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  • When you watch GUNG HO!, you'll probably soon recognize how crappy the print is. I know it's been in the public domain and the copy recent shown on Turner Classic Movies was very dark and a bit fuzzy--and TCM usually shows the best print available.

    As for the film, despite having Randolph Scott and some familiar faces (Noah Beery, Jr., Robert Mitchum and others), it's an amazingly straight-forward and simple film. The usual clichés and side stories, while still present, are much fewer in number and far more emphasis is placed on the training and combat. Additionally, I was amazed at how brutal the film was, as the Raiders were taught to fight very dirty and there was an amazing amount of blood for a 40s era film. It was uncompromising and direct throughout the movie.

    The film itself is about a special unit within the Marines that were akin to the Army Rangers or a Special Forces unit. Apparently they were a real group and the film was made about their first mission in 1942--only a few months before this film was produced! Because it was so direct and simple, I really enjoyed the film. However, for lovers of Randolph Scott, while he's in GUNG HO!, his role is rather simple and quite unlike his later persona in Westerns.

    By the way, although the film was pretty good, it featured one of the dumber war clichés as one of the soldier pulls a grenade pin with his teeth--a great way to rip out or shatter your teeth.

    For more information about this raid (some of which is much more incredible than what is in the film), try http://www.usmarineraiders.org/makin.html.
  • This fact-based war film (detailing the first ground assault on Japan following the attack on Pearl Harbor) is neatly divided into two parts – showing, first, the specialized training session of the carefully-chosen platoon (which is quite interesting) and the mission itself (displaying fairly standard heroics but well enough done nonetheless).

    The film has been criticized for glamorizing what was essentially a band of cutthroats (Leonard Maltin even describes it as "a jaw-dropping experience"). Still, there was no doubt that any war picture made during this time wouldn't ram propagandist slogans down the audience's throat (witness Randolph Scott's final straight-into-camera speech); ironically, even if the latter was the film's nominal star, he's rarely involved in the action proper – being there mainly to co-ordinate things, and repeatedly instigate his men to kill every Jap on the island!).

