–Captain, I’m concerned about this vessel. It’s taking on water.
–Why does that concern you?
–I can’t swim.
–To tell you the truth, I didn’t we could do it.
–To tell you the truth, neither did I.
He’s gonna kill me when the war is over.
He’s gonna kill when the war is over.
Someone stepped on the cake.
1.Are you sure it will work? 2.There’s no guarantee, but the theory’s perfectly feasible.
Everyone stay right where you are. The party’s over.
He’s from Crete, those people don’t make idle threats.
Sir, I’ve inspected this boat, and I think you ought to know that I can’t swim.
Someone’s got to take the responsibility if the job’s going to get done. Do you think that’s easy?
Well, as you can see, it was ruddy awful. But we’d love to go back, wouldn’t we boys? On one condition: we want to take along the ruddy joker who thought up this job, and when we get there, we’re gonna shove him out at ten thousand feet — without a parachute.
You’ve got me in the mood to use this thing, so think of something, or by God, I’ll use it on you!
All this cloak-and-dagger stuff.
Get off your behinds.
Greece and the Islands of the Aegean Sea have given birth to many myths and legends of war and adventure. And these once proud stones, these ruined and shattered temples bear witness to the civilization that flourished and men died here. And to the heroes and demigods that inspired those legends, on this sea and these islands. But, though the stage is the same, ours is a story of our own time, and its heroes are not demigods but ordinary people. In 1943, so the story goes, 2000 British soldiers lay marooned on the tiny island of Keros, exhausted and helpless. They had exactly one week to live. For in Berlin, the Axis high command had determined that on the show of strength Aegean Sea to bully neutral Turkey into coming in the war on their side, itself of no military value, but only a few miles off the coast of Turkey. The cream of the German war machine rested and ready was to spearhead the attack. And the men on Keros were doomed unless they could be evacuated before the blitz. But the only passage to and from Keros was guarded and blocked by two great, newly designed radar controlled guns on the nearby island of Navarrone. Guns to powerful and accurate for any allied ship then in Aegean to challenge. Allied intelligence learned of the prospected blitz only a few days before. What took place in the next ten days became the legend of Navarrone.
Hello Lucky …… come in lucky
matthew lambert is a fat bass tard
In any event I will nit tell you….ya fag
Not very hygienic, i must say. Shocking taste in undies too. Well, well. Heil everybody.
This clock could tick until Christmas and it wouldn’t set off a firecracker.
Well, there’s the team – pirates and cutthroats every one of ’em.
With all due respect to major Franklin, I think the operation is insane.
Your bystanding days are over. You’re in it now, up to your neck.
Your job is to kill enemy soldiers.
Page Topic: Movie Quotes from ‘Guns of Navarone, The’: Quotes from the movie ‘Guns of Navarone, The’