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Combat! (1962)

 Combat! (1962)
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TVTItem
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Combat! (1962)
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Combat1962
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Combat! is a TV series that ran on ABC from 1962 until 1967 about "King Company" during the invasion of France in World War II, starting from D-Day and never farther than that throughout its five-season run. It predominantly featured Sergeant Chip Saunders (Vic Morrow), though his entire squad was just as fleshed out. Robert Altman was a major creative force on the series, directing every second episode of the first season. The show's original writer, Robert Pirosh, also wrote Battleground (1949) and Hell Is for Heroes, which have a similar grounded style to this series.
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 Combat! (1962) / int_1501e2dd
type
Hero Antagonist
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comment
Hero Antagonist: The British soldier and the French Resistance fighter (until he discovers the truth) towards Kirby out of suspicion of being a German infiltrator in disguise in "The Masquers". Sgt. Metcalf and the court who sides with him towards Kirby in "Hill 256". Eddie Albert as Phil, the title character of "Doughboy" towards Saunders initially.
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 Combat! (1962) / int_15b09af9
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Heel–Face Door-Slam
 Combat! (1962) / int_15b09af9
comment
Heel–Face Door-Slam: In "Entombed," a truce is declared between Lt. Hanley's group and German soldiers following a cave-in. It forces both sides to work together and even causes both groups to bond with one another. The dominoes start to fall when the German Lt. Karl Mauer attempts suicide as Hanley attempts to talk him out of it, only for Mauer to accidentally injure him. Then Pvt. Tommy Bishopnote played by future horror director Tom Holland of Fright Night (1985) and Child's Play kills Mauer to save Hanley just as Mauer was apologizing to Hanley for accidentally shooting him and he nearly got killed by the German soldier Wexler, whom he bonded with to avenge Mauer's death, until Hanley saves Bishop by killing Wexler. An unfortunate sad end to a bond between two enemy groups. Sadder considering both Bishop and Wexler finally dug a way out when it happens.
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Comic-Book Time
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comment
Comic-Book Time: The first season follows a roughly consistent Story Arc from D-Day (June '44) to the imminent liberation of Paris (August '44). The next four all happen around and after that time... but the squad never leaves France.
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Punch-Clock Villain
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Punch-Clock Villain: While there are mostly Those Wacky Nazis antagonists on the show, several episodes even show some German soldier characters to be this too.
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Mauve Shirt
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Mauve Shirt: Early on, Pirosh and Altman made an effort to contract actors for a couple of episodes, so you'd just get to know them before they're killed.
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Ooh, Me Accent's Slipping
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Ooh, Me Accent's Slipping: Gavin MacLeod's British in "The Masquers".
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Gentle Giant
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Gentle Giant: The Big Guy of White Rook, Littlejohn.
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Feud Episode
 Combat! (1962) / int_3743ef88
comment
Also, Littlejohn and Caje in the Feud Episode "Conflict," when the lack of sleep and enduring rain prompts them to lose their patience, made them cranky and mean-spirited than they are usually, also behaving like each The Neidermeyer, turned them against each other and even lashing out at other members of their platoon, affecting their performances in the front lines that gets to a point of them committing insubordination and acting each as The Millstone for their Nice Job Breaking It, Hero moments. Both Saunders and Doc call them out for their inexcusable insubordination and they nearly earned getting a dishonorable discharge from their squad as Fallen Heroes after serving White Rook well and nobly in past countless episodes that spanned over four seasons for their disgracefully petty insolence in this episode. Fortunately, while they were not above in attempting to engage in a fistfight in amidst of their bickering, at least Littlejohn and Caje were humane and held on to whatever moral restraint they had left enough not to turn their M1s or bayonets against each other to kill one another out of petty spite, which if attempted may resulted in them not just earning a dishonorable discharge and transfer, but an automatic court martial for both of them also and shamed them afterwards as absolute Fallen Heroes following prosecution for attempting or having committed killing a fellow soldier. Doc's "The Reason You Suck" Speech towards the two troublemakers was able to get through to them for them to have a Jerkass Realization about themselves and eventually they reconciled, shift to Heroic Safe Mode and worked together with no issues.
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Properly Paranoid
 Combat! (1962) / int_3aec9e5e
comment
Properly Paranoid: In "The Masquers", the Allied soldiers are extremely paranoid of who is a German in disguise and who isn't. As a result Unfriendly Fire ensues.
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Recycled Soundtrack
 Combat! (1962) / int_405f6f52
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Recycled Soundtrack: Leonard Rosenman wrote a music library that provided backing throughout the run of the series, although he did do an original score for the pilot (and some other episodes).
