Fritz Lang's "American Guerrilla in the Philippines" (1950) feat. Tyrone Power

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  • Опубликовано: 23 авг 2024

Комментарии • 370

  • @tesstolentino8041
    @tesstolentino8041 10 месяцев назад +66

    Thanks for sharing this! My mother told us her experience during this war, she was only 7 yo then, how they walked, run, hid in the mountains of Mindanao. Her being the eldest had to carry sack of potatoes, rice and others stuff plus her brother in the back and a sister on her front also. That period of her life lasted for almost 3yrs(1942-1945). She learned how to understand and spoken some Japanese and English language without even attending any schooling at that time, imagine that. So much respect for our elders for what they've been through in their life before our generations. Hopefully I will be able to visit Corregidor and Leyte this January/Feb visit to the Philippines. So much history in those places.

    • @DonaldPBorchersOG
      @DonaldPBorchersOG  9 месяцев назад +5

      Thank you for sharing your story. And thanks for watching!

    • @kiasax2
      @kiasax2 7 месяцев назад +5

      What a terrible time for your mom and family. Blessings to you and yours.

    • @libhater651
      @libhater651 6 месяцев назад +3

      My wife is from Leyte, and her family endured the same kind of story. Her older siblings who were young at the time would have to hide in caves, and American soldiers would bring them supplies. I am still working on her father's story of the conflict. He didn't share that with his children.

    • @AlejandroGermanRodriguez
      @AlejandroGermanRodriguez 6 месяцев назад

      When I read about your experience and think about my children who believe the world is over if WIFI is not working.

    • @DavidRice111
      @DavidRice111 4 месяца назад

      Yeah, and in their 'gratitude', the Filipino govt. ran the U.S. out of Subic Bay in 1992! With China trying to muscle in today, I bet they regret THAT idiotic decision!

  • @cordelyeran7206
    @cordelyeran7206 4 месяца назад +11

    Who's watching 2024, i miss my family then suddenly i came here.. I remember my grandfather story during ww2 My grandfather helped those wounded soldiers during the war.. 😊Its a long story then... Until now i still remember my late great grandfather 💖

  • @billsmith5593
    @billsmith5593 8 месяцев назад +30

    My dad was a army physician after his service in Okinawa he was dispatched to establish a hospital in Manila. I still have the pic of him with his Philippine staff. I served in th PI during Vietnam era.

  • @musakeros30
    @musakeros30 10 месяцев назад +40

    I'm here in Leyte. My Grand Father was a WWII veteran. I was 9 years old when my Grandpa passed away. I saw his uniform and medals in his "KABAN" a wooden box for safe keeping a documents. I used to wear his blue hat. I was informed by my grade 2 teacher that my grandpa was a soldier and a corporal. My grandpa confirmed it but he never told us anything about his life during the war. He gave his revolver to my father but we lost it when we transferred residence. He was an untold hero and I am planning to create a statue of him to be installed in the place where his house stood before.

    • @DonaldPBorchersOG
      @DonaldPBorchersOG  10 месяцев назад +3

      Thank you for sharing that.

    • @GOYONGGIJOE
      @GOYONGGIJOE 6 месяцев назад +3

      My father birthplace Tacloban. He was a Guerilla fighter during World War II under famous Guerilla Commander Colonel Ruperto Kangleon after the war my father enlisted in US Army and he retired 1975. We immigrated in the US 1978. I enlisted in US Army 1978 and I retired 1999.

    • @TennesseeHomesteadUSA
      @TennesseeHomesteadUSA 4 месяца назад +1

      Mabuhay !

  • @peterlutz7191
    @peterlutz7191 10 месяцев назад +21

    Thank you for posting this forgotten gem!

  • @michaelcombs24
    @michaelcombs24 Год назад +63

    I was stationed in the Philippines in the 70's. Fourth generation to be stationed there. The people are EXTREMELY polite and friendly. I've been to some of the places that were shown in the movie. Haven't been back since 1979. It was an enjoyable experience.

    • @DonaldPBorchersOG
      @DonaldPBorchersOG  Год назад +3

      Thanks for sharing that.

    • @allandavis8201
      @allandavis8201 11 месяцев назад +5

      1979, that was an excellent year, the year I joined the Royal Air Force (RAF), and then spent 24 years going to many many wonderful places and met many friendly and hospitable people, but unfortunately I never had the chance to go to the Philippines 🇵🇭 or any of that particular region, I think the closest I got was Saudi Arabia 🇸🇦, and in relation to the Philippines it might as well be on the moon 🌙, and even more unfortunately now that I have been forced to retire due to ill health it can never happen now, I really wanted to see the battlefields that brought freedom back to the Philippines 🇵🇭 people from the tyranny of the Japanese Empire.

