Five Gates to Hell (1959) Poster

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7/10
true war feelings win out amid low budget surroundings.
HEFILM11 October 2017
So what do you have to "get over" to like this movie? The fact that standing sets and one American are used to be Vietnam. Those are small faults in a tightly put together potential exploitation film that instead manages to actually be dramatic and yes it's nasty in a war that's realistic to war in general and Vietnam in particular.

Due to a fast pace and tight dialogue this one won me over very quickly. It's well acted and there are things you won't see coming. The faith elements--both of the nuns and the doctors--are changed and broken realistically.

Unlike other Vietnam films--those made while the war was still being fought--this one presents the war in a way that time has supported, not torn down. There is no flag waving here. Also given good context and excitement to it all is a good musical score by Paul Dunlap.

James Clavell--as he proved with his novel turned movie KING RAT and with his later last film as director, THE LAST VALLEY, doesn't shy away from rape and death and nastiness in war but manages to make it about characters and drama not cheap exploitation. Which isn't to say that fans of just that wouldn't find this enjoyable and maybe even a little bit educational as well.

It's a good movie with limited production values--but makes the most of itself.
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6/10
The final line?
smokeyrayscreen26 November 2018
Warning: Spoilers
I saw this when I was a kid, and so it impressed me probably more than it should have. But the only thing I remember about it is the end, and a line of dialogue spoken by Neville Brand. The Viets had killed a bunch of people, and the survivors fought back, killing most of their attackers. Except for the leader, Brand. He is wounded, and while lying on the ground, he sees the leader of the women, (whom he had raped), coming to him. He raises his gun, looks at her, and then lowers it. His last words are, "Can't kill. Love", then dies. That always stuck with me. Anyone else remember that bit?
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grim but entertaining war story
Skragg19 November 2004
I first saw it very early (about 1970), and didn't see it again (as far as I know) until just a few years ago, but somehow the general idea of it always stayed with me. There have been many movies, I think, about women guerrilla fighters, but as far as I know, they usually do it for patriotic reasons. These women were doing it partly to stay alive and partly to get even, which gave it a different "feel", along with the fact that they were NURSES turned guerrilla fighters. Because of this, in the back of my mind, I always think of it as an exploitation film (the kind about "girl gangs" and so on). Which are fine with me, but it isn't one. It also isn't a "yellow peril" story, or really any kind of propaganda film (for France or any other country being in Vietnam). And where else can you see Nancy Kulp (Miss Hathaway) holding a hand grenade? (Unless maybe in some broad comedy routine.) And in how many other films (until a few years later) would you see a nun firing a machine gun? (Even though she did it very briefly.) And I know that people either laugh or get mad when they see an Asian (or in this case Eurasian) character played by a Western actor, but Neville Brand was very good in the part (again, he wasn't a "yellow peril" villain and nothing else). It isn't a perfect movie, but I think it mainly works.
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1/10
Shabby little shocker
reelguy217 January 2005
George Bernard Shaw once referred to Puccini's Tosca as that "shabby little shocker." That's an apt description for this Vietnam war film written and directed by James Clavell. Every manner of atrocity is committed in this unredeemable mess: garroting, rape, human boiling, crucifixion, pick-ax murder, and of course point blank shooting. Sure, it's a bloody war, but Clavell goes for the obvious sensational effect, without meaningful human values, much in the same way we've seen more recently in slasher pics.

Clavell manages to elicit terrible performances from his usually-commendable team of actors. Patricia Owens as a cynical nurse and Shirley Knight as a sanctimonious nun win the awards for bad acting against fierce competition. And for all the murders he commits, the usually tough Neville Brand is surprisingly innocuous, although it doesn't help that he's forced to play a Vietnamese leader. Greta Chi gives the best performance; doesn't that say it all?

There's some consolation at the end of the film when the women take arms against their captors. It's rather cathartic, I have to admit. But for sheer unpleasantness for most of its running time, this is a movie to avoid.
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1/10
A movie to unwatch
dubyah18 March 2008
I was against film censorship and film ratings less than zero until I saw the aptly named Five Gates of Hell.

As a previous critic noted, 'A shabby little shocker'.

