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IMDbPro

Do Inferno para a Eternidade

Título original: Hell to Eternity
  • 1960
  • Approved
  • 2 h 11 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
6,9/10
1,7 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Do Inferno para a Eternidade (1960)
Official Trailer
Reproduzir trailer3:13
1 vídeo
71 fotos
BiografiaDramaGuerra

Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaWhen his adoptive Japanese-American family is sent to Manzanar after Pearl Harbor, a young Chicano enlists in the marines to become a hero in the Battle of Saipan.When his adoptive Japanese-American family is sent to Manzanar after Pearl Harbor, a young Chicano enlists in the marines to become a hero in the Battle of Saipan.When his adoptive Japanese-American family is sent to Manzanar after Pearl Harbor, a young Chicano enlists in the marines to become a hero in the Battle of Saipan.

  • Direção
    • Phil Karlson
  • Roteiristas
    • Ted Sherdeman
    • Walter Roeber Schmidt
    • Gil Doud
  • Artistas
    • Jeffrey Hunter
    • David Janssen
    • Vic Damone
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
    6,9/10
    1,7 mil
    SUA AVALIAÇÃO
    • Direção
      • Phil Karlson
    • Roteiristas
      • Ted Sherdeman
      • Walter Roeber Schmidt
      • Gil Doud
    • Artistas
      • Jeffrey Hunter
      • David Janssen
      • Vic Damone
    • 46Avaliações de usuários
    • 10Avaliações da crítica
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
    • Prêmios
      • 3 indicações no total

    Vídeos1

    Hell to Eternity
    Trailer 3:13
    Hell to Eternity

    Fotos71

    Ver pôster
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    + 65
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    Elenco principal21

    Editar
    Jeffrey Hunter
    Jeffrey Hunter
    • Guy Gabaldon
    David Janssen
    David Janssen
    • Sgt. Bill Hazen
    Vic Damone
    Vic Damone
    • Cpl. Pete Lewis
    Patricia Owens
    Patricia Owens
    • Sheila Lincoln
    Richard Eyer
    Richard Eyer
    • Guy as a Boy
    John Larch
    John Larch
    • Capt. Schwabe
    Bill Williams
    Bill Williams
    • Leonard
    Michi Kobi
    Michi Kobi
    • Sono
    George Shibata
    • Kaz Une
    Reiko Sato
    Reiko Sato
    • Famika
    Richard Gardner
    • Polaski
    Bob Okazaki
    • Papa Une
    George Matsui
    • George as a Boy
    Nicky Blair
    Nicky Blair
    • Martini
    George Takei
    George Takei
    • George Une
    • (as George Takai)
    Miiko Taka
    Miiko Taka
    • Ester
    Tsuru Aoki
    Tsuru Aoki
    • Mother Une
    • (as Tsuru Aoki Hayakawa)
    Sessue Hayakawa
    Sessue Hayakawa
    • Gen. Matsui
    • Direção
      • Phil Karlson
    • Roteiristas
      • Ted Sherdeman
      • Walter Roeber Schmidt
      • Gil Doud
    • Elenco e equipe completos
    • Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro

    Avaliações de usuários46

    6,91.6K
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    Avaliações em destaque

    8texohio

    Hell to Eternity

    I remember seeing this movie many times in the 60's and 70's at the theater, on television, and on VHS. I grew up watching WWII movies and remember this as one that had a special appeal to me. I guess because I lived in Japan in the 1950's and visited some of the locales from the movie. The acting was well done and the story was well told and realistic. It is interesting to view the cast when they were relatively new to movies. David Janssen and Vic Damone stand out in my memory and Jeffrey Hunter was always a class act in films. I highly recommend seeing it if possible. I do find it hard to believe that it is called a "lost classic" and runs so high for a copy. Anyone know where I could get a cheaper copy, I would like to hear from you.
    8roscian-1

    Sadly Guy Gabaldon has past away

    Guy Gabaldon died Thursday August 31, 2006 at his home in Old Town, Fla. He was 80. The cause was a heart attack.

    From an L.A. Times Article:

    The actions that earned Gabaldon the nickname "the Pied Piper of Saipan" took place in June 1944 on the 25-mile-long island in the Northern Marianas in the western Pacific Ocean. Marine Pvt. Gabaldon killed 33 Japanese soldiers on his first day of combat, he said. Later he changed tactics.

    Disobeying orders, Gabaldon went behind enemy lines by himself looking for Japanese. He "daringly entered enemy caves, pillboxes, buildings and jungle brush, frequently in the face of hostile fire," reads the citation that went along with his Navy Cross. The goal was to get the Japanese to surrender.

    Years later, Gabaldon called his actions foolish, but back then he had reasons to believe he would succeed.

    Many years before, in Boyle Heights (Los Angeles, CA), a Japanese American family had taken in Gabaldon — a wayward boy, prone to trouble — and raised him. He experienced Japanese language, food and culture firsthand.

    During the war years the family was sent to an internment camp and Gabaldon joined the Marines. He used his limited Japanese language skills in his contacts with Japanese soldiers and civilians.
    mpdeaton

    A true story that is drama filled and heartbreaking

    I saw the movie many years ago and would love to have this movie on DVD. Jeffrey Hunter looses his best friend, David Janson, to the enemy and after that develops a deep hatred for the Japeneese. At times risking his own life to flush them out of their hiding places and kill them. At one point where he is watching the japeneese women and children hurl themselves off of the cliffs rather then be captured, he sees his own adopted Japenese family back in the states. An excellent movie that I would go the the movies to see again.
    7secondtake

    Great parts make up for some formulaic stuff in the first half

    Hell to Eternity

    This is the first movie (from Hollywood) to deal with the incarceration of Japanese Americans in 1942 during WWII. Eighteen years is a long time for someone to get a feature together about the problem but in 1960 most of the country didn't know about (or care about) the injustice of this mass sweep of American citizens of Japanese descent. You might say this movie is required viewing just to put that piece into perspective.

