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  1. Lukas Heller (Kiel 21 de julio de 1930 – Londres, 2 de noviembre de 1988) fue un guionista británico de origen alemán. Biografía. Heller nació en una familia de judíos alemanes [1] de Kiel. Su padre era el filósofo político Hermann Heller. [2] y emigró al Reino Unido después de la proclamación del Tercer Reich.

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Lukas_HellerLukas Heller - Wikipedia

    Filmography. References. External links. Lukas Heller (21 July 1930 – 2 November 1988) was a German-born British screenwriter . Biography [ edit] Heller was born to a Jewish family [1] in Kiel. His father was political philosopher Hermann Heller. [2] .

  3. Lukas Hermann Heller (* 21. Juli 1930 in Kiel; † 2. November 1988 in London) war ein deutsch-britischer Drehbuchautor. [1] Inhaltsverzeichnis. 1 Leben. 2 Filmografie (Auswahl) 3 Literatur. 4 Weblinks. 5 Einzelnachweise. Leben.

  4. www.wikiwand.com › es › Lukas_HellerLukas Heller - Wikiwand

    Lukas Heller fue un guionista británico de origen alemán.

    • Plot
    • Cast
    • Production
    • Reception
    • Home Release
    • Novelizations
    • External Links

    In the 1942 Pacific theatre of World War II, Lieutenant Junior Grade Sam Lawson, USN, is a Japanese-language interpreter who — so far — has avoided combat. His commanding officer, Captain John G. Nolan, unexpectedly cancels his leave and informs Lawson that he is to be assigned to a British infantry commando unit in the New HebridesIslands for a co...

    Development

    Aldrich later said he first wrote the story in 1959 with Robert Sherman. That year, when he was making films in Europe, he said he was going to scout locations in Burma and wanted Laurence Olivier and Trevor Howardto play the leads. In 1963, Aldrich was going to make a $14 million slate of eight feature films and one TV series for his production company, The Associates and Aldrich Company, using the success of Whatever Happened to Baby Jane?, Sodom and Gomorrah and 4 For Texas to raise financ...

    Historical accuracy

    The Japanese never were in the New Hebridesin World War II; the American forces arrived in May 1942. The attitudes depicted in the World War II film, made during the Vietnam War era, reflected the 1960s, with one character talking about "long haired conscientious objectors". The poster advertising the film showed a fallen soldier dressed in a 1960s American uniform and holding an M16 rifle.

    Shooting

    Filming started in February 1969. The bulk of the film was made on Boracay Island in the Philippines, by the same crew and using many of the same sets as Jack Starrett's The Losers. The opening and closing segments were filmed outside the Subic Bay Naval Base using sailors and American civilians as extras.[better source needed] During filming, Robertson found out he won the Best Actor Oscar for Charly. He had not insisted contractually that he could return for the Oscar ceremony, so Frank Sin...

    Critical response

    On review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds an approval rating of 62%, based on 13 retrospectively collected reviews with an average rating of 6/10. Roger Greenspun of The New York Times wrote, "Although committed to the notion that war is an inclusive system of betrayals, the film subverts that notion and settles instead for some fashionable ironies and remarkably conventional jungle war displays." Arthur D. Murphy of Variety called it "an okay World War II melodrama ... the net res...

    Box office

    The film earned rentals of $615,000 in North America and $975,000 in other countries (it had admissions of 294,232 in France).The film was one of the most popular movies in 1971 at the British box office. After all costs were deducted, the film had an overall loss of $6,765,000, making it one of the biggest money losers in the history of ABC Films. Aldrich said in 1972 that because the film "was less than successful, so now all our properties are scrutinized at a whole other level. It can get...

    Too Late the Hero was released to DVD by MGM Home Video on May 25, 2004 as a Region 1 widescreen DVD.[citation needed]

    Owing to a geographical separation of rights, Too Late the Hero is one of those films with the odd distinction of having been novelized twice for two different marketplaces. The more straight-ahead (and longer) adaptation was written by William Hughes (official byline of Hugh Williams, not to be confused with the actor) and published in the UK by S...

    Too Late the Hero at IMDb
    Too Late the Hero at AllMovie
    Too Late the Hero at the TCM Movie Database
    Too Late the Hero at the American Film Institute Catalog
  5. Roger Zelazny liked the original script by Lukas Heller, which was more faithful to his book, and expected that to be the filmed version; he did not realize until he saw it in the theater that the shooting script (by Alan Sharp) was vastly different. Related works. The novel Hardwired by Walter Jon Williams is an homage to Damnation ...

  6. Lukas Heller. Relatives. Bruno Heller (grandson) Zoë Heller (granddaughter) Hermann Heller (17 July 1891 – 5 November 1933) was a German legal scholar and philosopher of Jewish descent. [1] He was active in the non- Marxist wing of the Social Democratic Party of Germany (SPD) during the Weimar Republic.