“Attack
Force Z” is an Australian movie that is most known for starring young future
stars Mel Gibson and Sam Neill. It was
directed by Tim Burstall and was filmed in Taiwan. The movie was premiered at Cannes, but after
that was only shown briefly in Australian theaters. It was a flop. It was based on a true story. There was a Z Special Force which was an
elite unit of Australian volunteers that was part of Gen. Douglas MacArthur’s
army in the Pacific. It conducted
missions behind enemy lines and was similar to the OSS. The movie claims to be an “honest retelling”
of one of those missions.
The
movie opens in January, 1945 as five commandoes land on an island via kayaks
launched from a sub. They are led by
Capt. Kelly (Gibson). Their mission is
to rescue the survivors of a downed plane. An early encounter with a Japanese bunker
results in the wounding of one of them and his subsequent stoical dispatching
by Sgt. Costello (Neill). These guys
mean business. They hook up with a local
resistance leader who uses martial arts against a Japanese patrol. Is this the first use of kung fu in a war movie? There are some problems, but they eventually
locate their targets which turn out to be an American government official and a
Japanese defector who holds the key to a quicker Allied victory over the
Japanese. A romance is thrown in between the top billed
John Philip Law and a native girl. Queue
the sappy music. In the climax, the
village stands against a Japanese unit to aid in the escape of the commandoes. In a crescendo of violence, the movie lives
up to its “who will survive?” nature.
Answer: 20 %.
“Attack
Force Z” (also unknown as “The Z Men”) is a low budget resume white-out
target. The acting is not the
problem. Gibson and Neill show promise,
but Law (who had achieved fame as the blind angel in “Barbarella”) shows that
he is properly obscure. The plot is
shaky. Parts make no sense and it would
be best to not think too much while watching it. A Japanese defector who wants to reveal
important secrets? Ridiculous. There is some low budget action movie
violence that should keep the combat porn demographic happy. The deaths are not silly and they are fairly
graphic. It certainly goes out with a
bang (but not a loud bang because the heroes use silencers on their sub machine
guns).
As to the claim
of historical truth, I’m afraid I’m going to have to call “shenanigan” on that
one. The movie is clearly based on
Operation Opossum. In 1945, Z Special
Force was tasked to rescue the Sultan of Temate. Thirteen members landed on the island on
orders from MacArthur. They made contact
with the Sultan, but the next day had to defeat several boatloads of Japanese
soldiers that landed near the village.
The Japanese were wiped out in a firefight. The Australians lost only their
commander. The Sultan and his family
were evacuated by PR boat and taken to meet MacArthur.
Forgotten
gem? Appropriately forgotten and
certainly not a gem.
Grade = C
I have always wondered if it is as bad as I thought. Thanks for clearing that up. I will give this a miss.
ReplyDeleteIts a decent enough boy's own film. Watch it.
DeleteBut what if you are a big Mel Gibson fan?
ReplyDeleteI was during the Road Warrior/Lethal Weapon days but that ended once he started making movies with historical subjects.
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ReplyDeleteThanks. Good info. However, I doubt that the director cared.
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