    The supporting cast is good, made up of veteran character actors – J. Carroll Naish, Sam Levene – and newcomers – notably Robert Mitchum; however, a fair share of the running-time is unwisely devoted to the romantic triangle involving a girl and two soldiers who happen to be half-brothers (one of them played by Noah Beery Jr.) – all of which has a quite deadening effect on the main narrative! Despite being a relatively early WWII film, the action sequences are surprisingly gutsy – though accentuated on occasion by obvious stock footage.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    As a namesake nephew of one of Carlson's Marine Raiders that was killed in action during the historical Makin Island Raid this has always been one of my favorite movies. This patriotic film served as valuable and much needed recruitment tool for the United States Marine Corps for it's time. The film for the most part is jingoistic in nature and filled with a lot Hollywood make-believe i.e. scenes of the Marine Raiders over running the Japanese Headquarters then painting an American flag over the building then withdrawing the troops as Japanese troops approach. This Hollywood make-believe scene worked wonders on the movie audience at the time as they cheered while the Japanese pilots seeing the American flag mistakenly bombed their own troops. This type of scene caused many of the real Marine Raiders that participated in the Makin Island Raid to shake their heads in sheer disbelief. Having said that, it is true that Japanese pilots did accidentally bomb some of their own land force during the fighting. One of the Marine Raiders once told me that he thought the scenes of the Marine Raiders being formed and trained were quite accurate. The scene that he thought was the most historically accurate scene was when the Marine Raiders first landed on the island by rubber rafts, and when they approached the Japanese snipers hiding in the palm trees. The movie tries to convince the audience that the Japanese outnumbered the Marine Raiders 3 to 1. The Marine Raiders involved in the raid did in fact believe that, but the Marine Raiders easily outnumbered the Japanese force of 80 or so soldiers. The film ends with Randolph Scott giving a patriotic speech on the submarine as it makes it's way back to Pearl Harbor. From a personal perspective, I think what is not said in this movie is much more important than what is said. The Marine Raiders had one devil of a time getting off the island as they lost weapons, medical supplies, etc. due to the huge waves that impaired their journey back to the two submarines (USS Argonaut, USS Nautilus). In fact, an effort was made to surrender to what turned out to be an almost extinct remaining Japanese force. Fortunately, for the Marine Raiders contact was made to the submarines and they were able to rendezvous at another part of the island. Unfortunately, 9 Marine Raiders were inadvertently left on the island as a result of the inability to have a final roster reading and a blackout of radio contact between the two submarines.. The 9 marines were later captured by the Japanese and beheaded on Kwajalein. Oscar Peatross who participated in the Makin Island Raid later mentioned the valor displayed by FM1st Class Vernon Castle as he gave his life as he took out a Japanese Machine Gun nest. Petross later regretted the fact that had he known more about putting personnel in for medals that he would have put Castle in for the Congressional Medal of Honor as it was the bravest act that he had witnessed in WWII. Consequently, Petross even dedicated his book "Bless Em All" to Castle. To this day, the only medal Castle family has ever received has been the Purple Heart. After talking with some Marine Raiders at a Marine Raider Reunion I got the impression that medals are given sometimes for "political purposes" rather than the fact that were earned or deserved. In fact, it is my understanding that one member of the Makin Raid realizing he didn't truly deserve the medal tried to give his Navy Cross back to the Marine Corps but was told that "Once given the Marine Corps doesn't take back it's medals." The story of the 19 K.I.A.s that remained on Makin Island (Butaritari) is a fascinating one....much more interesting that any Hollywood version could ever be. After the war families such as my Grandparents were notified that the remains were "not recoverable". Carlson in his biography "The Big Yankee" by Michael Blankfort indicated that his second in command Col. James Roosevelt, F.D.R's son, visited the island and said that the 19 Marine Raiders were buried in individual plots, and that he said a prayer over each grave. This later turned out to be another historical falsehood. The remains of the nineteen Marine Raiders (including my late uncle) were later recovered in 1999 by the Central Identification Laboratory of Hawaii (CILHI). They had been buried in a mass grave. One of the natives, Buremoia Tokarei, that had buried these men as a teenager later led members of the CILHI to the lost grave site. According to some accounts he was 80 years old at the time, and began singing the Marine Corps Hymn as they began transporting the remains back to Hickham Field. Thirteen members of that group were buried at Arlington Cemetery on August 17, 2001 (59 years to the exact date of their untimely demise). My uncle PFC William A. Gallagher was one of them and Sgt. Clyde Thomason, the first enlisted Marine to receive the Congressional Medal of Honor in WWII was another. If your readers have any interest in reading more about this historic raid I refer you to Major General Oscar Peatross book "Bless Em All" and George Smith's book "Carlson's Raid". The Peatross book is difficult to find but you can read excepts of it at the Dan Marsh Marine Raider Web Site. http://www.usmcraiders.com/2ndann/bless_em_all.htm The main lesson to be learned from the film "Gung Ho" is that it is a typical cinema rendition of history.... a lot of glitter with little substance...and yet remains dated but enjoyable entertainment. Patriotism can be a wonderful thing but truth must always be the thread that guides it. As a Makin Island Marine Raider once told me..... "War is a terrible....terrible thing... and terrible things happen in war!"
  • rmax3048238 November 2001
    Of the two Marine Raider Battalions made famous by their exploits at Guadalcanal and elsewhere, Edson's First and Carlson's Second, the Second was by far the ideologically weirdest. Both were thought of -- and thought of themselves -- as elite units, but in many ways they couldn't have been more different. Edson was a by-the-book military man who took marinehood several powers beyond the norm. They were looked at askance by other members of the military. Edson's emphasis was on combat performance locked into a rigidly authoritarian cast structure.

    But Carlson's (here Thorwald's)background, temperament, and training methods were revolutionary, in a literal sense. Between the wars, Carlson had taken a kind of vacation from the Marine Corps and spent it studying the Chinese Communists and learning from them, especially the development of what they called "Gung Ho," which translates as something like "good public spirit" but has been degraded in meaning over the years until, when I was in the military, it had all the pejorative value of "chickenshit." Carlson was a committed leader, openly concerned about his men's welfare, what William James would have called "tender minded." His outfit, men and officers alike, lived together in both training and combat, suffered the same hardship, ate the same food, held bellyaching sessions in which anyone could say anything, good or bad, about anyone else, as close as you get to group therapy. The movie soft pedals much of this, and God forbid the word "communism" should be spoken aloud.

    The Raider Battalion's most famous engagement was the raid of Makin Island in the Gilberts (pronounced more like "Moggin" than what it looks like). It wasn't the unqualified success the picture gives us. After the rubber boats reached shore and the attack was initiated, resistance increased and it looked like the raid would fail, so Carlson called for a retreat back to the boats. Unfortunately, as Carlson had foreseen, the heavy surf flooded outboard engines and overturned many of the craft, drowning numbers of men. As it turned out, however, the Japanese had more or less disappeared and the mission was accomplished, except that nine of the men who had not been killed in combat or drowned had gotten lost in the dark or wound up on another atoll. They were later rounded up, taken to Kwajalein and beheaded.

