The story of Japanese-American soldiers who fought in Europe during World War II.
Go for Broke! is a 1951 war film directed by Robert Pirosh,</>
Plot
The film begins in 1943 at Camp Shelby, Mississippi, with newly commissioned Lieutenant Michael Grayson (Johnson) reporting for duty with the 442nd, then in training. He discovers that he has been sent to a unit composed of Nisei, when he had expected to return to the U.S. 36th Infantry Division, a Texas United States National Guard unit with which he had served as an enlisted man. Having joined the war to fight against the Japanese, he is disturbed to find he is expected to fight alongside people whom he sees as Japanese, rather than Americans. From the outset, Grayson runs his platoon with rather harsh treatment of his subordinates, including an almost martinet-like insistence upon the strict observance of Uniform Code of Military Justice.
He (and the audience) learn that "w:go for broke" is a pidgin phrase (used in Hawaii) meaning to gamble everything, to "shoot the works" – to risk "going broke" or bankruptcy.
Category:1951 films
Category:1950s war films
Category:American films
Category:Asian-American films
Category:Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer films
Category:Italian Campaign of World War II films
Category:Black-and-white films
Category:English-language films
Category:Japanese-American internment films
Category:Films directed by Robert Pirosh
Category:Directorial debut films