    • @michaelcombs24
      @michaelcombs24 11 месяцев назад +4

      @@allandavis8201 my dad's father was there three times. At Manila Bay, then the first and second Filipino Insurrection. Before he passed away I took photos of a gun emplacement he'd helped build in 1902. My dad was there taking it back from the Japanese and I was there making sure russia didn't take it

    • @allandavis8201
      @allandavis8201 11 месяцев назад +5

      I have watched this movie before but in B&W (I think) and as I recall it is an excellent film, even with the romantic scenes and the military actions being a little shaky on deportment and behaviour. Whenever I watch a film depicting the war in the Pacific Theatre I do get a feeling of the evil that the Japanese committed, and the bravery of those who stayed in their occupied countries to fight the enemy, the very brave men who fought and died in the operations to liberate them, the unsung heroes like the coast watchers who risked their lives on a daily basis to provide intelligence gathering stations for the allied forces, but unfortunately I don’t think 💭 that if, or perhaps I should say when, a world military conflict happens the fighting age generations will not be so quick to stand up and be counted, not all of them but a vast majority will be reticent in even fighting for their own country let alone any other sovereign nations that need help, with the best will in the world the allied nations standing military forces would be sufficient and voluntarily enlisted can’t possibly fill the void, leaving only conscription, and the last time any allied nation had to invoke conscription it didn’t work out so well, just going to show that even in the 60s-70s those generations of fighting age men, and at that time women who served as nurses and other non-combatant roles, were very reticent and even violent in their opposition towards the war, I don’t believe that they were cowards (or not all) but rather they thought going to war again was the wrong thing to do, it is a good job the “greatest generation” thought differently and were prepared to sacrifice their lives for the rest of the world, especially as for most of them they were fighting to free countries that they probably had never heard off and couldn’t point to on a map.
      I apologise for my long comment but I get a bit carried away sometimes, it’s the medication I have to take, honestly. I will try not to write anymore, but can’t promise, but for now I have put my soapbox away, vented my spleen and written my latest novel. 🤣😀👍🇬🇧🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿🇺🇸🇺🇦

    • @michaelcombs24
      @michaelcombs24 11 месяцев назад +2

      No a problem. I spent time in London at the Embassy. Partied with the Royal Marine Commandos. I VAGUELY remember the last couple of days. Cheers Mate

  • @martyandrus5413
    @martyandrus5413 Год назад +29

    I love this movie my father was a guerilla work with American he said they call him scout he name me after his friend Mabuhay Mabuhay

  • @nyoimanis
    @nyoimanis Год назад +26

    What an amazing movie!
    Greet from Philippines's neighbor, Indonesia❤

  • @iratitlinger
    @iratitlinger Год назад +38

    I am 76, as a kid I fell in love with a Micheline Prelle, beautiful woman, beautiful soul & heart.

  • @criticaltheories5222
    @criticaltheories5222 Год назад +77

    The Americans have recently redeployed its naval power to the Philippines to counter Chinese aggression.

    • @DonaldPBorchersOG
      @DonaldPBorchersOG  Год назад +6

      Thanks for clocking in with this.

    • @nomadmarauder-dw9re
      @nomadmarauder-dw9re 9 месяцев назад +3

      ​@@DonaldPBorchersOGy'all pay attention. This crap may come in handy soon. hahahahs😊😮😢😂

    • @angloaust1575
      @angloaust1575 8 месяцев назад

      Times have changed
      In 1898 the americans were
      The aggressors
      Then in 1942 the japanese were!

    • @thomaswilson8634
      @thomaswilson8634 7 месяцев назад +13

      Its only a token force compared to the 70s n 80s. About 1/10 the size. We gave all the bases to the in power government the leases were up. The Chinese know that. They know where every ship, plane, submarine, and man is at all times. Just think we support them every time we go to grocery store , an Walmart and everywhere retail store. We brought it on ourselves

    • @pacificopanogalinga81
      @pacificopanogalinga81 7 месяцев назад +2

      )❤

  • @edgarborda2748
    @edgarborda2748 Год назад +41

    NOSTALGIC MOVIE FOR ME as it reminded me that my father was captured with the Pilipino and American soldiers and my
    father was one of the prisoners in the BATAAN DEATH MARCH where he got his TUBERCULOSIS that turned to be "miliary"
    tuberculosis that caused his death with an undiagnosed PTSD. Very GOOD WAR ROMANCE DRAMA. Watching from Illinois
    USA. 08-13-2023. Early morning here now. Good Night and TO ALL PLEASE BE SAFE ALWAYS.

    • @DonaldPBorchersOG
      @DonaldPBorchersOG  Год назад +4

      Thank you for sharing that.

