IMDb-BEWERTUNG
5,1/10
131
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuAfter the U.S. defeat in the Philippines, Madison leads a rag-tag group of U.S. soldiers against the Japanese occupiers. In this WW II drama, the Japanese set an island trap for the American... Alles lesenAfter the U.S. defeat in the Philippines, Madison leads a rag-tag group of U.S. soldiers against the Japanese occupiers. In this WW II drama, the Japanese set an island trap for the American troops.After the U.S. defeat in the Philippines, Madison leads a rag-tag group of U.S. soldiers against the Japanese occupiers. In this WW II drama, the Japanese set an island trap for the American troops.
Maurice Poli
- Mario Patrello
- (as Monty Greenwood)
Hélène Chanel
- Betsy
- (as Helen Chanel)
Sandro Pizzochero
- Arthur Rodney
- (as Sandro Korso)
Gino Turini
- T.Sgt. Trevor
- (as John Brown)
Empfohlene Bewertungen
WOW!! Now here is a real gem in the rough: A low budget Italian war film from 1969 that has a fantastic script, excellent performances, genuine character development, emotional involvement & payoffs, and a profound sense of the artifice of film that is so convincing that it can even withstand contemporary scrutiny without the usual aplogies associated with cult Euro genre films. This is not just a good movie about war that has the potential to please even the dreaded war movie buff sect who never take this stuff seriously, but a great film, period.
Others have summed up the plot details succinctly already -- misplaced misfit Yankee GI's stumble around Japanese controlled Filipino island after the fall of Manilla, wage guerrilla warfare when they can, and die when they must. This film is a standout in the 1967 - 1971 Euro War cycle, an offshoot of the Italian Spaghetti Western industry cashing in on THE DIRTY DOZEN, GUNS OF NAVARONE, THE GREAT ESCAPE, etc, using pretty much the same performers & crew personnel but with tanks & machine guns rather than horses & six shooters. This one was directed by Giuseppe Vari, who's only other work I have seen is the Spaghetti SHOOT THE LIVING AND PRAY FOR THE DEAD and his proto-Peplum REVENGE OF THE BARBARIANS. My memory of both films is spotty but they were not this well done. Like Bitto Albertini, Umberto Lenzi, Enzo Castellari, Giorgio Ferroni, Tonino Ricci, Alfonso Brescia, Gianfranco Parolini and Leon Klimovsky, here is a director who managed to use the Euro War craze to their advantage, getting a contract to make a film that they then injected with their own particular vision. Some of them work (DESERT COMMANDOS, BATTLE OF EL ALAMEIN) and some are more like twisted, violent cartoons (FIVE FOR HELL, BATTLE OF THE LAST PANZER) but here is one that actually resonates on a personal level that goes beyond what was required of by the genre. I am astonished at how good of a movie it is.
What sets this one apart is not only actual use of the possibilities of film as a medium for expression using some wonderful camera work that is a cut above the usual documentary style used by the Euro War directors, but a Pacific War setting, specifically the Phillipines just after the Japanese invaded Manilla. Since the Euro War films of the classic 1967 - 1971 period were so low budget in nature, most of their directors relied upon European settings out of simple logistical need. As such, one of the most intriguing aspects of A PLACE IN HELL is just where it's location work was done. Most likely in the Philipines itself, where a number of Italian/Filipino productions were made around the same time (1968/1969).
The film has a wonderful, rugged, rough look to it, with adventurously kinetic camera work by Stelvio Massi, sparodic and brutal combat sequences that will please those who love action, and maybe even more importantly another great leading role for Euro War regular Guy Madison, who must have made a dozen of these things inside of a year or two: I'd like to see Brad Pitt keep that kind of a pace. This is easily Madison's finest performance in the genre, and on the subject of acting this film has some of the best aside from SALT IN THE WOUND and DESERT COMMANDOS, appears to have been dubbed by the actual principal leads, and the script actually gives them things to say that are pretty remarkable. Add that to a great musical score by Roberto Pregadio and we are talking about yet another minor cult genre masterpiece waiting to be re-discovered. Here is a Euro War film that even war movie buffs could probably take seriously since it treats the subject a sort of quiet nihilism that borders on sombre at times, but is never boring because it is about the people playing out the drama. Movies should always be about people and maybe that's what sets this one apart from all the others, which usually amount to movies about how cool tanks are, how rotten the Nazis were, and how great Klaus Kinski looks in a uniform. This one goes a bit further examining the people who were involved, and deserves to be seen again for having bothered to amount to more than the sum of it's parts. I'd rank it right up there with "Eagles Over London", SALT IN THE WOUND and DESERT COMMANDOS as the best examples of a much-maligned & misunderstood genre.
