I Was an American Spy (1951) Poster

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7/10
The Thrilla from Manila
blanche-210 August 2011
Ann Dvorak is real-life spy Claire Phillips in "I Was an American Spy," a 1951 film also starring Gene Evans (known to baby boomers as the father in My Friend Flicka on TV) and with a prologue and an appearance at the end of the film by General Mark Clark.

Though the movie takes the usual dramatic license, it does tell the true story of Claire Phillips, a woman living in Manila with her daughter when the war broke out. After she becomes a widow, Phillips helps the Americans by changing her identity and starting a gentlemen's club in Manila, which becomes popular with the Japanese soldiers. From her club, she provides information, food, boots, and medicine to the soldiers and prisoners of war (although if prisoners of war were mentioned in the film, I missed it). Her code name is "High Pockets" because she would put notes in her brassiere.

If Claire Phillips did a third of what Ann Dvorak portrays in this film -- and I think actually she did much more -- one can see why she was given the Medal of Freedom. I do think the beginning, with her following her husband's battalion around is probably a little fanciful. I mean, walking around in the jungle by yourself - is anyone that foolhardy.

Ann Dvorak is wonderful as Claire. She portrays the woman's bravery, finesse, sophistication, coolness, pluck, and her fear and suffering. An underrated actress who usually played supporting roles and retired from the screen after marrying her third husband in 1952, Dvorak shows that Warner Brothers should have given her better movies.

I thought this was a very good, compelling story of a courageous woman who served our country.
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6/10
Enjoyable...but what is the TRUE story of Claire Phillips?
planktonrules25 March 2019
During WWII, Claire Phillips was stuck in Manila after the Philippines fell to the Japanese. Following her husband's death, she apparently became an important member of the underground...though she did it in wide open as a hostess of a night club. The story is interesting and should have been made...but there is one serious problem. It seems that Claire was a liar. Yes, some of this DID happen but later when folks began investigating her claims, they found many exaggerations and outright lies. It's a shame...but the film still is entertaining and worth your time.

In the lead is Ann Dvorak. It's one of her last films and she was good in the role..particularly because she was older and less glamorous...and looked a lot like Phillips. The direction and production were all good...and the only reason I don't give the film a higher score is due to the dubious nature of the details of her exploits.
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7/10
Code Name High Pockets
bkoganbing9 April 2015
I Was An American Spy is a remarkable film for two reasons. First it's one of the few non-westerns that director Lesley Selander did in his career. Secondly I'm surprised that this story did not rate A picture treatment with a bigger name actress other than Ann Dvorak. Dvorak was on the downward slope of her career at this point.

That being said Dvorak gives a wonderful performance as the saloon entertainer Claire Phillips who married a GI stationed in the Phillipines the day after Pearl Harbor. When her husband Douglas Kennedy is killed in action she not only survives among the Japanese, but builds an extensive spy network and helps prisoners with food and gives valuable intelligence for sabotage working closely with American and Filipino guerrillas. Her main contact is Gene Evans heading up all the guerrilla activity in the islands, a role similar to what John Wayne does in Back To Bataan.

Remarkably when she was caught she was kept several months in prison and was found nearly starved to death according to the Wikipedia article on Claire Phillips. They kept her alive in the hopes she'd crack and give the Japanese information. The woman had the right stuff for sure, she never did. I doubt though her rescue was in real life quite as action filled as it is in this film.

Notice should also be taken of Richard Loo once again playing a Japanese soldier, in this case a colonel she makes a monkey out of. Loo had a career of playing cruel Japanese soldiers during World War II. Loo is given a bit more depth in this film than normally.

A nice B film that rated A picture treatment of a real American hero.
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Seeking biographical info on "High Pockets" Claire Phillips
Rik-1918 February 2009
Does anyone have biographical information on Claire? Her birth name was Claire Snyder. Anything you have will help, such as birth date/place, parents, siblings, etc., as well as what happened to her after her book "I Was an American Spy" was published? In the 1950s, she was remarried, with the surname Clavier.

I've found a speech by Senator Wayne Morse (he was an Oregon Republican who became an independent in 1952, then switched to the Democratic Party in 1955) about Claire Phillips Clavier (at a rough guess about 80% of the people with that surname are from Louisiana).

I also found a studio synopsis of the movie. Based on that, Boone is John Peyton Boone (then a corporal).