    • @jaredelizardo201
      @jaredelizardo201 Год назад +2

      Wow@edgarborda2748 he survived the March only too die because of tb/ptsd that's crazy.

    • @DonaldPBorchersOG
      @DonaldPBorchersOG  Год назад +1

      @@jaredelizardo201 Welcome.

    • @jaredelizardo201
      @jaredelizardo201 Год назад +6

      All the love too@edgarbroda2748&his family your father was a true hero my her rest in peace and be bathed in God's holy light.

    • @jaredelizardo201
      @jaredelizardo201 Год назад +3

      @@DonaldPBorchersOG your welcome.

  • @jayglithero524
    @jayglithero524 7 месяцев назад +6

    My father invaded Luzon at Lingayan Gulf on January 9, 1945. He spent the rest of his service in the Philippines until his discharge in 1946. He liked the Philippino people, and brought home two of those butterfly knives.

    • @DonaldPBorchersOG
      @DonaldPBorchersOG  4 месяца назад +1

      God Bless your Father. Thanks for his service. Welcome.

  • @CraigGoldsberry-vx7re
    @CraigGoldsberry-vx7re Год назад +6

    I was there 5 years ago I think maybe 4 ....I was in Bacolod ...my wife is from Budkidnon province in Mindanao. Trying to get back now to Davao . They are the most friendliest people ever

  • @nobrenobre1
    @nobrenobre1 Год назад +32

    Micheline Presle, she's still alive, she's 100 years now! For this movie, she was 28 she looks older, and after 40 she looks younger.

    • @DonaldPBorchersOG
      @DonaldPBorchersOG  Год назад +1

      Thanks for the visit!

    • @ach2lieber
      @ach2lieber 6 месяцев назад

      She's drop dead gorgeous, and so elegant.

    • @Amtcboy
      @Amtcboy 4 месяца назад +2

      @@ach2lieber
      Dead alright.
      Died last Feb 2024, 101 years old.
      Bless her.

  • @dougmoore5252
    @dougmoore5252 Год назад +13

    Thank you for this wonderful film!

    • @DonaldPBorchersOG
      @DonaldPBorchersOG  Год назад +1

      Welcome. I post war movies here: ruclips.net/p/PLk3CReZFhoBfTLfRUxFNzKZgdMZ0Bd2vA

  • @dietpepsivanilla3095
    @dietpepsivanilla3095 5 месяцев назад +5

    RIP Micheline Presle. She died last month at a young 101.

  • @raymundosayo421
    @raymundosayo421 Год назад +21

    I remember a remarkable filipino actor named Cris de Vera as a Japanese officer searching for palmer. This film was directed by the great Fritz Lang (Metropolis, 1927)

    • @DonaldPBorchersOG
      @DonaldPBorchersOG  Год назад +3

      Welcome. I post Fritz Lang movies here: ruclips.net/p/PLk3CReZFhoBfWYzkr3QBqLZZqi3uPJLl8

    • @raymundosayo421
      @raymundosayo421 Год назад +3

      Thanks Sir Donald! 👍👍👍

    • @hawaiib8
      @hawaiib8 10 месяцев назад +2

      I stopped over in the phillipines prior to going to my new assignment in vietnam i went to a small store in manila and one can cornbeef was 7 dollars this was in 1972 I can imagine how much that can of cornbeef cost now

    • @willsullivan9673
      @willsullivan9673 10 месяцев назад +1

      I was there 64-67 off and on with leave from Nam , very inexpensive then but on our pay it was great .

  • @mikelavelle5019
    @mikelavelle5019 Год назад +27

    My Wife is translating the Waray that the Filipinos are speaking in the movie to me. She is from Catbalogan Samar.

  • @1LSWilliam
    @1LSWilliam 7 месяцев назад +4

    No idea who this French actress is, but her radiant glamor before the camera is unmatched. She might as well be an angel from Heaven.

  • @RonOside
    @RonOside 7 месяцев назад +6

    28:03 The movie captures the Filipino persona very accurately. The fierce loyalty they express, the fact they mean what they say and would give you their last slice of bread. A truly noble, amazingly brave - and honorable culture. MacArthur certainly saw that just like I did when stationed there for four months in 1973. It's easy to fall in love with these people.

  • @mikeyoung1363
    @mikeyoung1363 4 месяца назад +2

    There's a lot of ex servicemen living in or near Subic Bay, Philippines. Mostly retired Marines that served there back in the day and returned on retirement. All good guys and proud to have served.

