Hell to Eternity: Difference between revisions - Internet Movie Firearms Database - Guns in Movies, TV and Video Games
Hell to Eternity: Difference between revisions
[[Image:hell81_sm.jpg|thumb|600px|none|Galbadon (Hunter) oversees the Japanese surrender. General Matsui (Sessue Hayakawa) has his back to the camera.]]
[[Image:hell81_sm.jpg|thumb|600px|none|Galbadon (Hunter) oversees the Japanese surrender. General Matsui ([[Sessue Hayakawa]]) has his back to the camera.]]
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[[Image:hell83_sm.jpg|thumb|600px|none|]]
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[[Image:hell57_sm.jpg|thumb|600px|none|]]
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==M1 Garand==
==M1 Garand==
Throughout the film, Marines carry the [[M1 Garand]].
Throughout the film, Marines carry the [[M1 Garand]].
Hell’s to Eternity (1960), directed by Phil Karlson, depicts the battle for Saipan and the heroics of Marine PFC and Navy Cross recipient Guy Galbadon, who captured over 1,000 Japanese in combat. Although Galbadon was a Mexican-American in real life, he was portrayed by actor Jeffrey Hunter in the movie. The film also starred David Janssen, Vic Damone, John Larch, and Sessue Hayakawa. A neglected youth, raised by a Japanese-American family in Los Angeles, becomes a decorated Marine in World War II by using his fluency in the Japanese language.
The following weapons were used in the film Hell to Eternity:
Throughout the film, Marines use the M67 flamethrower tank against Japanese defenders. The M67 is an anachronism, as it wasn't developed until the 1950's.