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IMDbPro

Porte de Chine

Original title: China Gate
  • 1957
  • Approved
  • 1h 37m
IMDb RATING
6.2/10
1K
YOUR RATING
Angie Dickinson, Gene Barry, Nat 'King' Cole, and Warren Hsieh in Porte de Chine (1957)
ActionDramaWar

In 1954, during the French Indochina War, an Eurasian female smuggler and a group of French Foreign Legion mercenaries, infiltrate the enemy territory in order to destroy an arms depot.In 1954, during the French Indochina War, an Eurasian female smuggler and a group of French Foreign Legion mercenaries, infiltrate the enemy territory in order to destroy an arms depot.In 1954, during the French Indochina War, an Eurasian female smuggler and a group of French Foreign Legion mercenaries, infiltrate the enemy territory in order to destroy an arms depot.

  • Director
    • Samuel Fuller
  • Writer
    • Samuel Fuller
  • Stars
    • Gene Barry
    • Angie Dickinson
    • Nat 'King' Cole
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.2/10
    1K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Samuel Fuller
    • Writer
      • Samuel Fuller
    • Stars
      • Gene Barry
      • Angie Dickinson
      • Nat 'King' Cole
    • 23User reviews
    • 19Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos31

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    Top cast26

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    Gene Barry
    Gene Barry
    • Sgt. Brock
    Angie Dickinson
    Angie Dickinson
    • Lucky Legs
    Nat 'King' Cole
    Nat 'King' Cole
    • Goldie
    Paul Dubov
    Paul Dubov
    • Capt. Caumont
    Lee Van Cleef
    Lee Van Cleef
    • Maj. Cham
    George Givot
    George Givot
    • Cpl. Pigalle
    Gerald Milton
    Gerald Milton
    • Pvt. Andreades
    Neyle Morrow
    Neyle Morrow
    • Leung
    Marcel Dalio
    Marcel Dalio
    • Father Paul
    Maurice Marsac
    Maurice Marsac
    • Col. De Sars
    Warren Hsieh
    Warren Hsieh
    • The Boy
    Paul Busch
    Paul Busch
    • Cpl. Kruger
    Sasha Harden
    Sasha Harden
    • Pvt. Jaszi
    James Hong
    James Hong
    • Charlie
    Willie Soo Hoo
    • Moi Leader
    • (as William Soo Hoo)
    Walter Soo Hoo
    • Guard
    Weaver Levy
    • Khuan
    Suey Chan
    Suey Chan
    • Monk
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Samuel Fuller
    • Writer
      • Samuel Fuller
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews23

    6.21K
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    Featured reviews

    7norbert-plan-618-715813

    War viewed from the grunts

    The film contains beautiful war scenery with buildings and parts of streets completely destroyed. The other part of the sets are jungle sets built in a studio where the film will take place at night.

    The interest of the film is to show the war in Indochina led by the French. It is about a French army commando with an American who will try to destroy an arms depot to avoid that the French parts of Indochina are bombed by the communists.

    This pretext allows Samuel Fuller to build an effective war film, but also to talk about subjects such as racism and psychological problems related to war.

    Samuel Fuller does not show heroes, because none of the characters are heroes, except perhaps Angie Dickinson who plays an Indochinese woman who has had a child with an American. She helps the commando to get through the jungle to the communist village that houses the weapons.

    One of the curiosities of the film is Lee Van Cleef in a very short role who plays the communist leader of the Indochinese. Curiosity, because it is a character with dialogues (his filmography has often used him in roles with few words).

    Otherwise, the Samuel Fuller system works well: a mix of studio shots, real set shots, documentary stock shots, edited together; or else, the dialogues are ampouled at times, but they are effective. And a rather effective direction of actor who makes that each of the characters has its function. The whole thing works quite well and remains captivating until the end. Obviously one of the messages of the film is also to show the horror, the stupidity and the absurdity of war.

    That is to say that we are not in the subtlety, the messages of Samuel Fuller are well inserted in a very insistent way so that the spectator captures them well.

    All in all, the film remains very interesting, because there are very few films about French soldiers during the Indochina war!
    8cpolster

    Memories

    I remember watching on TV as a teenager, little did I know that a few years later some of the scenes and some of the dangers pictured, one especially, when Goldie (Nate King Cole) stepped on a punji stick, that one day it would it be a real worry.

    To this day, I will not watch any Nam war movies, even though China Gate was about the Indochina War with the French I would never watch again, as I said a few scenes would be too much and bring back memories. The reason I posted this was I just watched a short about Nat King Cole and it reminded me of that movie he was in. I had to read what others had posted about China Gate to see if others felt the same way. USMC, Nam, 68-69.
    8JuguAbraham

    A family film that will be easily mistaken for a war film

    Angie Dickinson is reputed to have said "I was often a lead actress, but never the lead." Even an idiot will see her to be the lead actor and character in China Gate. She has a better role than Gene Barry by a mile.

    I can't claim to have seen a lot of Samuel Fuller directed films--but this is the best I have seen of his to date. The shots with the child at the beginning and the end are very well made. The film may not easily be recognized as a family film but it is essentially one. Is it the only role where Dickinson is on screen as a brunette? Probably so.

    The power of Fuller's writing is evident is these lines "Everbody doesn't carry their lives in the face" and "You are tough enough to handle explosives but not handle life."

    This is the best rounded performance of two actors--Lee Van Cleef and singer Nat "King" Cole, who actually sings the title song.
    rcj5365

    Sam Fuller's film about communist lands misses the mark

    Sam Fuller's worst war film is worth watching-or at least scanning-for several reasons. The most obvious is the bizarre casting. Then there is the unpersuasive attempt to recreate Vietnam on a studio backlot,which would be duplicated with not much more success years later by Stanley Kubrick in Full Metal Jacket(1987). Finally,both the screw loose plotting and the rabid Red-baiting have become unintentionally comic with the passage of time. This was in fact Sam Fuller's first-ever film for a major Hollywood studio(Twentieth Century-Fox)and his first to be presented in full widescreen Cinemascope.

