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Joe Butterfly
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Joe Butterfly is a 1957 American directed by starring , and , with in the title role as a Japanese man. Joe Butterfly at Audie Murphy Memorial Site The movie was action star Murphy's only outright comedy, and it suffered by comparison to the similar Teahouse of the August Moon, released seven months earlier.Gossett, Sue, The Films and Career of Audie Murphy, Empire Publishing, 1996, p. 82. The film was based on an unproduced play.Erickson, Hal Military Comedy Films: A Critical Survey and Filmography of Hollywood Releases Since 1918 McFarland, 30 Jul. 2012 p. 176


Plot
The film follows the staff of the Army weekly magazine Yank, who are among the first American troops in Tokyo after Japan's surrender. They are given the difficult task of producing an issue of the magazine in three days. Short on ideas and having to meet the deadline, they enter Japan's and come across Joe Butterfly. Butterfly shows them the high life, letting them live in a mansion complete with beautiful girls.


Cast
  • as Private John Woodley
  • as Sergeant Ed Kennedy
  • as Henry Hathaway
  • Keiko Shima as Chieko
  • as Colonel E. E. Fuller
  • as Sergeant Dick Mason
  • as Sergeant Jim McNulty
  • Shinpei Shimazaki as a little boy
  • Reiko Higa as False Tokyo Rose
  • Tatsuo Saitō as father
  • Chizu Shimazaki as mother
  • Herbert Anderson as Major Ferguson
  • as Sergeant Oscar Hulick
  • Frank Chase as Chief Yeoman Saul Bernheim
  • Harold Goodwin as Colonel Hopper
  • Willard Willingham as a soldier
  • as Joe Butterfly


Production
Filming started July 1956. The movie was shot partly in Hong Kong and Japan as well as aboard the USS Los Angeles.

At one stage the film was not going to be shown in Japan.

According to co-writer , Audie Murphy was extremely uncomfortable playing comedy. However, the movie was an enormous hit in Japan, in part because of the Japanese people's admiration for Murphy, and partly because of its sympathetic depiction of the Japanese.Don Graham, No Name on the Bullet: The Biography of Audie Murphy, Penguin, 1989 p 266-267 Following the film, Murphy brought home a 14-year-old Japanese girl who stayed with the Murphys and helped raise their children while she attended school in America.

The original choice for the title character was meant to be who had appeared as Sakini in the stage production of Teahouse of the August Moon. When he was unavailable the role was taken by Burgess Meredith who also played Sakini on stage.Erickson, Hal Military Comedy Films: A Critical Survey and Filmography of Hollywood Releases Since 1918 McFarland, 30 Jul. 2012 p. 176


See also
  • List of American films of 1957


External links

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