6/10
The Dragon's Tail
22 October 2010
Warning: Spoilers
***SPOILERS*** Unsual WWII movie that was actually finished almost a month before the US enter the war after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor! The fact that the attack on Pearl Harbor is mentioned in the movie's prologue and even later in the movie itself shows that it's storyline was changed after it was already in the can and had a number of scenes re-shot to update it.

Joe Tracey, Barry Nelson, the hard driving New York City taxi driver made a name for himself in capturing single-handedly the two notorious Spinaldi Brothers after they shot down a number of policemen in a New York City subway station. Basking in his popularity as a full fledged honest to goodness red blooded American hero Tracey is later approached by a local Chinese fraternity to drive a column of trucks up the Burma Road loaded with food and medical supplies to the beleaguered Chinese capital of Chunk-King that's on the verge of falling to the Japanese army.

Reluctant at first Tracey has a change of heart when he sees a number of Chinese students singing the Nationalist Chinese Governments national anthem as well as contributing what little they could scrape up for the cause in driving the hated Japs out of their country! Now in Rangoon Tracey runs into Amercan Gail Farwood,Larine Day, who's about to be deported by the British who run the country as an undesirable alien! It's Gail's estranged American the German born husband Tom Farwood, Stuart Crawford, who switched sides, even though at the time the USA was neutral, by joining the Japanese air-force in it's war against the United Kingdom, China's ally, who like the USA was not at war with Japan at the time!

It's hard to follow the movie in any historical context in knowing that Tracey was in fact working on his own in fighting the Japs not for what they did to his country, the attack on Pearl Harbor was still months away, but for what they were doing to the Chinese people! This all was very noble but in no way patriotic on Tracey's part!

In charge of getting a column of trucks across the treacherous Burma Road Tracey uses his expertise as a New York taxi driver to get the job done. In fact the Burma Road was in no way as dangerous as the streets on New York city that Tracey drove his cab for a living.

***SPOILERS*** Pretty good action scenes with Tracey and his American Chinese friend Kim How, Keye Luke, breaking through the Japanese lines at Shan Lu in order to break the siege of Chunk-King some 300 miles away. Among the difficulties that Tracey and his Chinese allies faced was non other then Gail's husband Tom who did everything to keep his mission, in breaking through the Japanses lines, from being successful.

What I considered the real hero in the movie Wing, who reminds me of a Chinese Hurtz Hall, played by Victor Sen Yung who was really the person who saved the day for Tracey and the men under his command. But by the time the film ended Wing wasn't around to get any applause from them!
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