Summaries

This gritty, atmospheric war movie dramatizes a chapter of World War II history in which 10,000 Japanese soldiers, fearing execution if they surrendered, disobeyed their own superiors' orders and barricaded themselves in Manila's Intramuros section along with a thousand or so unfortunate civilians. The walled city-within-the-city was built by Spanish colonialists from 1590 onward. Leading Allied forces trying to wear the trapped Axis troops' resistance down is Jock Mahoney as a gruff American officer carrying a big load of guilt from a prior operation gone wrong. Shot in impressive chiaroscuro-lit black-and-white on location, this was a fairly rare U.S. coproduction at the time, though the Philippines would shortly become a hub for English- language exploitation movies (with co-directors Eddie Romero and Gerardo de Leon among the busiest creators of features designed for both local and overseas audiences). WALLS OF HELL must have been a bittersweet project for de Leon: during WW2 he was forced to make propaganda films by Japanese occupiers even as he secretly worked against them in the underground resistance. - Dennis Harvey

Details

Keywords
  • psychotronic film
  • japanese soldier
  • battle
  • japanese army
  • japanese filipino war
Genres
  • Drama
  • War
Release date Mar 6, 1964
Motion Picture Rating (MPA) Not Rated
Countries of origin United States Philippines
Language English Filipino Tagalog
Filming locations Philippines
Production companies Hemisphere Pictures Filipinas Pictures Lynn-Romero Productions

Box office

Tech specs

Runtime 1h 28m
Color Black and White
Sound mix Mono
Aspect ratio 1.66 : 1

Synopsis

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