The Fighting Men was first broadcast on 24 September 1977 on
CBC Television. A longer,
35 mm film version (91 minutes) was released in theatres under the title
Men of Steel in 1988.
Home media As
Men of Steel, the film was made available on VHS on 15 September 1988 (91 min.,
Trans World Entertainment).
Critical response Frank Daiey said that while
The Fighting Men was "a good shot", it was not good enough, commending Shebib's direction, particularly the realistic set up of the military base. While he found
Allan Royal's acting superficial,
Robert Lalonde was far more believable, despite the fact that Archambeault comes across as "quite dumb" during the encounter with wolves, and leaving the transmitter on through the storm: "this guy was supposed to be a radioman... Errors like this undermine the credibility of a melodrama." However, the film's premise simplistic, as though "all that's needed to unite the two solitudes in loving harmony is a common catastrophe", thereby "reducing that notion to the level of personal conflict":
The Fighting Men fleshes out the dual conflicts of man against man and man against nature with an unseemly degree of melodrama... The net result is too much clutter, too many hangnail relationships and too many supporting characters in a drama built for two. ''
VideoHound's Golden Movie Retriever'' gives the theatrical version a single star. ==References==