Everyman's War (2009)

Written by Wuchak on November 9, 2023

Americans going to Western Europe to fight Germans in the wintery forests

The true story of Don Smith and his fellow soldiers leading up to the Battle of the Bulge in December-January, 1944-45, is chronicled.

“Fallen Not Forgotten” (2009), aka “Everyman’s War,” is a WW2 Indie only costing $720,000 and is reminiscent of "Straight into Darkness" from five years prior, just more straightforward and less surrealistic. It was a labor of love written & directed by the sons of the real-life protagonist. "The Frozen Front" (2017) is another comparison. While this isn’t as good as “Straight into Darkness,” it’s superior to “The Frozen Front.”

I watched it because I was in the mood for a WW2 flick, but also because I heard how little it cost and wanted to know if a decent WW2 film could possibly be made on such a non-budget, shot exclusively in Oregon of all places. Just think of the cost of apprehending items from the early 1940s, such as clothes, cars, uniforms, weapons, military vehicles and a tank or two, not to mention convincing sets. Then you have to have enough money left over for competent no-name actors and amenities, like lodging and catering.

Yet the Smith brothers pulled it off. Sure, it’s a micro-budget Indie, but the story & characters drew me in enough to give it a marginal thumbs-up for those who don’t mind spare change Indies. The well-depicted Germans even speak German (with English subtitles).

The movie doesn’t overstay its welcome at 1 hour, 43 minutes.

GRADE: B-