Claire's book "Manila Espionage" is out of print, and very difficult to find.
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7/10
Ann Dvorak as real life Philippine saboteur
kevinolzak22 May 2020
1951's "I Was an American Spy," the story of real life Filipina spy Claire Phillips, was adapted from her 1947 publication "Manila Espionage," depicting her activities as a Michigan-born widow conducting sabotage against occupying Japanese forces in the Philippines between 1942 and 1945. The release coincided with her receiving the prestigious Medal of Freedom that same year, although later scholars suggested that many of her accounts were 'without foundation' (she died of meningitis at age 52 in 1960). Regardless of any factual basis, it provides the 40 year old Dvorak (Cesca in the 1932 "Scarface") with the last great meaty role of her career, and a reminder of her own past as an ambulance driver for Britain's war effort (the real life Claire Phillips was delighted to have the legendary beauty cast in her shoes, and the two became good friends). We open with the announcement of Pearl Harbor's attack, Ann Dvorak as Claire with small daughter performing in a Manila night club while awaiting the return of her current paramour, American sergeant John Phillips (Douglas Kennedy). Once the Japanese invade the Philippines everyone heads for the hills, Claire catching up to John for a quickie marriage before he departs, later shot down before her eyes after the fall of Bataan, with Gene Evans as Corp. John Boone now looking after her. This steels the widow's resolve to return to her stomping grounds in Manila posing as a recently deceased Italian songbird, Richard Loo as Japanese Colonel Masamato quick to respond to her charms (it's never explicitly stated that Claire's establishment doubles as a brothel). The soppy, typical Hollywood beginning of a weeping Claire pining for her lover is by far the weakest section, but once she takes charge as secret agent 'High Pockets' it centers on her intriguing interactions with Loo's Colonel, granting her special privileges to travel and access to materials that can help the allied cause. Philip Ahn (KUNG FU's Master Kan) enters late as Captain Arito, delayed from an urgent mission by Claire's promised fan dance, American bombers sinking his vessel and tipping off the betrayed Colonel as to the identity of 'High Pockets.' Richard Loo was a longtime veteran dating back to Bela Lugosi's "Shadow of Chinatown" or Boris Karloff's "West of Shanghai," suitably concluding a lengthy career as Christopher Lee's wealthiest patron in 1974's "The Man with the Golden Gun." This film offers him a villainous Japanese with a bit more shading, acknowledging failure to achieve his own mission and genuinely admiring the pluck of his attractive female captive (even as Allied forces mow down his troops he cannot bring himself to shoot her, resigned to his fate with a final act of contrition).
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6/10
Enjoyable slice of Hollywood hogwash.
mark.waltz11 December 2019
Warning: Spoilers
A lot of dramatic license has been taken with the true story of Claire Phillips, an American spy in Manila whose efforts to get information on the Japanese nearly killed her but lead her to become a recipient of the American medal of freedom. Actress Ann Dvorak, one of the best actresses during the pre code era of Hollywood, could have had a career in the realm of Bette Davis and Barbara Stanwyck but her career path let her to be a featured actress in the 1940's and 50's. this rare lead for her, made it allied artists, was a step up, even though Allied Artists was a higher branch of the poverty row studio Monogram. Like Davis and Stanwyck, Dvorak wasn't afraid of getting her face dirty or looking unglamorous, and here, she's in plain clothes, made to look rather frumpy, and showing her middle age. Still, she's very commanding as a real life woman whose efforts to help beat the Japanese contributed to the war being won by the allies.

Given the nickname of "high pockets" (simply because her blouse pocket is so high), Dvorak pretends to be of Italian heritage and on the side of the Japanese, opening a nightclub in Manila to get information from Japanese officers. She has no qualms about telling off a Japanese businessman and slapping him across the face (resulting in her getting one back) and after seeing her husband murdered by the Japaneas a post war film made about the war, it is interesting because a good deal of what happens here apparently did happen, but apparently also much was altered for various reasons.

As a post war film made about the war, it is interesting because a good deal of what happens here apparently did happen, but also much of the truth was altered for various reasons. Still, Dvorak (in her second to last film) is excellent, the glue that holds this film together, and giving the type of performance that is legendary even for a film that is not well known. Some of the details are either unbelievable or even absurd, and one scene of two of her cohorts driving through the jungle in a sped up motion from the camera looks comical. It does maintain consistent attention, and the points that it sets out to make are well met.
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9/10
Heroes of Philippine espionage – who was Claire Phillips?
SimonJack5 August 2012
Based on real events, "I Was an American Spy" is several stories in one of valor and heroism. It is a unique film that includes spying, underground resistance, sabotage, and help for escapees and prisoners. It's a story about one of America's most successful volunteer spies in WWII – a rare example of Allied espionage in the Pacific theater. And, it is one of the best films about resistance to the Japanese by Philippine men and women.

Many books have been written and films made about spying and underground resistance to the Nazis in Europe. But very few such examples exist with the Japanese in WW II. So, this film has added historical value as well.

Others have commented on the movie plot, but I'll share some of the information I got when I tried to find out more about the all but forgotten hero of this film. Claire Phillips (nee, Snyder) was born in Michigan in 1908, but grew up in Portland, OR, where she graduated from high school. She joined a circus for a time, was a nightclub singer and was drawn to the theater. She joined a troupe that went to the Orient to play major cities. She landed in Manila for a few years where she married a Filipino and had a daughter, Dian. After five years, she divorced and returned to her home in Portland with her daughter. She became bored after several months and returned with Dian to Manila. That was in the fall of 1941. She married an American Army sergeant, John Phillips, during the Japanese invasion in December.

