The Bridge on the River Kwai opens in a Japanese prisoner-of-war camp in Burma in 1943, where a battle of wills rages between camp commander Colonel Saito ( Sessue Hayakawa ) and newly arrived British colonel Nicholson ( Alec Guinness ). Saito insists that Nicholson order his men to build a bridge over the river Kwai, which will be used to transport Japanese munitions. Nicholson refuses, despite all the various "persuasive" devices at Saito's disposal. Finally, Nicholson agrees, not so much to cooperate with his captor as to provide a morale-boosting project for the military engineers under his command. The colonel will prove that, by building a better bridge than Saito's men could build, the British soldier is a superior being even when under the thumb of the enemy. As the bridge goes up, Nicholson becomes obsessed with completing it to perfection, eventually losing sight of the fact that it will benefit the Japanese. Meanwhile, American POW Shears ( William Holden ), having escaped from the camp, agrees to save himself from a court martial by leading a group of British soldiers back to the camp to destroy Nicholson's bridge. Upon his return, Shears realizes that Nicholson's mania to complete his project has driven him mad. Filmed in Ceylon, Bridge on the River Kwai won seven Academy Awards, including Best Picture, Best Director for the legendary British filmmaker David Lean , and Best Actor for Guinness. It also won Best Screenplay for Pierre Boulle , the author of the novel on which the film was based, even though the actual writers were blacklisted writers Carl Foreman and Michael Wilson , who were given their Oscars under the table. — Hal Erickson
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William Holden | Shears |
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Alec Guinness | Colonel Nicholson |
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Jack Hawkins | Major Warden |
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Sessue Hayakawa | Colonel Saito |
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James Donald | Major Clipton |
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Geoffrey Horne | Lieutenant Joyce |
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André Morell | Colonel Green |
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Peter Williams | Captain Reeves |
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John Boxer | Major Hughes |
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Percy Herbert | Grogan |
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Harold Goodwin | Baker |
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Ann Sears | Nurse |
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Heihachiro Okawa | Captain Kanematsu |
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Keiichiro Katsumoto | Lieutenant Miura |
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M.R.B. Chakrabandhu | Yai |
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Vilaiwan Seeboonreaung | Siamese Girl |
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Ngamta Suphaphongs | Siamese Girl |
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Javanart Punynchoti | Siamese Girl |
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Kannikar Dowklee | Siamese Girl |
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Tsai Chin | Tokyo Rose |
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Christopher Greet | British Officer |
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Herbert Nelson | Bit part |
| Director | David Lean |
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| Writer | Pierre Boulle, Carl Foreman, Michael Wilson | |
| Producer | Sam Spiegel | |
| Musician | Malcolm Arnold | |
| Photography | Jack Hildyard | |
| Edition | Collector's Edition |
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| Packaging | Custom Case |
| Nr Discs | 2 |
| Screen Ratios | Anamorphic Widescreen (2.35:1) Anamorphic Widescreen (2.55:1) |
| Audio Tracks | Dolby Digital 5.1 [Spanish] DTS [English] DTS [French] DTS [Portuguese] DTS [Spanish] DTS 5.1 [French] DTS-HD High Resolution Audio [English] Stereo [English] |
| Subtitles | Chinese | English | French | Korean | Portuguese | Spanish | Thai |
| Layers | Single side, Single layer |
| Edition Release Date | Nov 02, 2010 |
| Regions | Region A |