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poster of Operation Bikini
Rating: 3.8/10 by 12 users

Operation Bikini (1963)

The film takes place aboard an American submarine in the Pacific during World War II. The sub's commander is ordered to stop and pick up an underwater demolition team led by Lt. Hayes, whose mission is to locate and destroy a US submarine sunken in a lagoon off Bikini Atoll before the Japanese are able to raise it and capture the advanced radar system on board.

Directing:
  • Anthony Carras
Writing:
  • John Tomerlin
Stars:
Release Date: Tue, Mar 26, 1963

Rating: 3.8/10 by 12 users

Alternative Title:

Country:
United States of America
Language:
English
Runtime: 01 hour 17 minutes
Budget: $0
Revenue: $0

Plot Keyword: island, submarine, world war ii, demolition, fistfight, scuba diving, love interest, underwater, japanese soldier
Subtitle   Wallpaper   Watch Trailer    

Tab Hunter
Lt. Morgan Hayes
Frankie Avalon
Seaman Joseph Malzone
Scott Brady
Capt. Emmett Carey
Jim Backus
Bosun's Mate Ed Fennelly
Gary Crosby
Seaman Floyd Givens
Michael Dante
Lt. William 'Bill' Fourtney
David Landfield
Lt. Jim Cale
Jody McCrea
Seaman William Sherman
Aki Aleong
Seaman Ronald Davayo
Duane Ament
Seaman Kingsley (uncredited)
Richard Bakalyan
Seaman Hiller (uncredited)
Jody Daniels
Seaman Jones (uncredited)
Joe Finnegan
Seaman Morris (uncredited)
Raymond Guth
Seaman Rich (uncredited)
Judy Lewis
Dream Siren (uncredited)
Alicia Li
Third Native Girl (uncredited)
Steve Mitchell
Seaman Nolan (uncredited)
Tony Scott
CPO Perez (uncredited)
Vernon Scott
Seaman Fowler (uncredited)
William Shatner
Narrator (voice) (uncredited)
Raynum K. Tsukamoto
Kawai (uncredited)
Wayne Winton
Seaman Patterson (uncredited)

CinemaSerf

Tab Hunter is "Hayes" - a beefcake marine sent to lead a mission to destroy an American submarine that has been captured by the Japanese, and that contains a top secret radar prototype. It requires a lengthy submarine trip to get to the eponymous atoll, and needless to say there are some fun and frolics en route. Not least, the rather vivid dreams of "Malzone" (Frankie Avalon) who has a go at singing a rather repetitive ditty "The Girl Back Home" which is accompanied by a rather psychedelic-style sequence of dancing girls in bright colours. Aside from those rather nightmarish scenes, the rest of it is all a rather cheap and cheerful wartime drama that reuses some actuality footage, some rather overgrown plastic foliage and the odd submarine interiors that help this trundle along to quite an enthusiastic and flag-waving denouement. Nope, it's nobody's finest hour - not in front of, nor behind, the camera but I didn't really hate it - I found it quite cheesily predictable. Had it been made during the war, then maybe it would have been able to get away with being propagandist. It wasn't, so it can't!


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