  • @user-xy2bc9ms2c
    @user-xy2bc9ms2c 21 день назад +1

    Always a great movie, I have the book stuck away somewhere and have read through it several times. A few years ago, I was fortunate enough to be able to purchase some of the actual, homemade paper money they used during these times .. a priceless treasure to me! I can only hope and pray that our younger generations still have some of the courage and will-to-sacrifice that led to our country's eventual victory over the evil that gripped the world and still continues to exist today. Thank you for providing this wonderful movie!

  • @EVILDR235
    @EVILDR235 8 месяцев назад +8

    My wife's father is in this movie and has a speaking part. My wife's mother was around while they were filming this movie. She took some pictures of Tyrome Power when they weren't filming and both my wife's parents played some tennis with Mr. Power. My wife was born in Olongapo in the Phillippines a year earlier than this movie came out.

    • @DonaldPBorchersOG
      @DonaldPBorchersOG  8 месяцев назад +1

      Thanks for sharing your story.

    • @Amtcboy
      @Amtcboy 4 месяца назад +1

      Which was he in the movie?

    • @EVILDR235
      @EVILDR235 4 месяца назад

      @@Amtcboy At 132.57 in the movie, he is the sailor in the middle of the picture standing behind the radio man who is sitting down.

    • @Amtcboy
      @Amtcboy 4 месяца назад

      @@EVILDR235
      “Okay, this is it. Not enough. Huh.”
      Big feller.

  • @vmax42dave
    @vmax42dave 11 месяцев назад +10

    Very enjoyable - 17 years in the PI as an Expat, lived in Samar, Subic and La Union. Traveled around Bataan and Corregidor, Cabanatuan Prison Camp ,and of course Tacloban.. 👍

  • @DanCamposano-hl1yf
    @DanCamposano-hl1yf 27 дней назад +1

    My late father was too young to serve with the guerrilla forces. My great uncle was missing in action during the Battle of Bataan. God bless America for liberating the Commonwealth of the Philippines.

  • @fractalmadness9253
    @fractalmadness9253 10 месяцев назад +10

    Read this book a long time ago. He actually ditched his señorita when the war was over.

  • @UKbaseflamingheartforneedy
    @UKbaseflamingheartforneedy Год назад +10

    🎉🎉🎉🙋‍♂️🍻I'm very proud to be a Filipino!!! mabuhayyyy!!!

  • @fredobyahero
    @fredobyahero 11 месяцев назад +11

    I remember my Lolo he was a Guirilla in Leyte

  • @logcabinschool
    @logcabinschool 9 месяцев назад +5

    Every American and freedom-loving human being should watch this and learn lessons from those that were there.

  • @UKbaseflamingheartforneedy
    @UKbaseflamingheartforneedy Год назад +6

    Mabuhay ang pinoy,, fantastic film! BRAVO 👏👏👏👏👏👍🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟

  • @CharlieArrojado-ne1gq
    @CharlieArrojado-ne1gq 10 месяцев назад +5

    I love also this movie my father was a Guerilla in Capiz & iloilo

    • @DonaldPBorchersOG
      @DonaldPBorchersOG  9 месяцев назад

      Thanks for sharing, and for watching. Welcome.

  • @ebayerr
    @ebayerr 3 месяца назад +2

    Micheline Presle just recently passed in February 2024.
    She was 101 years old.

  • @emmarubiso4129
    @emmarubiso4129 Год назад +4

    Thank you so much ❤❤❤❤ for your helpful to our country sir 🙏 America 🇺🇸

  • @dominadorandres-kh6qf
    @dominadorandres-kh6qf 6 месяцев назад +1

    Thanks so much for uploading this video ❤️❤️❤️

  • @youaregodspursuit
    @youaregodspursuit Год назад +12

    I do not believe we can do anything but applaud the people who fought the Japanese with what they had. We were not there and cannot judge anything they did. They survived and taught a lesson we may have to resort to one day soon.

  • @molitainson3612
    @molitainson3612 11 месяцев назад +4

    Thank you for this wonderful film.

  • @chrisanderson5317
    @chrisanderson5317 Год назад +18

    This is one of the best WWII flix ever.

    • @DonaldPBorchersOG
      @DonaldPBorchersOG  Год назад +1

      Welcome. I post war movies here: ruclips.net/p/PLk3CReZFhoBfTLfRUxFNzKZgdMZ0Bd2vA

    • @jaredelizardo201
      @jaredelizardo201 Год назад

      @DonaldPBorchersOG ever see the movie ondo about the last imperil Japanese soldier that surrender in 1974 based on true fact.#he was in his early 90's 90 years old too be exact. Second Lt Hiroo Onoda

    • @jeffreypennington8012
      @jeffreypennington8012 2 месяца назад

      😊

    • @jeffreypennington8012
      @jeffreypennington8012 2 месяца назад

      😊

    • @jeffreypennington8012
      @jeffreypennington8012 2 месяца назад

      Who. I enjoyed watching this movie. Brings back lots of memories. I new alot of soldiers that fought in the war against the Japanese in the Philippines, their generation was the Greatest Generation.