    The raid did no long-term damage except to convince the enemy that the Gilberts would soon be invaded (which was true) and that fortifications should be reinforced (which they were). I love this movie. It has every cliché in the book. Brawling rivals, a Jewish sidekick called "Transpawt" by Randolph Scott, treacherous Japs, stupid Japs, Marines throwing knives with deadly accuracy, one of our boys can beat a dozen of theirs, explosions galore filling the air with flying balsa wood, bayonets, judo, interesting rifle-shot sounds, Japanese pilots giggling maniacally while they unknowingly slaughter their own soldiers -- ding hau!

    The crowning moment: Colonel Thorwald begins one of those patriotic speeches about how we have to win the war, and the peace that will follow too, and turns mid-way through the speech and looks directly through the camera lens at the wartime audience, and the image on screen becomes a sinking ship flying a Japanese flag. Could there be anything better if you're seeking patriotic laughs from a movie? Shortly after Guadalcanal, the Raider Batallions were both disbanded, the Corps believing that since every Marine was elite anyway the Corps had no need for whole outfits of them.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    The picture is correctly based on Carlson's first-hand account about records of battalion of Marine Raiders. Six weeks after from Japanese attack to Pearl Harbor , Pacific Ocean is full of islands and atolls occupied by Japanese army. Carlson's Raiders are specially trained group of Marine jungle fighters determined to take island of Makin in the Gilberts. For the liberation of Pacific islands is formed an elite brigade composed by daunted soldiers specially prepared. The staff(colonel Randolph Scott, lieutenant J. Carroll Naish) choose the best men, as a two-fisted ex-boxer(Robert Mitchum), a tough countryman(Rod Cameron) , a ex-reverend, a Chinese- American, two grumpy brothers(Noah Beery). For the instruction are justly accepted 900 and lasted six weeks. They're instructed on judo, swimming, knife use, leaping fences, utilization of fixed bayonets and various forms of fighting , including hand-to-hand combat.Their patriotic shouting is Gung Ho, a Chinese words signifying Gung=endeavour, Ho=united. After battle of Sea of coral and Midway and while the Americans are landing in Salomon and Guadalcanal ,the group is assigned a perilous mission. The bunch undergoes a dangerous underwater journey destination Pacific Ocean to annihilate a Japonese garrison on Makin . At the island his most risked assignment results to be the radio station attack, using even a road-roller.Colonel Carlson(aka Thorwald) gets winning, thanks a silly set-up about a roof painting and all resistance ended.

    This is a vintage warfare, propaganda film , a jingoist and flag-wager tribute to courage at WWII. Packs the ordinary crew of Marines battling the ¨Yellow Menace¨ on a main base of the Pacific, one of the most difficult and unknown campaigns of the Pacific Theater. Vigorous and action-filled final scenes with memorable shootouts, violent fights that climb all over the screen. Includes a voice in off describing the facts and striking real war footage about stock-shots regarding the sinking ships from Pearl Harbor . Spectacular musical score by Frank Skinner and dated cinematography by Milton Krasker. Special photography effects by usual John P.Fulton.The motion picture is professionally directed by Ray Enright. Indiana-born Enright directed Randolph Scott seven times between 1942-46 and vies with Budd Boetticher for the position of the best Scott helmsman. He's an expert on Westerns such as he proved in Montana, The spoilers,Will Bill Hickock, Bad men of Missouri, among others. Rating : Acceptable and passable warlike film.
  • You can say the film is dated. But then again, Shakespeare is also dated. Shakespeare is also dateless, and this film is too. We won't get another Randolph Scott and here he stars in perhaps his most entertaining, if not most sobering, war film. Sure, it's jingoistic, racist, preachy, and cliché-ridden. It's not exactly historical, except in showing how Americans viewed themselves and the Marines at the time.

    The real history behind this highly romanticized dramatization has been covered well by the other commentaries. The Makin Island raid was a folly that movie glamorizes, and Carlson was an idealist whose comrade-oriented methods had little influence on later commando tactics. However, even he didn't like the Hollywood result. Despite seeing his name on the credits and Randolph Scott ideally cast to portray him, Carlson walked out of the movie theatre in disgust when he first viewed the film.

