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The Bamboo Prison

The Bamboo Prison

  • Status: Released
  • 15-06-1954
  • Runtime: 79 min
  • Score: 6.4
  • Vote count: 8

A communist POW sides with his North Korean guards against his fellow prisoners.

Robert Francis

MSgt. John A. Rand

Dianne Foster

Tanya Clayton

Brian Keith

Cpl. Brady

E.G. Marshall

Father Francis Dolan

Jack Kelly

Slade

Keye Luke

Comrade-Instructor Li Ching

Jerome Courtland

Arkansas

Earle Hyman

Doc Jackson, medic

Richard Loo

Commandant Hsai Tung

Murray Matheson

Comrade Clayton

King Donovan

Pop

Joe Turkel

P.O.W.

Dickie Jones

Jackie

Pepe Hern

Ramírez

Leo Gordon

Pike

Weaver Levy

Meatball

Robert Lynn

U.S. Colonel

George Conrad

P.O.W

Tony McCoy

P.O.W. (uncredited)

CinemaSerf

Brian Keith is adequate here as the all-American "Brady" who is taken to a POW camp during the Korean War. It's there that encounters the ostensibly collaborative "Rand" (Robert Francis) who has befriended "Tanya" (Dianne Foster) who is, herself, married to another whose loyalties are distinctly questionable. Pretty quickly we learn that nobody is quite who they seem and with a backdrop of severe torture, manipulation and fear we find that each of the Americans now suspect the other and are constantly trying to vie for the upper hand - all under the outwardly benign gaze of "Fr. Dolan" (EG Marshall) who has, himself, been imprisoned by the communists. It's actually quite a simple story designed to highlight the atrocities carried out against the Allies by the commies despite the provisions of the Geneva Convention. It has plenty of plausibility issues, though. None of the prisoners look especially emaciated - clean shaven with Colgate smiles; the casting is pretty weak and the dialogue does little to develop the sense of peril that the imagery lays before us. There isn't much chemistry on display, either, and I found the on/off romance stuff just clogged up what could have been quite an intriguing fifth-column, who-to-trust affair. Essentially this is a piece of propaganda and though doubtless routed in aspects of truth, to some degree, it is just a bit too much of a blunt instrument for me.