Hell in the Pacific (1968) USA
Hell in the Pacific Image Cover
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Director:John Boorman
Studio:MGM (Video & DVD)
Producer:Henry G. Saperstein, Reuben Bercovitch, Selig J. Seligman
Writer:Reuben Bercovitch, Alexander Jacobs
Rating:4
Rated:G
Date Added:2006-03-27
ASIN:B0001GF2FQ
UPC:0027616905819
Price:$14.94
Genre:Classics
Release:2004-05-24
IMDb:0063056
Duration:103
Picture Format:Widescreen
Aspect Ratio:2.35:1
Sound:Dolby Digital 2.0 Mono
Languages:English, Dolby Digital 2.0 Mono
Subtitles:English, Spanish, French
Features:Letterboxed
Subtitled
John Boorman  ...  (Director)
Reuben Bercovitch, Alexander Jacobs  ...  (Writer)
 
Lee Marvin  ...  American Pilot
ToshirĂ´ Mifune  ...  Captain Tsuruhiko Kuroda
Conrad L. Hall  ...  Cinematographer
Thomas Stanford  ...  Editor
Comments: They hunted each other as enemies...they tormented each other as savages...they faced each other as men!

Summary: Lone Japanese soldier Toshiro Mifune diligently scans the ocean from his island lookout as he must have thousands of times before, but this time he spies an abandoned life raft resting on a rocky bluff. Within minutes he's face to face with American sea-wreck survivor Lee Marvin and the two begin an elaborate game of cat and mouse. Director John Boorman presents this two-man war as a deadly game between a pair of overgrown children, who finally tire of it (as kids will) and settle into tolerated co-existence and then even something resembling a friendship. With impressionistic strokes, Boorman paints a lush tropical paradise in colors you can drink from the screen, capturing the texture of their experience as refracted through the cinema: the look of the island as seen through the haze of smoke, the sound of a sudden rainstorm as it hushes the island in a calming roar, the timelessness of life outside of civilization. The story seems almost secondary, an allegorical drama that comes alive in the excellent performances by Marvin and Mifune (who soon enough converse despite their complete inability to understand each other's language) and the visceral immediacy of Boorman's gorgeous widescreen images. Hell in the Pacific is not a tale told as much as a film experienced. --Sean Axmaker