OverviewReviewCastProduction CreditsAwards
   
Watch the trailer
From Here to Eternity
Plot Synopsis by Hal Erickson

The scene is Schofield Army Barracks in Honolulu, in the languid days before the attack on Pearl Harbor, where James Jones' acclaimed war novel From Here to Eternity brought the aspirations and frustrations of several people sharply into focus. Sergeant Milt Warden (Burt Lancaster) enters into an affair with Karen (Deborah Kerr), the wife of his commanding officer. Private Robert E. Lee "Prew" Prewitt (Montgomery Clift) is a loner who lives by his own code of ethics and communicates better with his bugle than he does with words. Prew's best friend is wisecracking Maggio (Frank Sinatra, in an Oscar-winning performance that revived his flagging career), who has been targeted for persecution by sadistic stockade sergeant Fatso Judson (Ernest Borgnine). Rounding out the principals is Alma Lorene (Donna Reed), a "hostess" at the euphemistically named whorehouse The New Congress Club. All these melodramatic joys and sufferings are swept away by the Japanese attack on the morning of December 7. No words could do justice to the film's most famous scene: the nocturnal romantic rendezvous on the beach, with Burt Lancaster's and Deborah Kerr's bodies intertwining as the waves crash over them. If you're able to take your eyes off the principals for a moment or two, keep an eye out for George Reeves; his supporting role was shaved down when, during previews, audiences yelled "There's Superman!" and began to laugh. From Here to Eternity won eight Academy Awards, including Best Picture, Best Director, Best Adapted Screenplay, and supporting awards to Sinatra and Reed.

» View DVD Releases
Links to other sites
Lars Attacks! review of From Here to Eternity
Similar Works
Pearl Harbor  (2001, Michael Bay)
The Best Years of Our Lives  (1946, William Wyler)
China Sky  (1944, Ray Enright)
D-Day, the Sixth of June  (1956, Henry Koster)
An Officer and a Gentleman  (1982, Taylor Hackford)
They Were Expendable  (1945, John Ford)
The Young Lions  (1958, Edward Dmytryk)
The Eve of St. Mark  (1944, John M. Stahl)
The Thin Red Line  (1998, Terrence Malick)
The Naked and the Dead  (1958, Raoul Walsh)
Other Related Works
 Is featured in:    As I See It 
 Is related to:    Some Came Running  (1958, Vincente Minnelli)
   Tora! Tora! Tora!  (1970, Richard Fleischer, Kinji Fukasaku, Toshio Masuda)
   A Soldier's Daughter Never Cries  (1998, James Ivory)
   Intimate Portrait: Donna Reed 
   The War File: Battlefield - Pearl Harbor 
 Has been remade as:    From Here to Eternity  (1979, Buzz Kulik)