    When will this gem get remastered and restored? They truly don't make 'em like this anymore.
  • I thought it was interesting that Carlson claims in the beginning that he was with Mao Tse Tung on his Long March. Apparently, Carlson takes the skills and lessons that he learned from the Red Army in Guerilla Warfare and trains a couple of hundred bad boy Americans how to kill and throw themselves on barb wire. The first half of the film follows the training and even has time for a bit of a love story with Noah Beery Jr. (best known from "Rockfile Files" perhaps).

    The second half involves a submarine ride and a raid on an island held by the Japanese. The action is surprisingly intense. Some scenes, like the shooting of Japanese out of trees reach the level of brutal poetic metaphor. These action scenes detail fierce fighting and are surprisingly even handed with both American and Japanese troops biting the dust pretty regularly.

    Unlike, "Walk in the Sun" where the audience is given the chance to know and care about each soldier, there is only a pretty stereotyped introduction and then they are molded into one tough killing machine. The title "Gung Ho" we learn means "harmonious work" and that is what we get with precision maneuvers and no hesitation in the face of death on the battlefield.

    One could call this communist propaganda, but without films like this, could fascism East and West have been defeated?
  • frankfob23 February 2002
    A lot has been said about this picture's outrageous jingoism, and that's a valid point, but this wasn't intended to be a history lesson (although it's based on a true story), it was made as propaganda to further the war effort, and at that it succeeds. It's quite well made, the battle scenes are exciting and very well done, and it probably did what it was intended to do, which was to give the public something to feel good about; in 1943 the war wasn't going all that well for the Allies. Robert Mitchum was starting to get bigger parts about this time; he has a fairly substantial part here, and his laconic style is quite evident. Some of the dialogue is a bit difficult to get past (one soldier says he wants to join the unit that is being put together to raid a Japanese-held island because "I just don't like Japs"), and some of the heroics are a bit much, but overall it's no worse, and a bit better, than many of the war pictures to come out of Hollywood around that time.
  • The campaign of Makin Island which was the very first piece of Pacific Island we invaded against the Japanese in World War II. It serves as the basis for this film. Not much of an island the island was directly between the Hawaiian Islands and a place called Guadalcanal. The theory was get in, destroy the Japanese base and communications and get out. That much is true. The rest of the film is Hollywood hype.

    Randolph Scott plays a character based on Major Evans Carlson of Carlson's Raiders which was an elite unit of Marines trained to take the island. Carlson had seen service in China and was impressed with the Chinese guerrilla campaign against the Japanese there. He studied the tactics of Chu The who was the military commander of Mao Tse-tung's Chinese Communists. I don't know much Marxism, if any, Carlson took to heart, but after World War II it got him in no small amount of trouble. In an organization as conservative and tradition bound as the United States Marines he became a pariah. He died in 1951.

    Since the Makin Island campaign was the start of our Pacific Offensive it was natural that Hollywood seized on the opportunity to make a quick B picture as a morale booster. Universal assembled a good cast that included a young Robert Mitchum before stardom. Besides Mitchum, I liked J. Carroll Naish and Sam Levene who gave good support to Scott. Levene played the typical serviceman from Brooklyn which by that time was becoming a cliché in war pictures.

    Anyway Carlson's lasting contribution to the Marines was the phrase Gung Ho. So if you want to know how that got into the Marine vocabulary, see this movie.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    First off a word about the "jingoism" battles that seem to be raging in regards to this movie. Get over it! Of course it's racist propaganda, it was made in 1943 for crying out loud. And really the only reason you can call it racist is because the Japanese are the bad guys. They aren't really made out to be any worse than the Germans in other films of the era. But, because of the different race, it is called racist. I haven't seen any Japanes films of the same period but I suspect they were equally as harsh in their portrayal of the Americans. I have seen print examples of Japanese propaganda from that time and they were much worse.

    On to the more relevant part of the review. The acting was not bad and the story was exciting. Direction and cinematography were okay but nothing to get excited about. The script, as you might expect, was a bit long on melodrama and short on accuracy.

    The lack of accuracy may be the reason that the names of all the characters were changed from the actual Raiders that took part. It seems very strange for a film to have a subtitle mentioning Carlson's Raiders with the main character being called Colonel Thorwald. The only name that was kept was the nickname of Transport. And the real Transport didn't die in the raid. In fact he was one of the film's technical advisors.

    I kind of wonder why they bothered with technical advisors, because the movie has basically zero percent of the actual raid in it. The most puzzling thing is the omission of the second in command of the 2nd. Raider Battalion. I really have no idea why the movie propaganda machine of the time would miss a chance to trumpet the fact that Franklin D. Roosevelt's son, Major James Roosevelt, was there. Perhaps that ties in with the reason that the characters were fictionalized. Or perhaps there were security concerns.

