- Hell in the Pacific
Infobox Film
name = Hell in the Pacific
caption= original film poster
imdb_id = 0063056
director =John Boorman
writer =Reuben Bercovitch Alexander Jacobs Eric Bercovici
starring =Lee Marvin ,Toshirō Mifune
producer =Reuben Bercovitch Henry G. Saperstein Selig J. Seligman
distributor =Cinerama
released = 18 December, 1968
runtime = 103 minutes
language = English
music =Lalo Schifrin
budget = Unknown"Hell in the Pacific" is a 1968
World War II film starringLee Marvin andToshirō Mifune . It was directed byJohn Boorman .Two men, one American and one Japanese, are marooned on an uninhabited
Pacific island. In order to survive they must accept their differences and work together, despite their two countries being at war.Containing little dialogue, this film is not dubbed or sub-titled, thus authentically portraying the frustration of restricted communication between the two characters. The film was entirely shot in the Rock Islands of
Palau in the northPacific Ocean , near thePhilippines in thePhilippine Sea .The film was originally released with a rather abrupt ending, one that left many dissatisfied with the outcome of the struggle these men endured. The subsequent DVD release has an alternative ending, which while leaving the eventual destiny of the two ambiguous, was much more in line with the overall direction of the movie.
Marvin and Mifune are the only two actors in the entire film. Both actors had real-life World War II combat experience: Marvin served with the US Marines in the Pacific, where he was wounded and received the
Purple Heart ; meanwhile Mifune served in theImperial Japanese Air Force .Critical reception
* "Toshiro"sic" Mifune also took on foreign assignments, but few did him justice. It was only John Boorman's "Hell in the Pacific" that captured something of his range, humour and power." -
British Film Institute Post-film collaboration
One of the writers, Eric Bercovici, would go on to write the screenplay for, and produce, the Emmy Award winning television mini-series "Shōgun" (based on the James Clavell novel) for
NBC , with Toshirō Mifune cast as "Toranaga" the man who would eventually become the Shogun.Adaptations
The concept was re-workedfact|date=February 2008 in 1979 for the Hugo and
Nebula Award winning novella "Enemy Mine ", later adapted to film in 1985. "Hell in the Pacific" was also the direct basis, a year later, for "The Return of Starbuck ", the only well-received (and the final) episode of "Galactica 1980 ", the short-lived spin-off of the original "Battle Star Galactica" TV series.cite web|url= http://www.battlestargalactica.com/outside_docs/bg_outdoc0030.htm |title=Interview with "Galactica 1980" story editor Allan Cole|date=28 February 2005|accessdate=2007-08-11|last=Larocque|first=John]ee also
* "
None But the Brave " (1965), produced and directed byFrank Sinatra , under a similar premise that pre-dates "Hell in the Pacific" by four years.References
External links
*imdb title|id=0063056|title=Hell in the Pacific
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