When asked to name a movie I wanted to 'unwatch', this is at the top of my list. Oh, and just when you thought the sociopathic film couldn't be worse, there's Nancy Kulp(Miss Jane Hathaway from the Bev Hillbillies) with a hand grenade, and Neville Brand in oriental blackface.

If you're interested in the fates of women in World War II and Asian prisoner-of-war camps, I suggest you watch the Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC) miniseries 'Tenko'.
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4/10
Well, at least the setting is unique
scsu197521 November 2022
Vietnam, 1950. A band of Vietnamese guerillas invade a French hospital camp and carry off the nurses and doctors to perform an operation on some old geezer who is gonna croak anyway. The nurses are subjected to various atrocities (the worst of which is being cast in this film) before the inevitable breakout. This is about as close to an exploitation film as you can get from a major studio (20th Century Fox) considering the time period. The movie was shot in Cinemascope, although the print I saw was cropped.

Neville Brand, as the guerilla leader, looks as Asian as Mantan Moreland. His slicked-down hair doesn't help, either. He speaks in broken English. He yells out commands in what I assume is supposed to be Vietnamese, although I suspect he was really saying "get my freaking agent!" Dolores Michaels plays a nurse that Brand has the hots for. Nancy Kulp plays an ugly nurse that no one has the hots for. Ken Scott plays a doctor. Shirley Knight plays a nun. Benson Fong plays an Asian. Audience plays with their cell phones.

The climax isn't half bad, nor is it half good. I am no military strategist, but I'm pretty sure if the enemy is firing at you, you don't stand out in the open. Also, there is another lesson to be learned here. Never let Nancy Kulp anywhere near a hand grenade.
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10/10
Nancy Kulp's Greatest Role
mls41828 April 2020
Nancy Kulp is comedic genius in this role. Otherwise just a story of attractive women in danger. This film is not to be taken serious but for camp value.
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2/10
The Yellow Peril
bkoganbing6 July 2018
A rather trashy early account of the Vietnam War when it was the French still fighting it is Five Gates To Hell. It's as if someone got all those yellow peril warnings out to create this film.

If you believe this the Vietminh were really interested in our women folk for sex. Well proportioned females weren't all that prevalent among their own women.

Neville Brand plays a Vietminh guerrilla leader who kidnaps a hospital staff to treat a local Vietminh leader, doctors and nurses. The patient dies and the hospital staff effects an escape, the doctors die but the women wind up defending French colonialism and the virtue of white womanhood with the exception of nurse Nobu McCarthy.

A number of reviewers have already commented on Nancy Kulp, better known as Ms. Jane Hathaway of the Beverly Hillbillies lobbing handgrenades like she Nolan Ryan on the pitcher's mound.

As if this oriental depravity isn't enough these people are even raping nuns among the nurses.

Pure unadulterated trash.
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Women on the Warpath
cchristi28 July 2010
I haven't seen this film since the early seventies, and I can remember it being a shocker to my teenage sensibilities. ( I think I had just been allowed to wear white lipstick, shades of Yardley!) But it held my attention, and I can remember seeing Nancy Culp (Yikes, Miss Jane, what are you doing with a grenade?) in a role 180 degrees from the office of the Commerce Bank and Mr. Drysdale. I remember the role of the nun being virtuous, but stoic in the face of war, and that Neville Brand was riveting as the main character.

I wish this were available on DVD. The writing and the story were gripping, and Clavell never disappoints...
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10/10
Riveting Movie Keeps Your Interest
hogwrassler31 December 2020
FGTH is shown on the Fox Movie Channel quite often. It's a riveting movie set in 1950 Vietnam that will keep your interest until the very end. Written and directed by James Clavell, it's the story of eight Red Cross nurses and two doctors who are captured by Vietnamese bandits and taken to the jungle castle of warlord Chin Pmok. There, they must treat and keep alive the gravely ill grandfather of the warlord leader. Eventually, they make a break for freedom and must learn to use hand grenades and M-3 "grease guns" in order to stay alive.

The acting is first rate. Neville Brand was an odd choice to play Chin Pmok, but he pulls it off well and is quite believable. He makes Chin Pmok a brutal killer, but also a man who has a sense of honor and a softer side.

Dolores Michaels strikes the right note as Athena Roberts. Athena tries to repress her love for Dr. Richter, and in doing so, often appears emotionless, but she can turn on the fire when necessary.