9/10; The musical score deserves a CD release, and this film deserves to be restored.
Others have summed up the plot details succinctly already -- misplaced misfit Yankee GI's stumble around Japanese controlled Filipino island after the fall of Manilla, wage guerrilla warfare when they can, and die when they must. This film is a standout in the 1967 - 1971 Euro War cycle, an offshoot of the Italian Spaghetti Western industry cashing in on THE DIRTY DOZEN, GUNS OF NAVARONE, THE GREAT ESCAPE, etc, using pretty much the same performers & crew personnel but with tanks & machine guns rather than horses & six shooters. This one was directed by Giuseppe Vari, who's only other work I have seen is the Spaghetti SHOOT THE LIVING AND PRAY FOR THE DEAD and his proto-Peplum REVENGE OF THE BARBARIANS. My memory of both films is spotty but they were not this well done. Like Bitto Albertini, Umberto Lenzi, Enzo Castellari, Giorgio Ferroni, Tonino Ricci, Alfonso Brescia, Gianfranco Parolini and Leon Klimovsky, here is a director who managed to use the Euro War craze to their advantage, getting a contract to make a film that they then injected with their own particular vision. Some of them work (DESERT COMMANDOS, BATTLE OF EL ALAMEIN) and some are more like twisted, violent cartoons (FIVE FOR HELL, BATTLE OF THE LAST PANZER) but here is one that actually resonates on a personal level that goes beyond what was required of by the genre. I am astonished at how good of a movie it is.
What sets this one apart is not only actual use of the possibilities of film as a medium for expression using some wonderful camera work that is a cut above the usual documentary style used by the Euro War directors, but a Pacific War setting, specifically the Phillipines just after the Japanese invaded Manilla. Since the Euro War films of the classic 1967 - 1971 period were so low budget in nature, most of their directors relied upon European settings out of simple logistical need. As such, one of the most intriguing aspects of A PLACE IN HELL is just where it's location work was done. Most likely in the Philipines itself, where a number of Italian/Filipino productions were made around the same time (1968/1969).
The film has a wonderful, rugged, rough look to it, with adventurously kinetic camera work by Stelvio Massi, sparodic and brutal combat sequences that will please those who love action, and maybe even more importantly another great leading role for Euro War regular Guy Madison, who must have made a dozen of these things inside of a year or two: I'd like to see Brad Pitt keep that kind of a pace. This is easily Madison's finest performance in the genre, and on the subject of acting this film has some of the best aside from SALT IN THE WOUND and DESERT COMMANDOS, appears to have been dubbed by the actual principal leads, and the script actually gives them things to say that are pretty remarkable. Add that to a great musical score by Roberto Pregadio and we are talking about yet another minor cult genre masterpiece waiting to be re-discovered. Here is a Euro War film that even war movie buffs could probably take seriously since it treats the subject a sort of quiet nihilism that borders on sombre at times, but is never boring because it is about the people playing out the drama. Movies should always be about people and maybe that's what sets this one apart from all the others, which usually amount to movies about how cool tanks are, how rotten the Nazis were, and how great Klaus Kinski looks in a uniform. This one goes a bit further examining the people who were involved, and deserves to be seen again for having bothered to amount to more than the sum of it's parts. I'd rank it right up there with "Eagles Over London", SALT IN THE WOUND and DESERT COMMANDOS as the best examples of a much-maligned & misunderstood genre.
9/10; The musical score deserves a CD release, and this film deserves to be restored.
A decent pacific war action film. The story is familiar, a small random group of survivors from a Japanese attack have to undertake an "impossible" mission. Much is saved by crisp characters and rugged acting, though masterpiece this one is not.
An unusual feature for a film of this kind is the camerawork. Not only does the camera move a lot, already lifting this film above some of its peers, there are also a couple of visually ambitious sequences.
Released on video in Finland in the early eighties.
An unusual feature for a film of this kind is the camerawork. Not only does the camera move a lot, already lifting this film above some of its peers, there are also a couple of visually ambitious sequences.
Released on video in Finland in the early eighties.
A PLACE IN HELL is a fun-but-forgotten Italian WW2 flick set in the Pacific theatre for a change (most of these films seem to be desert-set productions in my experience). It's business as usual for the scriptwriter, who concocts a storyline about a group of soldiers who have to undertake a deadly mission to blow up a Japanese base on one of the Pacific islands before escaping to the docks to make their getaway.