    The portrayal of Carson/Thorwald is somewhat accurate but probably sanitized for public consumption. His time in China had basically turned him into a communist. The actual questioning of the candidates to join the battalion included questions about the political significance of the war and the training included a certain amount of political indoctrination.

    As I said the actual raid isn't really present in this film. The raid actually lasted much longer than a single day. The last men made it off the island about 11PM the second night. And Carlson at one point actually tried to surrender, partially out of concern for the presence of Major Roosevelt. This fell through mostly because there were so few Japanese left alive on the island. The entire American flag plot line was completely made up and had no basis in reality.

    The raid was considered by some to be a failure, or at least ineffective in causing the Japanese to be distracted from Guadalcanal and the Solomons. The Solomons were invaded 10 days before the Makin Island raid took place, and the raid was intended as a distraction and intelligence gathering operation. Carlson himself was thought by some to have done a poor job, and he later admitted that he hadn't been at his best.

    Regardless of the effectiveness of the raid itself and Carlson's performance, the 2nd. Raiders went on to do a much better job on Guadalcanal. But that's another story. Both raider battalions were disbanded not long after Guadalcanal, because it was felt that elite units were not required when all Marines were elite soldiers already.

    In spite of the falsity of the story it was still an enjoyable film. Especially if you like war movies. Despite the cries of revisionists and appologists, it would seem strange if a film made in 1943 did NOT have a propaganda content. It is a pretty accurate portrayal of the sentiments of the American public of the time. So it's a slice of history in that sense. Tom Sawyer is still a great book, in spite of it's racist content. And Gung Ho is still a decent movie in spite of it's content.
  • Other reviewers have published some excellent critiques of this 1943 war-action film from the perspective of the military and military history. Given the subject matter - the introduction of guerilla tactics to the Marine Corps - the historic perspective is particularly important. Though I am no stranger to either perspective, I am going to discuss Gung Ho strictly from the perspective of its genre - military action.

    Though loaded with clichés such as rousing pre-battle speeches and over-dramatized death scenes, Gung Ho tells a more-or-less true story about the successful deployment of the Makin Raiders (Carlson's Raiders) on a minor Japanese stronghold (Makin Atoll). Fifteen thousand men volunteer, and in the end, only 200 make the team. These two hundred men will adopt the Chinese phrase Gung Ho (roughly translated as working harmoniously) as a philosophical approach to the task at hand.

    In the military action film tradition, we are briefly introduced to each of the men whose battle experience will form the central action later in the film. The characters are surprisingly well-developed and realistic, but the laundry-list approach to character development doesn't work very well in terms of pace and cinematography. Once deployed, the Makin Raiders immediately spring into action, employing intelligence, an unusual degree of individual initiative, and great courage, to challenge the overwhelming odds against their capture of the island of Butaritari in the Makin Atoll.

    The action sequences are quite entertaining, nicely thought-out, and the effects are brilliantly executed. From a pure action perspective, the film rates high for its time. The cinematography is quite good, the acting is OK, but hampered by some very mediocre directing. The early appearance of later legend Robert Mitchum is noteworthy, and Mitchum, even this early in his career, dominates every scene he is in.

    Gung Ho, however, has been justly accused of propagandism and jingoism, as well as historical inaccuracy. Overall, given the fact that this film was released in 1943 within months of the securing of Guadalcanal by U.S. forces, this is hardly surprising.

    From a civilian perspective, it's really just a 'pretty good' war film.
  • In the vast array of WWII movies, which are the ones that stand out? Special effects help you remember them, but mostly it's the story. If the characters make a special place in your heart and the story tugs you to the edge of your seat, you'll come back to the movie over and over again. Gung Ho! Is based on the true raid of Makin Island, made by a special branch of the Marines. But since American audiences had already seen the newsreels in 1943 and read the reports in the papers, how did Hollywood make the movie interesting? With fantastic characters.

    Randolph Scott, a war veteran himself, leads the team as the man behind the raid. He combines his military training with Chinese techniques he's been studying for the first combatant unit after Pearl Harbor. This movie shows every step of the journey, from interviewing the candidates to the special training before they sail to Makin Island. Within the pack are best friends Noah Beery Jr. And David Bruce, both in love with the same woman; Robert Mitchum, a tough boxer; Alan Curtis, who hasn't told anyone he's a minister; and other volunteers who are anxious to kill Japanese troops. The interview process is fascinating, as we see all the different types of soldiers who make up a company. The training sequences are also fascinating, as they learn new techniques to combat an entirely different kind of enemy. Troops in a lineup are far different than men waiting atop palm trees with traps and sniper rifles.