  • @ach2lieber
    @ach2lieber 6 месяцев назад +4

    I grew up in the Philippines. This was less than 20 years after the end of WWII. The Filipinos would tell us stories of Japanese barbaity. They were brutal beyond belief.

  • @gregbolitho9775
    @gregbolitho9775 Год назад +4

    Some real good movies on the subject. This one in my top 4. Even if its a Romance Drama an loosely attached to fact. Tom Ewell is in my top 40 favorite actors

  • @donjeep1937
    @donjeep1937 7 месяцев назад +6

    Am an American who has lived in Cebu for many years. This is really a nice country, nice people. And it is the only Catholic country in this part of the world. And so many things besides language are in English. But, American planes did more damage to Manila then the Japanese did. Today, many of the complex building projects are accomplished by the Japanese. There are NO American hospitals, but there are many provided by the Chinese. The Philippines were truly treated as a COLONY by the Americans up until WW2. They definitely took out more than they put in. The airport here is Cebu was built by the Japanese. All that said, the people here still love America.

    • @DonaldPBorchersOG
      @DonaldPBorchersOG  4 месяца назад

      Thanks for clocking in with all of that. Welcome.

  • @douglasturner6153
    @douglasturner6153 2 месяца назад +2

    That ending was so hokey. But I'm sure General MacArthur approved of it 😂

  • @Shadowcu123
    @Shadowcu123 9 месяцев назад +8

    🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸❤❤🤝❤❤🇵🇭🇵🇭🇵🇭🇵🇭🇵🇭 FOREVER ALLIES!

  • @aislinnkeilah7361
    @aislinnkeilah7361 10 дней назад +1

    Filipino guerrillas tied down 600,000 Japanese soldiers during the war. The six month defense of Bataan and Corregidor by Fil-Am defenders was a marvel of tactical brilliance and untold heroism.

  • @fredbigornia1814
    @fredbigornia1814 9 месяцев назад +5

    Cebu is the Richest Province in the Philippines 🇵🇭 for 9 Consecutive Years.!!

    • @DonaldPBorchersOG
      @DonaldPBorchersOG  9 месяцев назад +1

      I did not know that. Thanks for sharing, and for watching.

    • @Amtcboy
      @Amtcboy 4 месяца назад

      But has the worst road conditions in all of the Philippines.

  • @warringtonfaust1088
    @warringtonfaust1088 7 месяцев назад +1

    I picked up an old copy of this book while visiting another city right after 911. Decided to read it on the plane ride home, got a few looks.

  • @1LSWilliam
    @1LSWilliam 7 месяцев назад +4

    We need the Philippines and their people more than ever, but can this be?

    • @TwiPie572
      @TwiPie572 6 месяцев назад +1

      My family moved stateside after the war, now I am a 19D serving our great nation's army to receive my OSUT at Ft. Benning, GA. Always proud of my filipino heritage. 🇵🇭🇺🇸

    • @DonaldPBorchersOG
      @DonaldPBorchersOG  4 месяца назад

      Thanks for the visit!

  • @user-mx3xg8ui3p
    @user-mx3xg8ui3p 9 месяцев назад +4

    Merci beaucoup pour ce 😢très beau film avec un acteur de qualité 😅😅comme plusieurs acteurs de grande qualité de ces belles années ❤😂❤comme jeff chandler rock hudson robert taylor et beaucoup beaucoup d'autres sans oublier les actrices comme susan Hayworth Barbara maureen merle oberon ❤❤on ne saurait pas les nommé tous 😅😅😅tellement il y avait beaucoup d acteurs et d actrices merveilleuses et grandioses merci beaucoup pour le partage

  • @chrisk7118
    @chrisk7118 11 месяцев назад +3

    Thanks for sharing

  • @Armis71
    @Armis71 5 месяцев назад +2

    Rest In Peace - Señora Jeanne Martinez (Micheline Presle the actress, died February 21, 2024 at 101).

  • @johnp388
    @johnp388 8 месяцев назад +4

    At 17:00 into the movie one of the soldiers said it was 1800 hours At 6:00pm in the Philippines the sun is down already no matter what time of year it is

  • @RonOside
    @RonOside 7 месяцев назад +2

    I spent four months in The Phillipines as a Marine in 1973. A sea of smiles and everyone minds their own business. Then I came home and the dismay began in the airport when I saw how angry and abusive Americans are to each other. I never met a racist in The Philippines. I don't believe they think like that. The women are routinely beautiful - and a great catch. San Miguel beer was the best, the non-export version without the preservatives in it.

