A company that was really hoping they were getting shipped home, are instead shipped up to a section of the Siegfried Line. Soon after, most of the company is sent to reinforce a different section of the line, leaving just six guys to cover a hill, a much larger Nazi force stationed on the opposite ridge.
You've got Sgt. Larkin, stuck trying to make this untenable situation work. Corporal Henshaw (James Coburn), a bit of a tinkerer. Private Corby (Bobby Darin), the souvenir hunter, and a couple of others that are mostly there to make numbers. Their ranks are supplemented, if you want to call if that, by Homer (Nick Adams), a Polish teen that escaped from a labor camp, desperate to prove he can be a soldier, and a company clerk who got lost with a jeep full of typewriters (Bob Newhart, I know, I was surprised, too.)
But the one to watch out for is Reese (Steve McQueen), who just got transferred into the company after a court martial for nearly drunk-driving a jeep over a colonel. Reese is surly, rude, with a scraggly beard and eyes that regard everyone with hostility. He's the one person actually happier - though that may not be the right word - about going back to the front rather than home. Combat is probably when things are quietest inside his head.
Most of the movie is a cat-and-mouse game, though we only see the U.S.'s side of it, with the Americans trying to fool the Nazis into thinking they're still at full-strength up here. For example, a full company would send a patrol out into no man's land at night, but that would require 10 soldiers, which *counts on fingers*, nope, 8 soldiers total doesn't leave 10 to spare. How to make enough noise to simulate a patrol?
At times, it's almost lighthearted, Henshaw having a bit of a laugh as he using a backfiring jeep to simulate a tank, or the soldiers telling the clerk to pretend to talk on the phone with HQ once they realize the bombed-out pillbox has a hidden mike. But there's always a tension underlying it; these are stall tactics. If the Nazis figure it out before the rest of the company returns, these guys are cooked and they know it. You see it in a brief battle when one member of the squad leaves his foxhole to help the others, because there doesn't seem to be anyone attacking near him. And then more Nazis emerge from the night, and he gets gunned down.
So when Reese suggests a dangerous plan to sneak across and hit the enemy pillbox before daylight, you can figure that some of it is him being eager to fight, to go find trouble rather than wait for it to find him. But he's also not wrong that if they sit and do nothing, and the rest of the company doesn't return in time, it's going to end badly, for them and the rest of the forces in the area if the enemy get wild behind their lines.
The crawl across the minefield is tense, and I really couldn't tell if it was going to work or not until the movie answers it. The climactic battle, in contrast is kind of a dud. Reese's fate was sealed the moment the lieutenant starts barking about a court martial, and in general, it's just not that well-staged, outside a few bits (specifically, the part about using the flamethrower for cover and Reese charging through an inferno)