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Jerk with a Heart of Gold
 Combat! (1962) / int_4781adbb
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Jerk with a Heart of Gold: Kirby, the Hot-Blooded member of White Rook who is also equally courageous on the battlefield and caring of his brothers-in-arms.
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Stock Footage
 Combat! (1962) / int_4856ac40
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Stock Footage: Artillery barrages, massive numbers of tanks, and bombers are mixed with reaction shots of the cast members.
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Big Good
 Combat! (1962) / int_4a852458
comment
Big Good: Rick Jason as Lt. Hanley, as he is one of the series' regulars and the only one with a higher rank than Sgt. Saunders and the White Rook platoon.
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The Big Guy
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The Big Guy: Littlejohn, the most towering soldier in White Rook.
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Affably Evil
 Combat! (1962) / int_537dd8fe
comment
A defining trait of one guest character in the episode "Cry for Help," as another Affably Evil Punch-Clock Villain in the form of a German Wehrmacht Heer medic named Peter Halsman played by Academy Award-winner Robert Duvall before his next WWII German role in The Eagle Has Landed aided Doc in helping a young son of a La Résistance contact from choking on a bean, then when Doc is wounded, rather than escaping after freeing himself, Halsman chooses to stay behind to tend to Doc's wound.
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Ain't Too Proud to Beg
 Combat! (1962) / int_5b1a2f4e
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Ain't Too Proud to Beg: Quite a few of the Germans, noticeably Colonel Hoffen in "Gadjo."
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Public Domain Soundtrack
 Combat! (1962) / int_5f70322e
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Public Domain Soundtrack: In a variation, the Instrumental Theme Tune quotes from "When Johnny Comes Marching Home Again", a song from The American Civil War.
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Big Eater
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Big Eater: Braddock, especially in the pilot.
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Artistic License – Military
 Combat! (1962) / int_6eb4e408
comment
Artistic License – Military: In the Feud Episode "Conflict," Littlejohn's and Caje's bickering throughout the episode and even lashing out at others even during the mission was considered to be the charge of insubordination in face of the enemy. Littlejohn's transfer request would be thrown out the window since he now has war criminal record and if Saunders wasn't merciful, any sergeant in the platoon would automatically have the two infighting privates court martial. In the U.S. military, engaging in physical altercations with fellow soldiers which nearly happened twice between Littlejohn and Caje in the episode is considered a serious offense and can result in disciplinary action. Depending on the circumstances of the altercation, a service member may face charges under the Uniform Code of Military Justice, which could result in punishment such as fines, imprisonment, or discharge from the military. It is important to remember that physical violence is not an acceptable way to resolve conflicts and that all service members are expected to maintain good order and discipline.
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Jerkass Ball
 Combat! (1962) / int_73f51de7
comment
Jerkass Ball: Saunders when he behaves like The Neidermeyer towards New Meat Trenton, who Saunders suspects of pulling the Wounded Gazelle Gambit to skip combat duty, following suffering a Heroic BSoD from his letter in "Mail Call." Also, Littlejohn and Caje in the Feud Episode "Conflict," when the lack of sleep and enduring rain prompts them to lose their patience, made them cranky and mean-spirited than they are usually, also behaving like each The Neidermeyer, turned them against each other and even lashing out at other members of their platoon, affecting their performances in the front lines that gets to a point of them committing insubordination and acting each as The Millstone for their Nice Job Breaking It, Hero moments. Both Saunders and Doc call them out for their inexcusable insubordination and they nearly earned getting a dishonorable discharge from their squad as Fallen Heroes after serving White Rook well and nobly in past countless episodes that spanned over four seasons for their disgracefully petty insolence in this episode. Fortunately, while they were not above in attempting to engage in a fistfight in amidst of their bickering, at least Littlejohn and Caje were humane and held on to whatever moral restraint they had left enough not to turn their M1s or bayonets against each other to kill one another out of petty spite, which if attempted may resulted in them not just earning a dishonorable discharge and transfer, but an automatic court martial for both of them also and shamed them afterwards as absolute Fallen Heroes following prosecution for attempting or having committed killing a fellow soldier. Doc's "The Reason You Suck" Speech towards the two troublemakers was able to get through to them for them to have a Jerkass Realization about themselves and eventually they reconciled, shift to Heroic Safe Mode and worked together with no issues.
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Put on a Bus
 Combat! (1962) / int_754df088
comment
Put on a Bus: Private Braddock, as Shecky Greene walked off the show after nine episodes, because the physical demands of the series were taking a toll on him, and he wished to return to his nightclub acts in Las Vegas. The first Doc after Season One as well.
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A Day in the Limelight
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A Day in the Limelight: Almost all of the characters got to have an episode for themselves.
