The Bamboo Prison
Corporal Brady (Brian Keith) an American soldier captured during the Korean War, is taken to a POW camp. There he meets Sergeant Rand (Robert Francis) a prisoner who is cooperating with the North Kore…
The Bamboo Prison
Corporal Brady (Brian Keith) an American soldier captured during the Korean War, is taken to a POW camp. There he meets Sergeant Rand (Robert Francis) a prisoner who is cooperating with the North Koreans. Brady is disgusted by these actions, but he soon discovers that Rand is really an intelligence officer playing along to access important secrets. Rand also becomes close to Tanya Clayton (Dianne Foster), the wife of an American traitor, in order to exact information. What appears to be a classic prison camp film is in reality an espionage thriller. American prisoners delivered to a Korean POW camp encounter the cruelty of the communist guards, the treachery of a collaborator (Robert Francis), and spies placed among them by the communists to observe and manipulate them. Among the new prisoners is an intelligence operative (Brian Keith) sent to infiltrate the camp to gather proof of atrocities committed in the POW camps to be used to as leverage in the Panmunjom peace talks. E.G. Marshall portrays a demur priest imprisoned by the communists who provides spiritual support and encouragement to the troops. The story has several classic examples of communist questioning techniques and manipulation including torture, race baiting, bribery and seduction, but this is just window dressing. The real plot comes from the spies on each side attempting to outwit each other.
The Bamboo Prison
Drama,War
Film Details
Corporal Brady (Brian Keith) an American soldier captured during the Korean War, is taken to a POW camp. There he meets Sergeant Rand (Robert Francis) a prisoner who is cooperating with the North Koreans. Brady is disgusted by these actions, but he soon discovers that Rand is really an intelligence officer playing along to access important secrets.
Rand also becomes close to Tanya Clayton (Dianne Foster), the wife of an American traitor, in order to exact information. What appears to be a classic prison camp film is in reality an espionage thriller. American prisoners delivered to a Korean POW camp encounter the cruelty of the communist guards, the treachery of a collaborator (Robert Francis), and spies placed among them by the communists to observe and manipulate them.
Among the new prisoners is an intelligence operative (Brian Keith) sent to infiltrate the camp to gather proof of atrocities committed in the POW camps to be used to as leverage in the Panmunjom peace talks. E.G. Marshall portrays a demur priest imprisoned by the communists who provides spiritual support and encouragement to the troops.
The story has several classic examples of communist questioning techniques and manipulation including torture, race baiting, bribery and seduction, but this is just window dressing. The real plot comes from the spies on each side attempting to outwit each other..