  • @yomama8873
    @yomama8873 Год назад +2

    Thank you 🤩🤩🤩💖💖

    • @DonaldPBorchersOG
      @DonaldPBorchersOG  Год назад

      You’re welcome 😊 I post war movies here: ruclips.net/p/PLk3CReZFhoBfTLfRUxFNzKZgdMZ0Bd2vA

  • @kirkc4696
    @kirkc4696 Год назад +2

    Thanks for uploading this movie. Very good viewing.

  • @ruthator2497
    @ruthator2497 Год назад +9

    Moral of the story; It's OK to hustle pretty married women because their husbands might die and make room for you.

    • @DonaldPBorchersOG
      @DonaldPBorchersOG  Год назад

      Interesting. Thanks for the visit!

    • @criticaltheories5222
      @criticaltheories5222 Год назад +2

      Be careful what you wish for ....it could happen to you
      😂😂😂

    • @davidb2206
      @davidb2206 Месяц назад

      Yeah, I didn't like that part. "Thou shalt not covet ....'"

  • @josephramos3140
    @josephramos3140 6 месяцев назад +1

    Godbless the US and the Philippines our long time brothers🇵🇭🙏🇺🇸💪😎🔥💯

  • @jolanirinco8837
    @jolanirinco8837 13 дней назад

    The background song in opening make me feel young sounds good, watching from brgy. Lil Ven in Northern Samar 😊

  • @donfacundo2118
    @donfacundo2118 7 месяцев назад +4

    Filipinos and Americans shared more than friendship. This is being tested again as we speak...

  • @kioskeedoodle2928
    @kioskeedoodle2928 6 месяцев назад +1

    The movie reminds me how lucky we are living without war. GOD THANK YOU though PHILIPPINES is not a rich country we are at peace and have freedom.

  • @soldtobediers
    @soldtobediers Год назад +4

    ''They served and defended those lives they did not live.
    For those, in their day, were they!''
    -11b4p 1/504 back in '74.

    • @DonaldPBorchersOG
      @DonaldPBorchersOG  Год назад

      Thanks for the visit!

    • @nomadmarauder-dw9re
      @nomadmarauder-dw9re 9 месяцев назад +1

      101st? I was 11B, 3rd platoon, Alpha Co 2nd battalion 41st Inf. 2nd Armored Division. TDY Mechondo School, North Fort Hood, TX. If I tell you, you'll die laughing.

  • @TennesseeHomesteadUSA
    @TennesseeHomesteadUSA 4 месяца назад +2

    One of the great war films. "No Man is an Island" is another great.

  • @philippededeken4881
    @philippededeken4881 6 месяцев назад +2

    Born in 1922, Micheline Prelle died today in France at the age of 101.

  • @user-cd4ny6xk5j
    @user-cd4ny6xk5j 4 месяца назад

    nice movie, thanks for the upload

  • @KibongTV19
    @KibongTV19 9 месяцев назад +1

    What a great movie an amazing and so very cool a superb and entertaining film.

  • @wmccinema
    @wmccinema 7 месяцев назад +2

    1:15:32
    Cris de Vera. He died 25 years later. He did great in his role as a Japanese officer.

  • @Hoopaball
    @Hoopaball Год назад +4

    25:58 Is the best part. Reminds me of the Nation of 7,000 islands and the best sailors in the world.

  • @MrRomantico
    @MrRomantico Год назад +5

    great movie, historical

    • @DonaldPBorchersOG
      @DonaldPBorchersOG  Год назад

      Welcome. I post Historical movies here: ruclips.net/p/PLk3CReZFhoBcLvZ_xQvlGPJE91Tnw0yS2

  • @BALOYBEACHBUM
    @BALOYBEACHBUM Год назад +5

    I want to know what the drink"Barbed Wire" is, I have lived and traveled the Philippines the last 12 years and never heard of that!

    • @user-cc7mk2yz5p
      @user-cc7mk2yz5p Год назад +4

      It's not a "drink" , it means being imprisoned behind barbed wire against their will as P.O.W.'s. of Japan. Most of the Allied troops during that time were Ordered to surrender with the Mistaken Belief that Japan would honor the Genevia Accords as per the treatment of P.O.W's.

    • @tomgore9696
      @tomgore9696 Год назад +3

      FTR, I don't know if it's germane to the period and place, but there is an old cocktail recipe by that name, consisting of 1 part whiskey and one part apple juice.

    • @DonaldPBorchersOG
      @DonaldPBorchersOG  Год назад

      Interesting. Thanks for the visit!