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All for Nothing
 Combat! (1962) / int_aed65980
comment
All for Nothing: In "Hills Are For Heroes", the company gets slaughtered trying to take a strategically important hill. Even the tank they call in for help gets destroyed by the dug-in Germans. At the end, they finally take it, only to be told by Hanley they have to withdraw back to their original positions because the Germans have broken through elsewhere.
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Bottomless Magazines
 Combat! (1962) / int_b2cdd776
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Bottomless Magazines: The squad members were seldom seen re-loading their M-1s, BAR, and Thompson submachine gun.
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The Neidermeyer
 Combat! (1962) / int_be991863
comment
Saunders when he behaves like The Neidermeyer towards New Meat Trenton, who Saunders suspects of pulling the Wounded Gazelle Gambit to skip combat duty, following suffering a Heroic BSoD from his letter in "Mail Call."
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New Meat
 Combat! (1962) / int_bf609406
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New Meat: The squad seems to have a completely random new soldier every week, and half of the time, they end up dying.
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Spin-Off
 Combat! (1962) / int_d9ee7048
comment
Spin-Off: Garrison's Gorillas, made as an episode of this show, but eventually shown as a true Pilot Episode (turning it into a Spin Off Sendoff instead.)
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Doomed Hurt Guy
 Combat! (1962) / int_db165dcf
comment
Doomed Hurt Guy: Several times the squad will try and rescue a badly wounded G.I., a member of La Résistance, or, sometimes, even a Nazi, only to have the individual end up dying despite all their efforts. It was used to great effect to show the futility of war.
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 Combat! (1962) / int_e061d153
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Sergeant Rock
 Combat! (1962) / int_e061d153
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Sergeant Rock: Sergeant Chip Saunders.
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Translation Convention
 Combat! (1962) / int_e11b003d
comment
Translation Convention: Completely subverted, which helped greatly with the show's authenticity and realism: the Germans spoke German, the French spoke French, and all without subtitles; any translation that may have gone on was if the squad happened to have a translator who could hear the enemy's secrets, and relay the information back to the others.
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Last-Name Basis
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Last-Name Basis: Justified. Everyone is in the Army.
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Ambiguous Disorder
 Combat! (1962) / int_e8cfde67
comment
Ambiguous Disorder: At the end of "Hill 256," Kirby is proven innocent when his claim of seeing a machine gun is corroborated by Saunders and Caje. Sergeant Metcalf (Robert Culp), accused Kirby of cowardice and insubordination just because Metcalf claimed he not seen the machine gun at all. He is angered, thinking Kirby is a Karma Houdini and content he has done no wrongdoing himself. However, Saunders theorized that Metcalf is a Shell-Shocked Veteran suffering from some sort of mental disorder, driven by his constant bravery in battle, that caused him to see illusions of no danger at all, but that Kirby was able to see.
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One-Steve Limit
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One-Steve Limit: King Company had two different medical soldiers nicknamed Doc, one played by Steven Rogers in Season One, and the other played by Conlan Carter for the remainder of the series.
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Inspector Javert
 Combat! (1962) / int_f178203a
comment
Inspector Javert: The British soldier and the French Resistance fighter (until he discovers the truth) towards Kirby out of suspicion of being a German infiltrator in disguise in "The Masquers". There is also Sgt. Metcalf and the court who sides with him towards Kirby too in "Hill 256".
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Pet the Dog
 Combat! (1962) / int_ff7f34c5
comment
Pet the Dog: In the episode "The Wounded Don't Cry," Affably Evil Punch-Clock Villain Heer Sgt. Bauer helps a bird back into its nest. In the episode "The Volunteer," an Affably Evil Punch-Clock Villain Wehrmacht Heer soldier played by Ted Knight shows kindness towards defiant La Résistance Child Soldier wannabe Gilbert by first showing his Fatal Family Photo of his daughter and gave him chocolate. When Gilbert killed him to save the Americans and liberate the village his platoon occupied to ambush Saunders' and Hanley's squad, the poor French boy has a Heel Realization and My God, What Have I Done? and expressed an Alas, Poor Villain towards the dead German as he also gives back the chocolate to him in memorial upon acknowledging there can be an aversion of All Germans Are Nazis and What Measure Is a Mook? applying to some Mooks like that friendly German and that War Is Hell, which was the most important lesson he learned of all. A defining trait of one guest character in the episode "Cry for Help," as another Affably Evil Punch-Clock Villain in the form of a German Wehrmacht Heer medic named Peter Halsman played by Academy Award-winner Robert Duvall before his next WWII German role in The Eagle Has Landed aided Doc in helping a young son of a La Résistance contact from choking on a bean, then when Doc is wounded, rather than escaping after freeing himself, Halsman chooses to stay behind to tend to Doc's wound.
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