Walk Into Hell (1956) Poster

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8/10
Walk Into Paradise (Hell) was one of Oz's first International co-production.
collectibles18 July 2003
Long before Australia had a real film industry, Chips Rafferty and Lee Robinson made movies in an old picture theatre at Bondi Junction (Sydney). They began modestly making small budget films for the Australian markert but soon realized the importance of International distribution.

With no help from the government, they arranged their own co-production deal with a French company. WALK INTO PARADISE (HELL) and THE STOWAWAY with Martine Carol were two of the joint ventures.

Rafferty and Robinson made no money from these films because the French took all the cream but both films are to tribute to Rafferty, Robinson and the fledgling Australian Film Industry of the time.

WALK INTO PARADISE is an epic adventure on a grand scale and was filmed almost entirely in the wilds of Papua/New Guinea. It still has a lot of entertainment to offer.
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7/10
Still Looking Good After Over Sixty Years
richardchatten28 June 2018
This film must have been an extremely strenuous undertaking both as producer & star for the late Chips Rafferty.

There's the usual paternalistic attitude to the locals and problems with witch doctors, but not excessively so to modern sensibilities; and the tone is in the main quietly level-headed. After Rafferty's predictable initial opposition to bringing French woman doctor Françoise Christophe along, she too is eventually allowed to settle into the team and behave like a pro.

And Carl Kayser's Eastman Color photography is terrific!
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7/10
Beware of some moments that will shock you!
mark.waltz29 April 2022
Warning: Spoilers
This collaboration of French and Australian movie makers is a great outdoorsy adventure that goes into some seemingly forbidden locations to film this journey through a very beautiful but dangerous land. Deep in the heartland of Australia, these natives are not welcoming at all to outsiders, and practice dark magic to ward away anything that they consider an evil influence or interference. Chips Rafferty, one of the biggest Australian movie stars of the 40's and 50's, plays The Adventure on a mission to get through this dangerous land and is accompanied by the beautiful French woman Françoise Christophe who really isn't a problem along the journey like other females were in other adventure movies like this. Rather than South America or Africa, Australia is an interesting substitute for these usual locations so you don't really get any wild animals outside of a scene where a curse is put on Christophe and a large snake is put into her hut. That scene is definitely not for the faint of heart.

Beautifully filmed, this obscure Adventure certainly isn't as well known as films like "King Solomon's Mines" or "Mogambo", but it is certainly deserving of classic status. The natives appear to be the genuine article, speaking their native tongue oh, some obviously meant to be representing dangerous tribes while others are friendlier. In glorious color, this is definitely a feast for the eyes. The beauty of nature really shines as seen in this film, and it is not an easy journey for Rafferty to make. At one point, they have to climb up a ladder to get onto the platform above where they are stopped so they can continue, and obviously much of this land is not settled. American films of this nature are usually pretty campy and sometimes silly, but this is done in a very serious nature. I don't know much about the natives in the heartland of Australia, but what they show here is indeed something quite amazing to behold.
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This film should be re-released
talbystargazer10 November 2004
With the right marketing this film could be re-released in Australia and France, and possibly elsewhere. It's a solid entry into the "adventure" genre, with slightly wooden but totally endearing performances by the cast.

Chips Rafferty is quite charming in a blue-collar no-nonsense sort of a way, and it's extraordinary to see how the Australian film persona has evolved since then.

Some of the imagery of Papua and New Guinea is breathtaking, and would be utterly impossible to film now in light of security problems there now.

Come on Village Roadshow, do some forward-thinking PR and distribute this gem!!!!
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7/10
Between Paradise and Hell
tomsview17 July 2020
Warning: Spoilers
When I saw "Walk into Paradise" (the Australian title) in a theatre in Sydney in the 1950s, I think New Guinea was more in our minds than it is today. I was only nine, but nearly all the parents of my generation had served in the war, a lot of them in New Guinea.

The story has a touch of John Huston's "The African Queen". Like Humphrey Bogart's Charlie Allnutt, Chips Rafferty's Steve McAllister reluctantly takes a woman with him on an expedition through dangerous, uncharted country.

Like Humphrey in the earlier movie, Chips finds that the woman, a French doctor in this case, is an asset rather than a liability. That was pretty much the basic ingredient of movie expeditions whether it was a trip to the middle of Africa or a journey to the centre of the earth.

The stars in "Walk into Paradise" hardly had the glamour of their famous Hollywood counterparts, but the participation of the hundreds of extras, the real natives of New Guinea, is absolutely fascinating. They are the real stars of the film.

There are impressive scenes: the sudden appearance of scores of natives out of seemingly empty grassland; the female paddlers ferrying McAllister's expedition in canoes though a labyrinth of channels, and finally, the massing of the natives in full regalia to create an airstrip.

At the time, Chips Rafferty still seemed to represent the quintessential Aussie male. Peter Finch gave the icon another shading in "A Town Like Alice", but you always felt that Chips wasn't acting all that much.

The score for "Walk into Paradise" was by Georges Auric, hired through the film's French connection. He had composed one of the most beautiful melodies ever for the screen, "It's April Again", the song from "Moulin Rouge" - another John Huston film. His score here is a quality one for an Australian film of the time.

On many levels "Walk into Paradise" is a time capsule. It may not be a masterpiece, but it certainly is unique.
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9/10
Trek through Papua
bkoganbing6 March 2005
The island of New Guinea in its recorded history seems to be in a bad location. The western half of it was colonized by the Dutch and is now part of Indonesia.

The eastern half now Papua has been at some point English, German, Australian. Walk Into Paradise was made while Australia held a mandate from the Trusteeship Council of the United Nations. Who run's the island is a big concern in Canberra. Spread over the northern shore of the Australian continent like a canopy, New Guinea was the scene of some of the fiercest fighting in World War II. A lot of Australian lives were lost so that the Japanese never mounted an invasion of Australia proper. That being said, for those natives in New Guinea, some of the most primitive people on Earth, they suffered as well because of geography.

I saw this film as a youngster as a second feature of a double bill back in the early 60s. Very few Australian films were shown in the USA then. This one was particularly relevant because the news at the time was filled with the disappearance of Michael Rockefeller, son of Nelson Rockefeller. Americans got to see on the movie screen just what Michael Rockefeller had gotten himself lost in. Made the tragedy all the more real for the general public.

It's one of the most realistic jungle pictures ever done. You can't count the studio Hollywood product before King Solomon's Mines or The African Queen. Americans are terribly ignorant of Africa and most of the rest of the tropical world because of Hollywood.

America also got to see Australia's biggest film star, Chips Rafferty. On the occasions I have seen him, Rafferty never disappoints and definitely not here. He plays a district officer who's sent into the jungle to locate a gold strike.

There are no Hollywood style heroics here. Rafferty plays a man who's just doing a very difficult job under trying conditions of heat, rain, and occasional fever. Gritty and realistic is the word here.

Papua got its independence in 1975 so that world is gone now. But the jungle is there and should be seen in this film.
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Fast-moving, spectacular, a curiosity
mcgowansociety16 November 2004
Seen as WALK INTO HELL, as apparently doctored up by Joseph E Levine. 35mm print still blazing with color. The mademoiselle doctor is charming, though the romance is tepid. The real-life District Officer, Fred Kaad, is a screen natural! Excellent picture of colonialist society of Papua-New Guinea at the time. Compare with MOGAMBO? Camera-work is fluent and lively, scenery looks as spectacular as producers intended, and almost as it really is.

Several crew had earlier worked with Robinson on Australian Government documentaries -- good way to scout a production! Auric's music is ordinary, a pity, obviously he came in at the end.
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