Genre: | Biography Drama |
Director: | Lamont Johnson |
Starring: | Martin Sheen Ned Beatty Gary Busey Mariclare Costello |
Music: | Hal Mooney |
Country: | United States |
Language: | English |
Executive Producer: | Richard Levinson William Link |
Producer: | Richard Dubelman |
Location: | Montréal, Canada RMS Queen Mary 1126 Queens Highway Long Beach, California |
Cinematography: | Bill Butler |
Editor: | Frank Morriss |
Runtime: | 120 minutes |
Company: | Universal Television |
Budget: | $180,000 |
Network: | NBC |
The Execution of Private Slovik is a nonfiction book by William Bradford Huie, published in 1954,[1] and an American television movie that aired on NBC on March 13, 1974.[2] [3] The film was written for the screen by Richard Levinson, William Link, and director Lamont Johnson; the film stars Martin Sheen,[4] and also features Charlie Sheen in his second film in a small role.[5]
The book and the film tell the story of Private Eddie Slovik, the only American military serviceman executed for desertion (during World War II) since the American Civil War.
The film starred Martin Sheen as Private Slovik, a performance for which he received an Emmy Award nomination for Best Lead Actor in a Drama. Sheen said he did not think actors should be compared, and made it clear he would refuse the award. Many critics and viewers consider this to be one of Sheen's finest performances. The film was nominated for five Emmy Awards, including "Outstanding Special - Comedy or Drama",[6] and was one of the bases of a Peabody Award given that year to NBC for dramatic programs.[7]
Frank Sinatra announced in 1960 that he would produce a film adaptation of The Execution of Private Slovik, with the screenplay to be written by Albert Maltz, who was one of the Hollywood 10 blacklisted after they refused to testify to the House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC) in the McCarthy era.[2] This announcement evoked tremendous outrage, with Sinatra accused of being a Communist sympathizer. As Sinatra was campaigning for John F. Kennedy for president of the United States, the Kennedy campaign became concerned and prevailed upon Sinatra to cancel the project.[8]
In 1949, a Pentagon source revealed to Huie a European graveyard containing the remains of unidentified American soldiers. Huie's investigation identified Slovik's name and grave. Huie's account of Slovik is an example of his style of reporting and his tendency to anger Dwight D. Eisenhower, who had authorized the execution as commander of the Allied Forces, and who tried to stop publication of the book. Award-winning filmmaker Richard Dubelman acquired the film rights from Sinatra. Some years later, Dubelman persuaded Universal Pictures to help him produce it as a television movie.
Television critic Matt Zoller Seitz in his 2016 book co-written with Alan Sepinwall titled TV (The Book) named The Execution of Private Slovik as the third greatest American TV-movie of all time, behind Duel (1971) and The Positively True Adventures of the Alleged Texas Cheerleader-Murdering Mom (1993). Seitz praised Martin Sheen's performance as "one of his finest" and stated that the film is "as close to a perfect character study as network TV has produced, quietly outraged yet somehow resolutely unsentimental".[9]
The military service record of Slovik, which is now a public archival record available from the Military Personnel Records Center, provides a detailed account of his actual execution.[10] It was upon this that most of the film was based.