  • @hoffenwurdig1356
    @hoffenwurdig1356 6 месяцев назад +1

    For those who don't know, Admiral Yamamoto Isoroku was the Commander-in-Chief of the Imperial Japanese Navy at that time. A political moderate, he was Harvard-educated and well-traveled. He was one of the people who believed that the future of naval warfare would lie with aircraft carriers rather than with battleships, and he was correct. Today, many scholars on different sides consider that Yamamoto was a genius -- but of course that did not translate into being able to micromanage all of his subordinates, nor did it give him political means to succeed.
    In 1940, Yamamoto had warned then-Prime Minister Konoye that in the event of war with the Allied Powers, "If we are ordered to do it, then I can guarantee to put up a tough fight for the first six months, but I have absolutely no confidence as to what would happen if it went on for two or three years." In September 1941, he made a similar prediction, stating, "For a while, we'll have everything our own way, stretching out in every direction like an octopus spreading its tentacles. But it will last for at most a year and a half."
    When the Admiral was ordered to finalize campaign plans and recheck the details of initial strikes, including the Pearl Harbor attack, one of his subordinates commented on his 'brilliant' job. The Admiral replied, "A brilliant man would find a way not to fight a war." He soon learned after the attack that there had been a failure to deliver the intended thirty-minute advance warning to the United States due to an honest-to-God problem with the decoding process at the Japanese Embassy, a reason which he knew the Americans would never believe. Horrified, he said, "I can't imagine anything that would enrage the Americans more."
    Eventually, the Americans devised a long-distance fighter attack specifically to target Admiral Yamamoto, and they succeeded in shooting down his plane, which killed everyone aboard. Many years later, his skeleton was found in the wreckage of his aircraft, showing that he literally died with his hand on his officer's sword, intending to cut himself and his aircrew out.
    In college, my Asian Studies professor mentioned that he had once overheard two Japanese tourists who were on the roof of the Empire State Building and were looking through a coin-operated telescope. He heard a man say to his wife in that language, "I can't believe our forefathers thought they could take on this country. It's infinite!"

    • @hemming57
      @hemming57 4 месяца назад +1

      Yamamoto's body was found the next day, cremated in New Guinea and sent to back to Japan. PS: he never gave the "sleeping giant" speech.

    • @DonaldPBorchersOG
      @DonaldPBorchersOG  3 месяца назад

      Thanks for sharing. Welcome.

  • @jingletugano6927
    @jingletugano6927 6 месяцев назад +1

    Thanks for sharing...the movie..

  • @albertjabs1644
    @albertjabs1644 9 месяцев назад +4

    That "palanggana" the officer was burning documents on made me laugh in the middle of the night! My mother used that for washing clothes when we were small.

  • @jeffangara6965
    @jeffangara6965 Год назад +2

    I think this movie was shoot somewhere in Zambales Province in the Philippines...

  • @stephenbaker1362
    @stephenbaker1362 7 месяцев назад +2

    Entertaining, some of the boxes would not fit through the 26" diameter submarine hatch

  • @wilfredrenivajr.3541
    @wilfredrenivajr.3541 7 месяцев назад

    Thank u for sharing...

  • @hocares6983
    @hocares6983 5 месяцев назад +1

    i read this book long time ago when i was in highschool but i forgot everything since it was 40yrs ago

  • @buzz5969
    @buzz5969 2 месяца назад

    This American Guyrilla has been in the Philippines 100s of times for both work and for play. Some good LBFMs running round those jungles. Love is just a Short Time away.😊🇺🇸🍻✌🏻

  • @shable1436
    @shable1436 10 месяцев назад +5

    Im watching a war movie to take my mind away from the real wars

  • @User-4-mn3or
    @User-4-mn3or 9 дней назад

    WOW! Very good movie, but expect that from Fritz Land and Tyrone Power.

  • @allenwatkins4972
    @allenwatkins4972 День назад +1

    This is a pretty good movie!!

  • @Smith53823
    @Smith53823 Месяц назад

    Yes I read the book back when I was younger before television and read books I worked at Clark Air Base in 1958 and they did not have to guard their outer fences because they left that in charge of a tribe whatever they were called for pay they got the exclusive use I'm picking through the trash I love the Philippines I hated to leave

  • @Davids_journey_to_happiness
    @Davids_journey_to_happiness 2 месяца назад +1

    If they landed 50 km. North of cebu City. How did they Walk to tacloban, leyte. Maybe I missed something

    • @davidb2206
      @davidb2206 Месяц назад

      I caught that too. Hollywood scriptwriters and their fantasies again. Why don't they just stick to true stories?

  • @robotech
    @robotech 4 месяца назад +2

    My father played as an extra in this movie.

