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B. Back Door to Hell; Back to Bataan; The Bamboo Blonde; Bataan (film) Bataan Rescue; Battle at Bloody Beach; Battle Cry (film) Battle of Blood Island; Battle of Okinawa (film)
Comedy. American PT boat crew in Pacific Ocean theater of World War II and New Caledonia: 1964 Philippines The Guns of Corregidor † Mga Kanyon ng Corregidor: Jose de Villa, Mar S. Torres: Allied forces retake Philippine island from Japanese in the Battle of Corregidor: 1964 Yugoslavia Nikoletina Bursać: Nikoletina Bursać: Branko Bauer
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The film or miniseries must be concerned with World War II (or the War of Ethiopia and the Sino-Japanese War) and include events which feature as a part of the war effort. For short films, see the List of World War II short films. For documentaries, see the List of World War II documentary films and the List of Allied propaganda films of World ...
Operation Pacific is a 1951 black-and-white World War II submarine war drama from Warner Bros. Pictures, produced by Louis Edelman, and written as well as directed by George Waggner. John Wayne and Patricia Neal star and Ward Bond and Philip Carey play supporting roles. Much of the film is set aboard a Gato-class submarine.
This is a list of movies, grouped by the era in which they were made, in which a submarine plays a significant role in the storyline. [2] From 1910 to 2010, some 150 fictional films about submarines have been made. [1] Many of these are set in World War I, World War II, or the Cold War; others depict relatively "authentic" terrorist scenarios. [1]
The Sea Chase is a 1955 World War II drama film starring John Wayne and Lana Turner, and featuring David Farrar, Lyle Bettger, and Tab Hunter.It was directed by John Farrow from a screenplay by James Warner Bellah and John Twist based on the novel of the same name by Andrew Geer.
[6] Variety wrote that "[i]n contrast to many professedly anti-war films, Beach Red [sic] is indisputably sincere in its war is hell message." [7] In a capsule review published many years after the film debuted, Time Out London wrote, "Wilde's neglected WWII movie is an allegory about the futility and the carnage of Vietnam. ... The movie is ...