They don't make 'em like this any more (and maybe that's just as well). Tony Richardson clearly had a huge budget to work with on this epic portrayal of the disastrous cavalry charge during the Crimean War. The bill for the extras alone must have been huge.
The film is good at exposing the criminal lunacy of the aristocratic generals who thought nothing of sending hundreds of brave men to certain death. Trevor Howard is good as the inflexible, vindictive Lord Cardigan, though his performance verges on a rehearsal for his crusty old fogey in 'Sir Henry at Rawlinson End'.
As in 'Zulu Dawn', the arrogance of the British class system is revealed as the main reason for military disaster.
Even the more sympathetic characters are little more than caricatures. It almost comes as a relief when the strident, egotistical Captain Nolan (David Hemmings) is cut down at the start of the fateful charge.
The film's main weakness is the mystifying decision to include chunks of light-hearted animation. The animation sequences are by the excellent Richard Williams, but they are horribly misplaced here. The cartoons devalue the seriousness of the gory incompetence and waste of human life that the film portrays.