The film is surprisingly well made for its budget and genre, with atmospheric jungle locations and some top action to recommend it. The cast is merely average, with dependable leading man of Italian action cinema Guy Madison leading the way, but Giuseppe Vari's direction is better than average.
There's an excellent set-piece at the climax involving a deserted beach and village which is the perfect exercise in setting up tension before letting loose with a rousing climax. There are some thoughtful reflections on the nature of warfare here, which you aren't expecting in the dubbed English dialogue, along with location photography in the Philippines which adds to the authenticity.
The film is surprisingly well made for its budget and genre, with atmospheric jungle locations and some top action to recommend it. The cast is merely average, with dependable leading man of Italian action cinema Guy Madison leading the way, but Giuseppe Vari's direction is better than average.
There's an excellent set-piece at the climax involving a deserted beach and village which is the perfect exercise in setting up tension before letting loose with a rousing climax. There are some thoughtful reflections on the nature of warfare here, which you aren't expecting in the dubbed English dialogue, along with location photography in the Philippines which adds to the authenticity.
A Place in Hell is another in the cycle of films often categorised as Macaroni Combat. These Italian films are sort of war-action alternatives to the spaghetti westerns. But there is a reason that these movies aren't remembered by anyone outside of Euro-cult enthusiasts and that is that by-in-large they are pretty unremarkable and, unlike the spaghettis, they don't have nearly as many factors that make them stand out as a genre of their own. This one, like 36 Hours of Hell from the same year, is set in the Pacific, on-location in the Philippines to be more precise. This does make it a little more distinctive from most in the genre which were set in Europe or North Africa. Set during World War II, its story focuses on survivors of the Japanese attack on Manila, including a journalist, a hooker and an Italian soldier. They end up on a Pacific island overrun by the Japanese and are soon joined by a band of Allied soldiers who are in the process of trying to recapture a radar base from the enemy.
Despite the setting, I found this one to be a little too slow moving for my liking. It wasn't especially thrilling or particularly interesting either. I found 36 Hours of Hell to be a better example of this kind of thing to be honest. I expect it will still be of interest to Euro-war film fans though.
Despite the setting, I found this one to be a little too slow moving for my liking. It wasn't especially thrilling or particularly interesting either. I found 36 Hours of Hell to be a better example of this kind of thing to be honest. I expect it will still be of interest to Euro-war film fans though.
During World War II in the Philippines: After a night of partying, two soldiers (Guy MADISON, Maurice POLI) and a beautiful prostitute (Helene CHANEL) are stranded on an island. They don't yet know that it is already occupied by the Japanese. Soon all hell will break loose. The stranded people fight their way through the jungle, meet their own soldiers (Fabio TESTI in an early role) and fight their way to a village by the sea. But there is a surprise lurking in the fine-grained sand...
Effective and hard MacaroniKOMBAT flick that keeps you interested with its impressive jungle and good fight scenes. The film is also known under the titles GRÜNE HÖLLE PAZIFIK, RAIDERS ON THE BLOODY BEACH and A PLACE IN HELL.
Unfortunately, the version on AMAZON PRIME VIDEO is no longer in such good condition and is too dark and blurry in some places. Nevertheless, director Giuseppe VARI has managed to make a war film that is definitely worth seeing.
Effective and hard MacaroniKOMBAT flick that keeps you interested with its impressive jungle and good fight scenes. The film is also known under the titles GRÜNE HÖLLE PAZIFIK, RAIDERS ON THE BLOODY BEACH and A PLACE IN HELL.
Unfortunately, the version on AMAZON PRIME VIDEO is no longer in such good condition and is too dark and blurry in some places. Nevertheless, director Giuseppe VARI has managed to make a war film that is definitely worth seeing.
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesGuy Madison's voice is dubbed by another actor in the English language version.
- VerbindungenFeatured in Dusk to Dawn Drive-In Trash-o-Rama Show Vol. 8 (2002)
Top-Auswahl
Melde dich zum Bewerten an und greife auf die Watchlist für personalisierte Empfehlungen zu.
Details
- Erscheinungsdatum
- Herkunftsland
- Sprache
- Auch bekannt als
- Soldier II - Tote faulen in der Sonne
- Produktionsfirma
- Weitere beteiligte Unternehmen bei IMDbPro anzeigen
- Laufzeit1 Stunde 47 Minuten
- Sound-Mix
- Seitenverhältnis
- 2.35 : 1
Zu dieser Seite beitragen
Bearbeitung vorschlagen oder fehlenden Inhalt hinzufügen
Oberste Lücke
By what name was Tote faulen in der Sonne (1969) officially released in Canada in English?
Antwort