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The Highest Honor

Catalog Number
4034
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The Highest Honor (1984)

Additional Information

Additional Information
A true story of heroes. The enemy gave them a choice. Live in disgrace. Die with honor.

The true story of a daring raid on Japanese-occupied Singapore Harbour by Australian and British troops during WWII.

During World War II, a team of Australian soldiers from Z Special Unit, including Ivan Lyon and Robert Page, successfully lead an expedition to destroy ships in Singapore harbour, Operation Jaywick. An attempt to duplicate this success, Operation Rimau, ends in disaster, with the team either killed or captured. Those soldiers who are interrogated by the Japanese in Singapore, with Page forming a friendship with Minoru Tamiya. Eventually all the Australians are convicted of war crimes and are executed.

The film was never released theatrically in Australia[4] but did screen as a mini-series in 1989.[5] It did obtain a theatrical release in the US and England and McCallum says the film sold widely to television. It was also known as Heroes of the Krait and Minami Jujisei.[6]
The widow of Bob Page and survivors of Z Force were furious with the film, claiming it was far too complimentary to the Japanese. Robinson admitted the film was "50 percent fiction" and that "there is no doubt that the whole picture is designed as an apology, but with facts as dramatic as these, why play around with it? What gives the film the impact is the constant reminder that this is true."[2]
Robinson admitted there was an occasion where the Japanese producers wanted the prison set to have pillows and sheets on the bed to make them look nicer, but he refused. A scene where a Japanese officer comes to Australian ten years after the war to make peace with one of the widows, Roma Greenish, was cut at the request of Ms Greemish.[2]
McCallum later said that "Stuart Wilson was very good in" the film but:
It got bogged down with too much Japanese dialogue, because they were co-producing, and put up half the money. They insisted on a lot of Japanese. I said, 'You're the villains in this, you beheaded the Australians.' But they thought they'd make a huge amount of money out of it; the man behind the film company was a millionaire. He took us up there, Robinson and myself and some of the actors, and we had a great jamboree of a week in Tokyo, where he had a huge launch of the damn thing in a huge cinema. He said 'We're releasing it tomorrow all over Japan. We expect to make three million.' I think they lost three million.[7]
In 1982 Thomas Keneally was reported as working on a script for another film based on Operation Rimau called Rimau for the South Australian Film Corporation to be made for $1 million, but no film eventuated

Release Date: January 18, 1985

Distrib: New World Pictures

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