The China Burma India theater has gotten short shrift from Hollywood. Merrill’s Marauders have gotten a couple of films, but the rest of the theater has been ignored.
A lot of the Chinese theater—the Defense of Sihang Warehouse came to mind immediately, but a refresher reveals that it was technically more properly in the Sino-Japanese War, and actually had two movies made about it, the last in 1976.
And, as a matter of fact, Men Behind the Sun is the closest thing I could think of to feature the Japanese use of chemical or biological weapons. And it mostly focused on development and testing of the latter.
Some dramatic WWII RL incidents (that I can’t give solid links to right now) Can anybody recall seeing movies about them?
That Japanese doctor who’d gone to med school in the US, then was killed in the Aleutians (by one account while trying to surrender)
The German U-Boat captain who was pulling a boatload of survivors of a ship he’d sunk into the shipping lanes where they’d have a better chance, but was attacked by an Allied plane nonetheless.
The African-American working on the Burma Road who’d taken too much crap off the whites, so he went renegade and lived with the head hunters.
The German saboteurs who landed in the US and mostly all had no intention of doing any damage, but were hanged anyway.
(Actually, we don’t come off looking too good in any of these.)
Even though this caused myriad casualties (including what has remained the largest single maritime loss of life in human history) it is poorly documented.
I don’t think there’s ever been a movie about the Battle of Manila. Which is somewhat surprising because it was a major battle with plenty of dramatic events and it involved American forces.
As I mentioned up thread if you listen to Hollywood the Pacific theater was strictly a Marine operation. The Army contribution is largely ignored. This is an example. The Battle of Manilla and much of the Phillipine campaign was U.S. Army.
When are they going to make a film about Juan Pujol aka GARBO? It would seem made for Hollywood, although it might be that the reality was just too hard to believe. There have been scripts written, and some attempts to get a film off the ground, but nothing has happened so far. It would have to be done by a director with a dark sense of humor.
To satisfy one’s carnophilia, how about the battle of Ramree Island in Burma? One thousand Japanese soldiers hunkered down on the beach ready for a British invasion, bombardment by a battleship kills 100 of them and forces them to cross a 16-mile stretch of swamp infested by giant crocodiles, the pursuing British soldiers urge them to surrender but instead are treated to a night of ghastly sounds of men being eaten by crocodiles. The movie can even segui to the present where a Japanese writer publishes a novel about the whole thing (“Dragon of the Mangroves.”)
How about the Battle of Hong Kong? Over 2,000 allied soldiers killed, 10,000 captured, 4,000 civilians killed.
I’m trying to remember a western film about the Battle for Okinawa, but one’s not coming to me. Have there been any? I know there’s a Japanese movie about it. But that was a huge battle - 12,000 allied deaths, 38,000 wounded, 110,000 Japanese soldiers killed, 40,000 civilians.
There was a TV miniseries in Canada about the Dieppe raid, but have any major WWII films covered it?
There was a John Wayne film called “Flying Tigers” from 1942. Also, the TV movie “Baa Baa Blacksheep” followed the career of Greg “Pappy” Boyington, who started WWII with the Flying Tigers in Burma and the movie covers that quite a bit. The TV series ‘Baa Baa Blacksheep’ followed that with extensive stories about the air battles in the South Pacific.
John Woo was working on a movie about the Flying Tigers, but that appears to be dead. There’s a TV miniseries in the works that may star Harrison Ford.
There was a movie called “Raiders of Leyte Gulf”, and I think the battle was depicted one of the big war movies of the '70’s like “Midway” or “Tora Tora Tora!”. Or maybe I just remember stock footage from Leyte Gulf being used.