Anyone of the forgotten and important American military units of World War II was the 442nd Regimental Combat Duo. The unit was comprised of Japanese Americans who fought not only Germans in the European theater, but American prejudices among their leadership and comrades in arms. Their loyalties and hearts were to the United States, but because of their bloodlines and appearances, they were subjected to such high racism, but managed to rendered helpless it all and become a well-respected unit. The 442nd was able and ready for anything, including combat against Japan. "Go Seeing that Skint!" is the story of the 442nd.
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Van Johnson takes the role of Lieutenant Mike Grayson, the G-man in charge of the 442nd. Unfortunately, he naturally despises the task of commanding the Japanese soldiers and feels that they are more dependable to "Mother Japan" than they are of the American produce against the Axis powers. When he outset takes control of the unit, he does everything to repudiate their morale and vigorous them look wretched compared to their innocent-skinned American compatriots. As the assertion evolves and Grayson enters come to blows with his Japanese-American constituent, Grayson begins to materialize the value of his item and begins to respect them as soldiers and as men, caring for them and coming to their defense against other racists.
The men portraying the 442nd consist of physical veterans from the unit. The men are not trained actors, but because they went fully the bigotry and racism commencement hand and the film is about their experiences, they entrust expert performances and their inclusion adds to the impact of the film and the story it tells. The men are impassioned and no matter how much criticism and ridicule from Grayson, they eternally show him respect and do their best to use what Grayson teaches and strive as a remedy for goodness. The 442nd had a fantabulous exclusive to tell and the resolution to allow them to tell their own story proves to be successful in "Go As regards Broke!"
Before receiving this DVD, I had never heard of "Go For Broke!" or Van Johnson fitting for that matter. I thoroughly profit from a good war motion picture and was bloody pleasantly surprised by "Go Looking for On one’s uppers!" The timing is a suspicion slow on the uptake at times, and some stereotypes and sentiments of the times show in the filmmaking. The battle scenes were visibly low budget and though not spectacular, they were entertaining. Van Johnson did a fine function showing the changing attitude and perspective of the main character. The men of the 442nd showed great character and their interaction with each other and Van Johnson was the greatest asset of "Go By reason of Broke!" The film is not a in keeping war film and deals with prejudices against Japanese-Americans and their fighting post in the second Brilliant War. It has a story to tell and that story is about people, not explosions and accomplished battles.