," that "it feels like who ever wrote it had watched dozens of other movies about life at sea during the war, picked out all the bits which they liked right down [to] the music and then slotted them together," and that it "delivers plenty of cliche."[4]