    At ninety minutes, this intense, emotional war drama could have easily gone another half hour. It moves quickly and leaves you wanting more. It's a great piece of Americana to show the morale boost we all needed after Pearl Harbor. At the time of this movie's release, we had no idea whether or not the Allies would win the war, but we rallied together and rooted for Randolph Scott to save the day with his Marines. As he says, "Teamwork. The Chinese have a word for it: gung ho!" While that's not a literal translation (gung ho means enthusiasm about going to war), the real commander of the raid used that definition and made it the motto of the Marines. That's good enough for me.
  • This film, made in 1943, doesn't even try to hide its purpose. It's propaganda, pure and simple. Several scenes are shot and narrated in a documentary type of mode. The film was shot only months after the actual events took place. Randolph Scott was a good actor, but they threw this together so quickly that he didn't have time to do a decent job. Young (and I mean YOUNG) Robert Mitchum is the best actor in the film and he isn't nearly up to his usual standards. The story is good, and I believe that, given the language constraints of 1943, the film is as well written as it could be. The battle sequences are fair. There's a good bit of obvious choreography in the hand-to-hand scenes. Overall, judged against other films of its type, this one isn't too awful bad.
  • After reading the reviews, it became obvious that everyone intellectualized this work. How utterly boring. Oh how about the good ol' days and there was nothing like it. Of all the comments no one expressed any emotion to this work or any other.

    I grew up just after the end of the steam age and this cinematic gem along with Dan'l Boone graced the Saturday afternoon matinées. This was an annual movie that made the rounds and filled the seats with gabbing, yapping, farting, giggling, snot monsters like myself or was-self. And it was a movie theatre filler at the time. Almost as big as the Wizard of Oz.

    IMDb insists that every critique contains something about the plot. Problem is was that it was rather a template. Here goes. Randolph Scott (cowboy/hero)gathers friends and goes defeats those evil people. Hooray!

    All of us kids figured out that plot before we plunked our quarter down to watch it. That was just about the plot line of every Scott, John Wayne, Roy Rogers film ever made. If you take the time to go back and review each and every movie - just don't ask for surprises.

    One must remember the context of the times. There was no or little TV. None for kids. There was school. There was the great outdoors. There were toy guns. No Cyber time. And the steam age had just collapsed. But movies such as this provided the entertainment and filled the imaginations of young whippersnappers. Even the girls got into it.

    This movie was the entertainment. And it is just as mindless as anything produced today. It had a purpose originally of being propaganda. But quickly came to be kids movies.

    Our fathers had experienced the real thing. And it wouldn't be until Sam Peckinpah a decade later who finally lavished the red splashes of imitation blood in realistic and copious quantities. Not until his directorship did anyone die slowly, with great pain and miserably. Until Peckinpah war and gun fights were a rather bloodless affair. Thanks Sam.

    To see a movie had little or no blood, the adults didn't mind. They wouldn't have tolerated it I think. No guts spraying the shattering plant life. So this movie had all of the glory and none of the gory. Gung Ho was suitable for kids then.

    You will see that I assigned a four to this rating. Why would I do that? Well. It is a terrible movie. No matter how I love it. I do love this movie because it brought back one of the happier moments of my childhood. But it is not all that good of a movie in quality terms. Basically Gung Ho transitted to become a romance novel for children.

    Should people watch it. Of course. I am not saying to stay away. Realistically however. The plot is simple. The characters shallow? they are shoals. You can love a bad movie.
  • I've seen this film several times and it reflects the patriotism of America during WWII. It actually intertwines real history with Hollywood fantasy by modeling the story from the Marine Corps' Raider Battalion. Randolph Scott's Col. Thorwald is loosely based on Lt.Col. Evans Carlson's philosophies and his own experience in China. I enjoyed seeing Noah Beery, who would later become James Garner's dad in "The Rockford Files", and Robert Mitchum, already possessing his laid-back approach to acting. Most war-themed movies made during the war were aimed to boost morale and make our boys into the heroes they eventually became, although at times the dialogue was over-the-top. Still entertaining, and gives an idea what a war with a purpose was about.
  • Everybody has already watched lots of war films where good soldiers go fight the bad guys in some other country because of something terrible these bad guys have done, right? Right! This is "Gung Ho!"! But please keep calm, you who like this movie! This is just a small joke about this kind of film. "Gung Ho!" was made in 1943, so years before of many of movie pictures like it. Actually, it's one of the first war movies ever made, and, like "Guadalcanal Diary" (1943), mas made when the II World War was still going on. At that time, war movies wasn't so common, so "Gun Ho!" has nothing of cliché. To cut it short, this film is good and kind of original. And it's also like a document since it was done under the real atmosphere of war. The movie is American and was done after the Pearl Harbor attack, so the hate for the Japanese was strong.