The movie is about her life during that time until the end of the war. After the war, she and her daughter returned to Portland where she lived for the rest of her life. She received many honors and recognitions at home. Articles were written about her and she appeared on radio programs (TV wasn't widely available until after 1950). She received a free deed and keys to a new home in Beaverton, OR.

In 1947, she wrote a book, "Manila Espionage," about her life and exploits during the war. This 1951 movie was based on her book and a magazine article. In 1951, she received the Medal of Freedom from the U.S. – the only woman who was honored based on the recommendation of General Douglas MacArthur. While some 200 total awards of the Medal of Freedom were made for WWII and Korea, most of those were to people from other nations for their heroics in helping Americans.

But after a few years in the limelight, Phillips became restless and dissatisfied with working in a department store. She married again, and divorced. She became a heavy drinker and within nine years after the movie came out, Claire Phillips died of meningitis. She was 52.

There was some interest in Portland in 2011 in providing a permanent memorial to this WWII hero. One can wonder why that wasn't done in the past. While her heroic efforts during the war have been honored, could there be other things about her life that most citizens would not want to hold up for people to model? My guess is that the answer is "Yes!" based on articles available online, and considerable changes or glossing over in the movie.

For instance, magazine and newspaper accounts refer to Phillips as the "Manila Mata Hari." Yet, the movie shows her as a proper woman who runs a respectable club. In reality, her Tsubaki Club, was a high-priced, high class nightclub and brothel. Articles describe the girls and the matron performing for their high-ranking Japanese clients. Also, in the late 1950s, Phillips sued the U.S. government for $146,850 in compensation for her work. She received just $1,349 and the U.S. Claims Court decision read, "Much of her story was greatly exaggerated and at times almost fanciful."

"I Was an American Spy" has one big fault – what seems to be a clear Hollywood altering of the story that detracts from the film. In several early scenes, Phillips tries to follow and find her husband who had to report to his unit on the front lines. Her character, played by Ann Dvorak, is almost hysterical when she insists she wants to go with him. In real life, Phillips had been around the American forces for years at Manila. She would have known that families don't go off to war with the troops. Common sense tells most of us that. And Phillips was not such a naive person as that.

So, why would Hollywood alter her story to put this tripe in it? My guess is to paint a picture of the heroin precisely as a naive, innocent and clean person before the start of the war. That would also explain how the movie then accounts for her change of character – to someone who could kill and spy on the Japanese herself. We see a fictional scene in which she watches the Bataan death march and sees her husband shot and killed for stopping to drink from a well. After crying over her husband's body, she picks up a gun and shoots several times killing a very elderly Japanese soldier who came out of nowhere – with his rifle slung over his shoulder. Totally unbelievable!

This film could have scored a 10 if the film makers had cut most of the opening hide-and-go-seek scenes, and instead replaced them with more scenes of the real underground help and resistance efforts. That would also have shown more of the deserving honor of the Filipinos, several of whom worked for Phillips.
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4/10
Dumb story
warkap23 May 2020
Poor acting. The basic story is true but poor acting too. I am a fan of Gene Evens.
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8/10
Ann Dvorak outstanding in spy drama
banse15 June 2001
Based on a true story U.S. citizen Dvorak poses as a cabaret singer in Manila during WW2 to help combat a Japanese attack. Code name "High Pockets" she endures many dangers and severe punishment for the sake of her country in this tense spy story. Also impressive in the cast are Gene Evans, Douglas Kennedy and both Richard Loo and Philip Ahn performing their nasty Japanese soldier bits. However it's Dvorak who makes it all worth while. The veteran actress who excelled in such films as "Scarface" (1932), "Three on a Match" (1932), "G Men" (1935), "Our Very Own" (1950) etc. is outstanding as the American spy. Also featured in the film is the song "Because of You" which was a big hit for crooner Tony Bennett.
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9/10
Based on Fact
Bronco469 June 2003
This is a good movie about a real life character. It has to be viewed in the context of the time. It was shortly after the war and the wounds left by the Japanese treatment of prisoners of war were still deeply felt. Some of the acting is a little over the top by today's standards. But, watch it, and try to imagine going through what these people (the allied POW's) went through. I enjoyed it. And I appreciate their sacrifice.
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9/10
Incalculable Courage
deanofrpps22 August 2011
Warning: Spoilers
This movie deserved more reviews than it received. I recall seeing it many years ago on the BIG SHOW, the 3PM movie shown on NBC in the 1960s. Mrs. Claire 'High Pockets' Phillips (Ann Dvorak) was left stranded by the American defeat in the Philippians. The Island fell to the Japanese. American civilians are being interned.

Mrs Philippe manages to persuade Japanese authorities to leave her at liberty under flimsy Spanish identification papers. Behind their backs she is helping Filipino guerrillas and American soldiers in hiding. Can the rouse last until the Americans return? The acting by Ann Dvorak was superbly complimented by Richard Loo's performance as the enemy Colonel Masamato.

I was surprised that this film did not receive a revival when the movie THE GREAT RAID came out in 2005.

One commentator expressed doubt in Mrs Phillipe's exploits including following her husband's unit through the jungle. Americans of that generation unlike US people of later times had incalculable courage.
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