    A voice-over introduction sets a hyperbolic tone: "With the end of the Korean War,France was left alone to hold the hottest front in the world and became the barrier between Communism and the rape of Asia." Moments later,we learn that because the dirty Reds have put the Vietnamese town of Sun Toy under siege,a little boy's(Warren Hsieh)pet puppy is about to be eaten! Presumably because 1957,American audiences did not know much about the country or the war,Fuller spends most of the first act spinning out a fanciful interpretation of the situation,blaming many of the country's problems on the Chinese Communists and their massive underground ammunition bunker at China Gate. The French Legionaires decide it to blow it up,and call in explosives expert Sgt. Brock(Gene Barry). The only person who can lead them from Sun Toy to China Gate is Lucky Legs(Angie Dickinson in one of her first major roles),who is allegedly half-Chinese. She's also Brock's ex,and if that weren't enough,the kid with the puppy is their son! That's doubly hard to believe because the stars generate all the sexual chemistry of two wet paper towels. Not to mention in 1957,white actors or actresses were playing roles of minorities,whether Latino or Asian or Arabian were stereotypical then.

    After that's been established,the already pokey action stops cold for Goldie(Nat "King" Cole) to not only demonstrate his acting abilities but also sings the theme song. Then off they go,with a half dozen or so more Legionaires and a couple of boxes of highly explosive detonators. At every opportunity.one or more of these guys bears his tortured soul,and as they get closer to the Chicorns,it becomes apparent that our girl Lucky has been a sort of one-woman welcoming committee whose mission is to boost morale in every way that she can. All the guys know her because she makes regular visits to the Chinese to deliver cognac and sex,even though her main squeeze is the commander of China Gate,Maj. Cham(Lee Van Cleef),yet another half-Chinese who is in line for a promotion to Moscow.

    With only a few exceptions,the combat scenes are as phony as the rest. They were filmed on cheap-looking sets with little originality or energy. Nothing on screen comes as close to Fuller's better work in "The Steel Helmet",and "The Big Red One". Still,"China Gate" is instructive. It's a perfect example of Hollywood's attempt to turn every post-war conflict into another World War II. When the film does try to draw any distinctions,it still reduces the action to good guys versus bad guys. If a few Americans will just go over there and blow up stuff and shoot some guys,those benighted foreigners will see the error of their ways and everything will straighten itself out. That's a bit of oversimplification,but given the loopy politics of China Gate,it's not too far off the mark. It misses it.
    7adrianovasconcelos

    Interesting take on French Indochina just before Vietnam

    As any historian will tell you, France ruled over Indochina - comprising three territories known today as Laos, Cambodia and Vietnam - until its military defeat at Dien Bien Phu in 1954, causing the Ho Chi Mihn-led communists to expand from the northern part of Vietnam, Hanoi as capital, to take the southern part, with Saigon the capital.

    Samuel Fuller built up a reputation as writer of such staple screenplays as THE STEEL HELMET, SHOCKPROOF, HELL AND HIGH WATER, and director of his acknowledged masterpiece, PICKUP ON SOUTH STREET (1953).

    CHINA GATE (1957) does not rate as highly as any of those efforts, but it provides a most interesting insight into the last days of French rule over Indochina and the circumstances that led to the United States deploying forces in southern Vietnam to prevent it falling under the communist sphere.

    The screenplay suffers from unevenness but generally holds your attention by depicting the perils of a war against a determined enemy, and, especially, by curvaceous Angie Dickinson, one of the most beautiful women ever to grace the screen and soon to become closely connected with Frank Sinatra, Peter Lawford and President John F Kennedy. In this film, she plays the half-breed who has had a child by Gene Barry and wants that child to become a US citizen, and to that end she is willing to make all sacrifices.

    Gene Barry leaves something to be desired. He is not a bad actor, he looks the part of a soldier, but somehow he looks short-changed throughout. Unexpectedly to me, because the only other part I saw him in was in CAT BALLOU singing the film's theme ballad, the famous crooner Nat King Cole delivers a far more convincing performance as a fellow soldier.

    Highly competent B&W cinematography by Joseph Biroc.

    Warrants watching, especially if you are interested in what led to the USA's decision to deploy military forces in Nam. In my humble view, THE DEER HUNTER and APOCALIPSE NOW are the masterpieces that reflect best the consequences of that ill-fated move. 7/10.

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      The film was never released in France because the French government at the time deemed the film's prologue too harsh towards France. The French Consul-General in Los Angeles, Romain Gary, asked producer / director Samuel Fuller to change the film's prologue but Fuller refused.
    • Goofs
      Film stock flipped when Lucky Legs and Sgt. Brock go into the tree house. The sniper has a left handed rifle, Sgt. Brock's knife is on the wrong side, and his watch has moved to his right wrist.
    • Crazy credits
      Music by Victor Young Extended by his old friend Max Steiner
    • Connections
      Featured in The Typewriter, the Rifle & the Movie Camera (1996)
    • Soundtracks
      China Gate
      Music by Victor Young

      Lyrics Harold Adamson

      Sung by Nat 'King' Cole

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    FAQ14

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • April 18, 1958 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Las puertas rojas
    • Filming locations
      • Bronson Caves, Bronson Canyon, Griffith Park - 4730 Crystal Springs Drive, Los Angeles, California, USA
    • Production company
      • Globe Enterprises
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • $150,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 37m(97 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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