    In the story, a group of soldiers is called to go on a special mission that is attacking a Japanese island as an answer for the tragedy in Pearl Harbor. The soldiers are selected one by one, through an interview where they end up talking about their personal lives, and makes us feel close to them and feel sorry for them as the film goes on and they start suffering and unfortunately passing away. "Gung Ho!" is a good film, even today, 62 years after it was made. I imagine the impact and the shock it caused in 1943, when it was released...

    My rate 7/10
  • Warning: Spoilers
    When someone sees this movie they should remember that movies during World War II had one of two purposes: either show the U.S./Allies as gallant heroes or provide a escape from the war itself. That being said Gung Ho is a prime example of this.

    In the applicant scene many of the Marine said their prime reason for joining is because as one marine put it "I just don't like Japs." A Filopino joined to avenge his sister kidnap by Japanese and not doubt raped and murdered by them. Other guys just want to prove themselves. Of course when you consider the movie takes place after Pearl Harbor their reasons should not be surprising.

    The movie makes every point to show the Marines as victorious heroes while the Japanese as murderous villains, even shooting at their men in an American trap.

    Gung Ho also makes an odd attempt at diversity. One leiutenant is a Greek promoted from the enlisted ranks. A "no good" kid trying to prove himself. Two half-brothers competing for the same girl. A Filipino and a Mexican (though they only are only seen in the beginning are barely get mentioned again). Their unorthodox skills were adopted from the Chinese (enemy of the Japanese).

    The film is not politically correct but it is entertaining especially if you want a pure action flick.
  • This a great movie that reflects the politics of the day, I believe that movies not only serve as entertainment but also as historical documents, giving us insight into language, culture, fashion and political and racial issues. This movie is no exception The story is great, the development of the marine raiders into an elite fighting force who go on to attack Makin Island. Its difficult to stay in a PC state of mind when the fighting starts. However, it brings it all back to us at the end of the movie when when Colonel Thorwald (Randolp Scott) makes his final speech and pays tribute to the many who died to make sure that the evil, such as seen in the far east during the late 1930s and early 1940s should never happen again. I only wish that leaders of the modern world had time to watch and pay attention.....

    On DVD its cheap, but still its disappointing to see such a great movie which has not been given at least a little touching up in audio or video. The quality of the sound and picture are extremely poor. Things went from bad to worse when the disc that I purchased would not play between minutes 30 and 40. Its most disappointing when distributors of films such as this do not seem to want to acknowledge that many of those who collect movies these days have better home theatre systems and poor quality shows up badly.