Patricia Owens was perfectly cast as the hard-edged but pragmatic Joy Brooks. The press book for FGTH mentions the scenes where the women are selected by individual soldiers for sex. Patricia told Director Clavell that she was going to give the soldier who selected her "the look." In that closeup scene of Patricia, she definitely gives him "the look" and shows that she knew how to seduce a man just by using her eyes. That scene alone makes the FGTH worth watching. An excellent piece of acting by Patricia Owens.

Nancy Kulp was born to play Susette, the head of the nurses. Irish McCalla was originally cast as Greta, but wound up with the much smaller role of Sister Magdalena. Gerry Gaylor as Greta was very good. Shirley Knight, Nobu McCarthy, Linda Wong, and Greta Chi (in her first ever role before the camera) are all quite convincing. Ken Scott and John Morley provide good support as the two doctors who are sworn to save lives, but now find they must take them in order to stay alive.

Try to catch FGTH on The Fox Movie Channel if you haven't seen it yet. It's also available on DVD and can be found on Amazon and eBay. It's a good film to have in your collection.
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Emblazoned in my memory
masibley13 August 2003
The day I was watching this movie, I went into labour with my second son, who has now passed away., therefore this particular movie has stuck itself into my memory, and when a friend told me today of this website, I had to see if it was listed....and it was.

I never actually saw the entire movie, and would now love to purchase it if at all possible.

Thank you. Mary Anne Sibley
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10/10
This movie is up to the quality of Shogun, in movie form
Gar-817 February 1999
I believe Clavell was a great historical novelist, and when he tried out the silver screen, with all its limitations, he maintained his integrity. The sheer quality of this flick shines through. It's set in Vietnam in 1950, and, as usual, if it's Eastern society, he can teach it.
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A wartime story with a twist on victory.
byoung642920 April 2001
I saw this movie long ago and I remember being riveted to the story. I thought Neville Brand was a great bad guy and the Five Gates to Hell were where he ruled. It was a very different war theme. I would like to purchase this in video if I could find a copy. I have looked about everywhere on the internet.
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9/10
"God forgive me, but I am going to enjoy killing this man."
clanciai4 April 2023
The five gates to hell are five fortresses in Vietnam, built by the French to safeguard their colony, which in the insurrection war against the French were taken over by Vietnamese war lords. The strongest of them is the main scene of this drama, where eight nurses and two doctors are held prisoners with the intention to have a dying old war lord cured of his cancer, which of course the doctors fail to do, which they realise and the necessity of their escape before it is too late. The escape is not entirely successful, as there are casualties among them, but the ladies manage to get out and then have to face running the gauntlet to get into safety some 30 miles away. Their struggle and ordeals is the main drama of the film, which reminds quite a lot of "A Town Like Alice" a few years earlier, for the trials of the women. James Clavell, who wrote and made the film, always knew what he was describing, as he himself had been a war prisoner with the Japanese. His films like his novels are replenished with action and very dramatic developments, and they are all readable and impressive also as films. This is one of the best, and he would go on making more films for ten more years, until he concentrated wholly on only novels. The most impressive acting here is actually the villain, Neville Brand, a very brutal war hero but with human feelings, and the development of his character and his downfall is the most interesting part of the film, although it is not quite credible. Why do villains in films always have to be shot and killed over and over again? Can't they never do it right the first time?
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8/10
some similarities to inn of the 6th happiness
ksf-29 March 2021
With that title, it sounds like a vincent price camp horror film, but it's actually an adventure film, with some history thrown in. At a red cross medical unit in vietnam, 1950, a doctor ( Ken Scott) and several nurses (led by Nancy Kulp, from Beverly Hillbillies !) are taken hostage by the locals. Neville Brand is Chen, who has them operate on the local war lord. the soldiers are barbaric, and the nurses start getting attacked. and because some of the nurses are nuns, there's discussion over how much of a fight they should put up when it happens. the group must escape. somehow. the second half is their escape. written and directed by Jim Clavell, who actually WAS a prisoner of war during WW II. wrote a lot of material on experiences in asia. he passed away in 1994, but they are still remaking his story Shogun! Five Gates is very well done! he squashes a lot of story into 98 minutes.
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