The_Bamboo_Prison

<i>The Bamboo Prison</i>

The Bamboo Prison

1954 film by Lewis Seiler


The Bamboo Prison is a 1954 American Korean Wardrama film directed by Lewis Seiler and starring Robert Francis, Brian Keith, Dianne Foster, and Jerome Courtland. The working title was I Was a Prisoner in Korea. The US Army denied their co-operation to the producers.[1]

Quick Facts The Bamboo Prison, Directed by ...

Due to Cold War hysteria, the film was falsely accused of communist sympathies, with several US cities banning it, although the film is clear that Sgt. Rand was actually a spy for the US, pretending to be a sympathizer.[2]

The brainwashing and abuse of American prisoners of war during the Korean War was also dramatized in P.O.W. (1953), Prisoner of War (1954, starring Ronald Reagan), and The Manchurian Candidate (1962, starring Frank Sinatra).

Plot

A group of American soldiers is held in a prisoner-of-war camp in North Korea in the final phase of the Korean War. Prisoners who show sympathy with the communist cause are given special privileges, but are understandably hated by the other prisoners, who see them as traitors.

The camp "brain-washer", Comrade Clayton, is permitted to have his beautiful Russian wife, Tanya, live in camp. Sergeant Rand, one of the communist sympathizers (known as Progressives), falls in love with her, and his special privileges permit him to go to her house. However, she is not a communist sympathizer. Meanwhile. the camp priest, Father Dolan, is actually an impostor, trying to glean information through confession. Despite their differences, Rand helps his rival, Corporal Brady, to escape.

At the end of the war, Sgt. Rand stays in North Korea as an American intelligence agent posing as a man disillusioned with the capitalist system and its exploitation of the working man.

Cast


References

  1. p. 65 Young, Charles S. Name, Rank, and Serial Number: Exploiting Korean War POWs at Home and Abroad Oxford University Press, 1 Apr 2014
  2. Hollywood Diplomacy H S Chung



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