  • @fastone942
    @fastone942 7 месяцев назад +2

    In real life tyrone power marine Corps officer and pilot during WW2 and flew all over the pacific and stay in the marine Corps reserve as an officer, till he died and promoted to major before he died also got the full military funeral with a fly over as a World War II vet and serving marine Corps officer

    • @DonaldPBorchersOG
      @DonaldPBorchersOG  4 месяца назад

      Thanks for clocking in with all that! Welcome.

    • @alimolina4279
      @alimolina4279 2 месяца назад +1

      @fastone942: Thank you for remembering this about Mr. Power. He was a talented actor and he was a brave soldier, too! I'm his unconditional admirer since I was a young girl! Thanks again!

  • @roberthevern6169
    @roberthevern6169 Месяц назад

    Did he say, 'Colonel de Mylanta'??! I learned that a Major in the Army equals an Ensign in the Navy! Even at 69yrs, you're never too old to .... now what was I thinking.... (moments pass) ...
    oh yeah, Pocatello is in my state of Idaho!
    No, that wasn't it...
    Aw, shucks....
    That ant scene was
    great!Great!
    Thanks, DPB! Excellent movie!
    PS: fairly quick period of grief!

  • @boyseguerra7380
    @boyseguerra7380 Год назад +3

    Beautiful movie!!

    • @DonaldPBorchersOG
      @DonaldPBorchersOG  Год назад

      Welcome. I post war movies here: ruclips.net/p/PLk3CReZFhoBfTLfRUxFNzKZgdMZ0Bd2vA

  • @e.a.p3174
    @e.a.p3174 4 месяца назад

    My wife grew up in Dulag Leyte just outside of Tagloban, this was not shot in Dulag because it faces open Pacific ocean and the waves are very strong. Also the quickest way from Cebu to Mindanao is not the East coast of Leyte, that would be via Bohol or Negros. My father in law was one of the guerillas on Leyte

  • @robponton3181
    @robponton3181 5 месяцев назад +1

    Good world war II versus Japanese in the Philippines movie. If you are a world war II be you'll appreciate this one. Not the best but definitely not anywhere near the worst.

  • @Mindswamp
    @Mindswamp 7 месяцев назад +2

    One hour 21 minutes in and the French Lady came to play.

  • @mikeyoung1363
    @mikeyoung1363 4 месяца назад +2

    The leading actress in this only recently died in February 2024 aged 101.

    • @forgottenman8629
      @forgottenman8629 4 месяца назад

      so good to hear, however, she did live a long life...

    • @admiralyisoonshin4995
      @admiralyisoonshin4995 4 месяца назад

      You means Micheline Prelle, the American actress?

    • @mikeyoung1363
      @mikeyoung1363 4 месяца назад

      @@admiralyisoonshin4995 She was French born but did her most famous work in US movies.

    • @admiralyisoonshin4995
      @admiralyisoonshin4995 4 месяца назад

      @@mikeyoung1363 I see. Thank you.

  • @jetset4me1
    @jetset4me1 10 месяцев назад +2

    Ensign is not equivalent to a Major. Lt. Commander is the equivalent.

  • @racieldelosreyes8670
    @racieldelosreyes8670 2 месяца назад

    i remember my late grandma told us they were scared whenever the japanese soldiers marching through their village, the sound of their heavy boots still linger in her ears.. But she said, the japanese officers were kind and polite to them, especially to children. unlike korean foot soldiers.

  • @scottystiffchicken
    @scottystiffchicken Месяц назад +1

    She love him LongTime on Christmas Eve.

  • @ArmandoGarcia-e3g
    @ArmandoGarcia-e3g 16 дней назад

    Very nice war movie and history ..

  • @johnzeszut3170
    @johnzeszut3170 11 дней назад

    A must read as kids - movie was good - learned how to make a shot gun from two lengths of pipe!

  • @essentialknowhow3752
    @essentialknowhow3752 Год назад +4

    Cool movie!

  • @Amtcboy
    @Amtcboy 4 месяца назад

    I’m 60yo. My father was 7yo when liberation came to the Philippines.
    But the scene where they “walked for 2 weeks” to reach Tacloban from Cebu made me laugh.

  • @gananmonie
    @gananmonie Год назад +3

    Nice movie 👍

  • @ramonrobles1323
    @ramonrobles1323 10 месяцев назад +2

    Such a nice movie

  • @jingletugano6927
    @jingletugano6927 6 месяцев назад +1

    Nice movie....✌️👍

  • @arthursexton3942
    @arthursexton3942 7 месяцев назад +2

    MY DAD WAS THERE

    • @DonaldPBorchersOG
      @DonaldPBorchersOG  4 месяца назад

      God Bless your Dad. Thanks for his service. Welcome.

  • @roysmemorylane
    @roysmemorylane 8 месяцев назад +1

    What a classic! And the Heroine is still with us. How about that?