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Sunday, March 31, 2024

Battle of the Bulge Movie Tanks

Close up of a German Tiger tank.
The Germans captured a number of American halftracks in WWII and often repainted and remarked them and used them in their own army.  The .50 caliber machine gun was often retained.

The US Army M47 tank was about the same size of the Tiger II.  The M47 was only three feet shorter, one foot narrower, and almost as tall as the Tiger II.

So painted in WWII paint and markings it made a reasonable German tank for the movies in the 1960s, given that there were no operational Tiger tanks available for movie use in those days.


In the movie the Battle of the Bulge the Spanish Army rented out about three dozen or more M47 tanks that were repainted and remarked for the movie.  I have never found evidence of the Tiger II having been painted in Panzer Gray but for movie goers in the 1960s it was a easy way for them to recognize the German vehicles.

 The movie also used an American halftrack as the towing vehicle for a command van.
I got three Roco M47 tanks that were partially converted in a collection I purchased about 20 years ago.  The previous owner used what appears to have been Roco Tiger II barrels with the second muzzle baffle cut off, then glued on in place of the original M47 gun barrel.  The models were not painted.  Since I had no M47 replacement barrels, and it seemed kind of a fun project, I finished the job by painting them Tamiya German Gray and adding the decals and tank commanders.  The halftrack is a Roco M3 and the command trailer is a European made resin kit, perhaps ArsenalM but I am not sure.
The movie is very exciting and for 1965 has excellent special effects.  Don't expect a history lesson, the historical accuracy of the movie is limited.

Here is the trailer for the movie:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xIVqFQ4fhFg

4 comments:

Wayne W said...

Whenever I see the line: "Based on a True Story" I assume (using "Battle of the Bulge") - 1) There was a World War 2; 2) There was a "Battle of the Bulge" somewhere; 3) Allies were fighting Germans. And that' about as much history as I can expect.

It's what we got with "Battle of the Bulge." Fun war movie, but pretty bad history. Even Eisenhower came out of seclusion to criticize it. But still love it.

My favorite Alamo movie is still John Wayne's - maybe not the way it happened, but the way it SHOULD have happened... LOL

jeigheff said...

I too like "Battle of the Bulge", but with the same reservations that everyone else has.

Another WWII officer didn't like "Bulge" when it was first released. This one was a high-ranking German officer who had fought in the war. I don't remember his name. He said (in so many words) that the movie was disrespectful to the fighting men of both sides. I searched for the officer's identity and quote before posting this, but had no luck.

One last thing: Tamiya Panzer Grey looks really good on your "panzers"!

Legion4 said...

Just like in the movie !!!!

Mike Bunkermeister Creek said...

While my preference is that movies set in historical times who pretend to present historical events do so in a manner that reflects what actually happened as accurately as possible, I also like a movie to be entertaining. Those are not mutually exclusive, but seldom seem to match up.

John Wayne best captured the spirit of the Texicans rather than the specific details of the Siege of the Alamo. And I still think Davy Crockett when down fighting and did not surrender.

Thanks for reading guys.

Bunkermeister