China Gate (1957 film)
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China Gate | |
---|---|
Directed by | Samuel Fuller |
Produced by | Samuel Fuller |
Written by | Samuel Fuller |
Starring | Gene Barry Angie Dickinson Nat King Cole Lee Van Cleef |
Music by | Victor Young Max Steiner |
Cinematography | Joseph F. Biroc Cinemascope |
Distributed by | 20th Century Fox |
Release date(s) | May 22, 1957 |
Running time | 97 min. |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
China Gate is a 1957 Hollywood Cinemascope war film written, produced and directed by Samuel Fuller and released through 20th Century Fox.
Contents |
[edit] Plot
Gene Barry (Brock) and Nat King Cole (Goldie) are American Korean War veterans now serving as French Foreign Legion mercenaries in the First Indochina War. Angie Dickinson is "half caste" as a Chinese Eurasian (mixed ancestry) called "Lucky Legs' who resorts to smuggling to feed her five year old son that she had with Barry. Barry abandoned her and the child when it was born with Asian features feeling a "half breed" would not be welcome in America; an attitude towards miscegenation prevalent at the time. Lucky Legs is recruited by the French high command to use her knowledge to guide a demolition squad of Legionnaires led by Barry to blow up a hidden Viet Minh ammunition dump on the border with Red China. In return for her services, Lucky Legs is promised by the French that they will arrange for her son's evacuation to America.
The patrol is filled with animosity between Barry and Dickinson, booby traps, and Viet Minh patrols. On arrival at the ammunition dump hidden in a mountain, Dickinson discovers the commanding officer is a former friend Major Cham (Lee Van Cleef) who wants to take her and her son to a new life in Moscow. Van Cleef plays his role as a high flyer corporate executive (in the manner of Fuller's gangsters in Underworld USA) marked for great things in the world of international communism. The sabotage mission is successful but at great cost. Barry reconciles with his child and is last seen walking holding his hand in prelude to returning to America as Cole reprises the title song.
[edit] Production
Fuller selected Cole after being impressed with his face on a record album cover. Though Darryl F. Zanuck said that Cole received more money in a few weeks then the entire budget of the film, Fuller arranged to meet Cole. Cole and his wife were interested in Goldie as an opposite to the racist Brock and agreed to work at a minimum salary. China Gate was the last score that Victor Young composed; the film was finished by his friend Max Steiner. Harold Adamson wrote lyrics to Young's beautiful theme for the film. Though originally not intending to sing in the film, Cole sang China Gate as he walked through a bombed out village making it a memorable tune and a fitting tribute to the late Victor Young.
Though ludicrous by today's standards, Angie Dickinson makes the most out of her role. An actual Asian actress playing a love interest opposite a white European star was a rarity in Hollywood at the time. The Eurasian Dickinson plays proves attractive to Brock, and to mainstream audiences of the time. Her character is allowed to speak Fuller's view on race relations and her character is respected both by the French military and by a local priest whose life Lucky Legs had saved. Dickinson's character is similar to Fuller's prostitute protagonists in Pickup on South Street and The Naked Kiss. The dangerous patrol allows for a gradual change of heart for Barry's character.
[edit] Banned in France
Before China Gate was to be released, Fuller received a call from the French Consul-General in Los Angeles, Romain Gary inviting him to lunch. Gary said the film's prologue was too harsh towards France and asked Fuller to change it. Fuller didn't, but the two became firm friends with similar interests. The film was never released in France
Many years later Fuller fimed a story of Gary's White Dog (1982) that Fuller and Curtis Hanson wrote.[1]
[edit] References
- ^ Fuller, Samuel A Third Face Alfred A Knopf (2002)
- Fuller, Samuel A Third Face Alfred A Knopf (2002)