    Unless you are desperate to watch this movie I would wait until the necessary restoration work has been done before making a purchase.
  • Randolph Scott is Colonel Thorwald, leader of the island raiders. Started after Pearl Harbor, the groups went from island to island, driving out the japanese soldiers on the pacific islands. it gets a little hokey, but it is a true story, based on real trained forces. about twenty minutes in, there's a propaganda speech, to inspire the men to train hard and work hard. it kind of goes on and on. Co-stars Alan Curtis and Noah Beery (brother of the larger than life Wallace...) also an early role for young Robert Mitchum. some incredible footage of the wrecks at Pearl Harbor. to remind the soldiers and the viewers what it's all about. Directed by Ray Enright, who himself had served in world war i. story by Lieutenant LeFrancois, USMC. some accounts say this was used as a training film for the military, and i can see why. so many places where they point out tactical points or things to watch for. it's almost a documentary. they even explain the meaning behind "Gung HO!"
  • Warning: Spoilers
    Should have been titled 'Balderdash!' Little in the film is true except the name of the island and the fact submarines were involved. Little more than training film quality with poor camera work, muddy stock footage and perhaps the low point of stereotyping 'Japs' with laughing Japanese infantry, laughing Japanese fighter pilots and one-dimensional square-jawed Americans dying left and right. Sixty years later it is unintentionally funny as an odd artifact and as an opportunity to see what is possible when the war fever is upon you. The plot and the dialogue remind me of playing guns on a summer's afternoon in my childhood, peering through the neighbor's hedge to gain a fatal advantage on my best friend Steve and my little brother. In actual fact, the Makin Island raid was a near total failure with Carlson and his men wandering around in the dark exchanging gunfire with shadows until finally, thirsty and completely disoriented, looking for someone to surrender to, before they happened upon some equally confused Japanese soldiers who promptly surrendered to them! In the withdrawal several of Carlson's Marines ended up on another island and were abandoned! The film, of course, couldn't tell that story, not in 1943, so this bit of whimsy was fabricated and rushed into release to the beating of drums. With Randolph Scott, and his jaw, as Colonel Thorwald (Carlson) leading a unit comprised almost entirely of stock caricatures, the green recruit (Harry Landon, Robert Mitchum), the grizzled veteran (J. Carroll Naish, Milburn Stone, Sam Levene), the country-bumpkin (Rod Cameron), the all-American boy (Alan Curtis), and scores of sneering (when they weren't laughing) 'Japs'. And yet the cast nearly overcomes the material. Almost. Randolph Scott's narrow range is well suited to his role of earnest commander and he is supported by a solid group of professionals who do their best with thin gruel. But in the end, the one-note object of the exercise wins. Any pretense is totally abandoned at the close when Randy Scott simply looks directly into the camera and delivers a stirring (well sorta stirring) call to arms. The cast was better than this material. So was the audience. Should be viewed with Reefer Madness and a bottle of moderately priced Merlot.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    Ray Enright directs this Black & White patriotic war film that of course is definitely dated; but highly entertaining...with no apologies for propaganda. This movie without a doubt lifted spirits of wartime Americans. GUNG HO!is based on a true story of World WarII Marines on Makin Island. Some very realistic scenes even though some dialog is genuinely hokey. Talk about an All-Star cast: Randolph Scott gives up his horse and saddle for military garb in the role of Colonel Thorwald. There is a young Robert Mitchum on the brink of stardom. Others featured are: Noah Berry Jr., Rod Cameron, Alan Curtis, J. Carrol Naish, Sam Levene, David Bruce and Milburn Stone. Not much can bust up these commandos...except war.
  • anstamatopoulos17 December 2006
    The movie 'Gung Ho!': The Story of Carlson's Makin Island Raiders was made in 1943 with a view to go up the moral of American people at the duration of second world war. It shows with the better way that the cinema can constitute body of propaganda. The value of this film is only collection and no artistic. In a film of propaganda it is useless to judge direction and actors. Watch that movie if you are interested to learn how propaganda functions in the movies or if you are a big fun of Robert Mitchum who has a small role in the film. If you want to see a film for the second world war, they exist much better and objective. I rated it 4/10.
  • chingatch2 August 2009
    Sets the standard for war moves to come.

    Many complain about "clichés", how can you call the move that created the clichés as cliché? Are Edward Weston's photographs "cliche"? He set the standards, copied by many, as does this movie.

    As kids growing up in the 50's, watching movies like this on weekend TV set the stage for many battles between our block and those kids across the street.

    Great action scenes, heroic Americans mowing down "Japs" by the hundreds, explosions, airplanes bombing & strafing, ships, submarines, this movie has it all!
  • The Plot.

    Seven weeks after Pearl Harbor, volunteers form the new 2nd Marine Raider Battalion whose purpose is to raid Japanese-held islands.

    The men selected come from different walks of life but have toughness in common.

    Under command of Colonel 'Thorwald', they're trained in all imaginable forms of combat.

    Then, after a perilous submarine journey, they face a daunting first mission: to annihilate the much larger Japanese garrison on Makin Island, in a lengthy battle sequence.

    I didn't think I was gonna like this movie. And yes, it is dated.

    But it's very engaging and hard to stop watching. It's directed at a brisk pace. Some people call this racist. It's not. They call the enemy Japs. That the entire racism in this movie.
  • Skip it – A WWII propaganda film that is not bad compared to most made during the war, but still does not deserve to be ranked among the great war movies. Devoid of any character development or storytelling, it is more of a straight forward retelling of the events surrounding the American raid on Makin Island. Starring Randolph Scott and a young Robert Mitchum, the film waits until about an hour in for the action to start. There is, however, more than one battle as the Americans work their way across the island. This is not a "one and done" action movie. There are some pretty decent combat sequences in the second half of the movie, so if you can put up with the old-fashioned feel, it might be worth a watch.
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