Inmate Wanger Gets a Credit For Battle Zone (1952)
An Allied Artists Korea war movie credited to
producer Walter Wanger, who was actually serving an Honor Farm stretch at the
time (for shooting wife Joan Bennett's lover), and had nothing to do with
Battle Zone other than name among main titles and % of profit. This
foregoing I learned from Matthew Bernstein's Wanger bio, one of the
best books on a Hollywood independent that's
out there. Battle Zone was made for in vicinity of 2-300K and directed by
expert-in-his-sleep Lesley Selander, who'd always turn in a good job given at
least a rudimentary script and players who could stand straight to recite
dialogue. This was about combatphotographers, the "Motion Picture
Unit" of our Marine Corps, John Hodiak and Stephen McNally being rivals
for vivid shots as much as mobile nurse Linda Christian. She got Battle Zone
instead of co-starring berth with husband Tyrone Power in U-I's The Mississippi
Gambler, a stairway to stardom she desperately wanted and nagged Ty incessant
to get. Didn't work out, to her permanent distress (being focus in memoir account of their doomed union). Battle Zone relies heavily on fight
footage matched with co-op tanks, artillery, etc. loaned by Camp Pendleton.Korea
was hot enough topic for cheapies to eek by and get bookings better than maybe
they deserved, Battle Zone OK for such an economy model. If nothing else, it
kept Allied Artists on the climb toward "A" status within a doubting
industry, but exhibs were thankful for their product to fill bottom-of-bills or top humbler ones.
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