    The big flaw of the movie is the simplistic way it presents the situation beginning in the 1930s. An honest, decent (indeed, admirable) Japanese family in California takes in a non-Japanese kid name Guy who comes from a bad home and needs a family. The point is clear: the Japanese family is amazing, generous, and rather typical of immigrant families where the older generation doesn't know English very well and the kids are all assimilated. As stiff as it is in some ways, it's truly touching and a warming, disturbing story.

    Jump ahead to Pearl Harbor and you can see where the conflict is coming. Guy is now enlistment age (as are his Japanese foster brothers, who are fighting in the European theater). What follows is a war movie based somewhat on fact-the unit he eventually joins fights the Japanese, and there is doubt, heroism, and tragedy and it's a well done story. I wonder whether audiences in 1960 quite got into it, so long after the events. (Other WWII movies were still being made, but many are about the exceptional parts of the war, like D-DAy in "The Longest Day" in 1962 or Nazi trials "Judgement in Nuremberg" in 1961.)

    The main character is supposed to be based on a Mexican-American kid, but the actor (Jeffrey Hunter) is a very white American, which adds to the contrast (and meld) between cultures. (Hunter's big fame? He was the captain in the very first Star Trek episode, before Shatner.) He makes a visit to what is supposed to be Manzanar (but they show painfully little of what it would have been like). And he ends up fighting the Japanese because he knows the language.

    Exactly half of the movie is about the lead-up to fighting-lots of chummy interactions, girl chasing in military clubs, and kind of 1960s lightweight entertainment. David Janssen is one of Hunter's sidekicks, and he's really good (he was famous for being the TV star in "The Fugitive"). When the fighting starts the movie clicks into place -in fact, director Phil Karlson is great with smaller budgets and yet keeping an honest intensity to the acting. The fighting is very realistic (mixing in only a small amount of archival footage). And the final impressive crisis between Guy and the remaining Japanese troops is unique and compelling. And the movie builds to this point believably.

    A great movie this is not-but it has great parts, which is more than many movies can offer.
    tcroldan

    Too much Hollywood in order to promote this movie

    Gabaldon was born and raised in Boyle Heights and attended Roosevelt High School with my brother-in-law Edwardo. He was not rejected by the Marines because of his ethnicity (Mexican-American) but because at 5'4" tall he did not meet Marine standards. It should be noted that the Marines were not adverse to recruiting in predominately Chicano communities. Guy was not "raised" by a Japanese family, but he did spend a couple of his teen year's with a Japanese family where he learned some basic Japanese. He was far from fluent in Japanese. However, the Marine Corps recruited him because they believed his knowledge of Japanese would be useful. The movie went to great lengths to hide Guy's true ethnicity. First, he was portrayed by Jeffrey Hunter, whose most notable role was playing 6'tall, blond blue eyed Jesus Christ. Guy described himself as "swarthy." In addition, there is a scene where the mamasan, in order to distinguish him from her Japanese grandchildren, refers to Guy as her "All American son." I once saw the movie on the History Channel. After the movie there was a panel discussion by historians. The final obligatory question was why the movie never mentioned that Guy was Mexican-American. The historian briefly answered that the movie was focused on the treatment of Japanese Americans during WW II and that Guy's ethnicity would have distracted from that. REALLY! Seems to me it would have made the story even more interesting. Typical Hollywood. Part of selling a movie means you have to make a white guy the central character and hero. More Hollywood is the David Jansen part and the party in Hawaii.

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    Enredo

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    Você sabia?

    Editar
    • Curiosidades
      On July 8, 1944, Pfc. Guy Gabaldon single-handedly brought in 800 Japanese prisoners. He is credited with a total of 1,500 from June to August, 1944 from Saipan and Tinian islands.
    • Erros de gravação
      In all of Vic Damone's scenes as Cpl. Pete Lewis, he is seen wearing a very shiny gold bracelet, including in combat scenes. In reality, no person in combat would have been allowed to wear a shiny gold bracelet, nor would they have wanted to, out of concern for the bright glint given off which might betray their position. Damone should have been told to remove the bracelet during filming.
    • Citações

      Capt. Schwabe: Lewis? How's it going? Says here you were shot in the ashcan.

      Pete: Not bad, sir. Could have been a howitzer.

    • Conexões
      Referenced in To Tell the Truth: Tom Poston, Kitty Carlisle, Ralph Bellamy, Polly Bergen, (Guy Gabaldon, Terry Burnett & Alfred Delage - contestants) (1960)

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    • How long is Hell to Eternity?Fornecido pela Alexa

    Detalhes

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    • Data de lançamento
      • 1 de agosto de 1960 (Estados Unidos da América)
    • País de origem
      • Estados Unidos da América
    • Idiomas
      • Inglês
      • Japonês
    • Também conhecido como
      • Hell to Eternity
    • Locações de filme
      • Okinawa, Japão
    • Empresa de produção
      • Atlantic Pictures
    • Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro

    Bilheteria

    Editar
    • Orçamento
      • US$ 800.000 (estimativa)
    Veja informações detalhadas da bilheteria no IMDbPro

    Especificações técnicas

    Editar
    • Tempo de duração
      2 horas 11 minutos
    • Cor
      • Black and White
    • Proporção
      • 1.85 : 1

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