Blood on the Sun

Having a wonderful time In Tokyo!

5.8
19451h 34m

Nick Condon, an American journalist in 20s Tokyo, publishes the Japanese master plan for world domination. Reaction from the understandably upset Japanese provides the action, but this is overshadowed by the propaganda of the time.

Production

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Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: Blood on the Sun 1945

Blood on the Sun 1945

Cast

Photo of James Cagney

James Cagney

Nick Condon

Photo of Sylvia Sidney

Sylvia Sidney

Iris Hilliard

Photo of Porter Hall

Porter Hall

Arthur Bickett

Photo of John Emery

John Emery

Premier Gilchi Tanaka

Photo of Robert Armstrong

Robert Armstrong

Col Hideki Tojo

Photo of Wallace Ford

Wallace Ford

Ollie Miller

Photo of Rosemary DeCamp

Rosemary DeCamp

Edith Miller

Photo of John Halloran

John Halloran

Capt. Oshima

Photo of James Bell

James Bell

Charley Sprague

Photo of Rhys Williams

Rhys Williams

Joseph Cassell

Photo of Frank Puglia

Frank Puglia

Prince Tatsugi

Photo of Harold Miller

Harold Miller

Bar Patron (uncredited)

Photo of Philip Ahn

Philip Ahn

Secret Police Capt. Yomamoto (uncredited)

Photo of Hugh Beaumont

Hugh Beaumont

Johnny Clarke (uncredited)

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Reviews

G

CinemaSerf

5/10

James Cagney is a journalist in pre-war Tokyo who gets embroiled in a tussle between the forces of Imperial aggression led by John Emery ("Tanaka") and those of peaceful conciliation headed by "Prince Tatsugu" (Frank Puglia). When the expansionists realise that Cagney is not going to play along - after bribery/threats and blackmail all fail to convince him; his very life is soon in peril - made worse once he is given a letter from the Prince that his opponents need back at all costs. Made at the end of WWII, it is a pretty obvious slice of propaganda, though it is tempered by some respect for the decent Japanese who did not want war, and it reflects their sense of "honour" in quite an interesting fashion - is it to the glory of the ancestors or just glorified cowardice? Cagney carries this pretty much single handedly. Marvin Miller is quite menacing as the dastardly "Yamada" too, but Sylvia Sidney as the plotting "Iris" doesn't remotely carry off her task as a scheming double-dealer and Rhys Williams ought to have stuck to his more jovial roles - he never could carry off meatier parts. The budget went on the star, the technical aspects of this leave quite a bit to be desired. It's a straight-up goodies v baddies film and nothing more complex than that...

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