Product Details
Shell Shock / Battle of Blood Island (Something Weird)

Shell Shock / Battle of Blood Island (Something Weird)
Directed by Joel Rapp, John Hayes

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Product Description

War is hell -- especially if you're a G.I. suffering from Shell Shock! Bonked on the head during the Battle of Bronson Canyon, Johnny Wade is ready to crack. But that doesn't stop rotten Sgt. Rance from sending Wade out to capture a German ammo dump which results in Johnny having a complete mental breakdown: "Sure a psycho, ain't he?" Though everyone realizes Johnny needs medical help -- especially since he's throwing himself around his tent like it was a padded cell -- Rance thinks it would be more amusing if crazy Johnny was running loose in German territory. Sure enough, Rance helps Johnny "escape," and wacky Wade is soon racing around Italy with no idea of what planet he's on!. Directed with brisk efficiency by exploitation vet John Patrick Hayes (Grave of the Vampire), here's a fun little low-budget war epic in which the Hollywood Hills pass for 1943 Italy! Plus: All that's left after the Battle of Blood Island are gloating Japanese and a beach littered with dead G.I.'s. But two of the "dead" aren't: Moe is just playing possum while Ken is alive but seriously wounded. Essentially strangers, the two must learn to work together, elude the enemy, and somehow survive -- despite an unwelcome explosion of some old-fashioned American bigotry.... Shot in Cuba back-to-back with Last Woman on Earth and Creature from the Haunted Sea, pay attention to the G.I. barking orders at the end and you'll spot executive producer Roger Corman, no doubt playing a part to stretch a buck!


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #98071 in DVD
  • Released on: 2004-03-16
  • Rating: Unrated
  • Aspect ratio: 1.33:1
  • Formats: Black & White, DVD, Full Screen, NTSC
  • Original language: English
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Running time: 146 minutes

Customer Reviews

Weak Films, Great Shorts4
Both of the main features are weak and the 4 stars is solely due to the fascinating bonus shorts.

Shell Shock has an interesting set up, but it just fizzles out. It held my attention, but at the end I was left feeling like I could have spent my time better. Overall, it was like a weak episode of Combat.

Battle of Blood Island, on the other hand, was an utter chore to sit through. Early on in the film, all the Japanese troops commit suicide, so the two surviving US soldiers are left on the titular island alone to spend the whole film alternating between bickering with each other, then apologizing to each other for said bickering. There is no battle (just the aftermath). There is no blood. And it wasn't filmed on an island. It could just have easily been a terrible drama about a couple of guys stranded in a desert, or in a mountain after a plane crash, or (fill in with any scenario in which two people could be stranded in the middle of nowhere). Only recommended for those who feel the need to see a young Roger Corman say two or three lines in order to save money.

The only real reason to get this DVD is for the amazing shorts. "Information Please" is a film produced by the US Air Force during WWII to teach soldiers about the methods Germans might use to trick prisoners into providing information. It is largely done through a film-within-a-film (a fake German film about how to conduct interrogations).

"Our Job in Japan" is a jaw-dropping War Department film made just after Japan's WWII surrender in order to explain to soldiers, often by using stock footage taken completely out of context, why the US must continue to occupy Japan. The film is as outrageously racist as any film the Nazis made. For example, it tries to degrade the Japanese by explicitly arguing they are a bunch of irrational pagans, and goes out of its way to insult Shintoism. Also, the War Department argues that Japan has no culture (they don't say why, but I guess it's because the Japanese didn't eat hot dogs or play baseball.) One concession the War Department makes: the Japanese do have brains like other humans, and therefore could be taught by US occupiers how to use them (the US War Department's words, not mine). Overall, this documentary, like Mein Kampf, is a horrific artifact that is simultaneously historically and sociologically important (as a study of racism), although its contents have zero validity.

And, lastly, in "We've Got Another Bond to Buy", a famous crooner/child-abuser tries to appeal to the patriot in all of us by arguing that there is profit to be made in them there War Bonds. You can sing along by following the bouncing ball.

A pair of mismatched WWII B-Movies with fascinating short subjects4
I had not thought of their being World War II exploitation films, but then again this double-feature from the friendly folks at Something Weird Video would more rightly be considered B-movies since you really do not get blood and gore, while the sex stuff consists of girls for speak Italian or dance around in a bath towel. The 1964 film "Shell Shock" is set in Italy during WWII, where Johnny Wade (Carl Crow) goes from war hero to shell shock victim. His friend, Gil Evans (Frank Leo) knows there is something wrong with Johnny, but Rance (Beach Dickerson) is convinced Johnny is faking. Rance wants to be promoted back to sergeant, but the commanding officer has busted Rance so many times that he sees no reason to do it again. So Rance decides to take out his frustrations on Johnny, by releasing him in the direction of the German lines and then following, ostensibly to catch him in the act being a coward. But before he finds the Germans, Johnny finds an Italian farm girl (Pamela Grey). Her Italian is more believable than his battle fatigue, and while there is a lot going on as the situation becomes more complicated, little of it is worth the watching unless you have a fondness for unintentional humor. The film was also released as "82nd Marines Attack," which makes no sense as an alternative title (2.5 stars)

"Battle of Blood Island" has the disadvantage of a title that does not reflect what the film is really about. The setting is a pacific island in the aftermath of a battle that apparently consisted of a platoon of American Gils against a platoon of Japanese soldiers. The only American survivors are Moe (Richard Devon) and the badly wounded Ken (Ron Kennedy), who hide out in a cave and try to survive on the occupied island. The chronology is off a bit because the "battle" was apparently in January, and suddenly the Japanese troops commit hara-kiri because the war is over (which makes it August of 1945). Now Moe and Ken have to survive on the island alone, a situation made difficult because Moe has to take care of Ken, which escalates the tension between the two. Those looking for a battle movie will find the idea that "Battle of Blood Island" belongs in that category to be a joke. But this film becomes a fairly interesting little film about these two soldiers in this particular sticky situation. For what qualifies as a "Corman quickie," it is not bad (3.5 stars).

The chief attraction on this DVD ends up being "Information Please!" a WWII training film. Basically, the War Department "adapted" a British training film (i.e., they put their title at the start), which presents a faux Luftwaffenfilm on how to interrogate British P.O.W. for intelligence. The advantage of this conceit is that it show the German intelligence officers successfully using a variety of tricks and tactics to get information from the P.O.W.s. The problem of what a conquering army does with 70 million Japanese people is the subject of "Our Job in Japan." These are "people trained to play follow the leader," and who engaged in a war "so obscene it turned the stomach of the entire civilized world." It all has to do with putting the right things in their brains, and given that the United States currently has an occupying force in Iraq, this is another fascinating short (it makes you wonder what sort of training films they are showing our troops today). Then Bing Crosy croons "We've Got Another Bond to Buy," with lyrics included so you can sing along. Of course we also have eight "Battle-Scarred WWII Trailers," to remind us there are even more bad war movies out there: "Armored Attack!", "Blood of Bataan," "The Cavern," "The Devil's General," "Ordered to Love," "The Quick and the Dead," "The Steel Bayonet," and "Verboten!" (5 stars for the extras).