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| William Holden | Father O'Banion | |
| Clifton Webb | Father Bovard | |
| France Nuyen | Siu Lan | |
| Athene Seyler | Sister Agness | |
| Martin Benson | Kuznietsky | |
| Edith Sharpe | Sister Theresa | |
| Robert Lee | Chung Ren | |
| Marie Yang | Ho San's Mother | |
| Andy Ho | Ho San's Father | |
| Burt Kwouk | Ah Wang | |
| Weaver Levy | Ho San | |
| Ronald Adam | Father Lemay | |
| Lin Chen | Sister Mary | |
| Anthony Chinn | Ho San's Driver | |
| Noel Hood | Sister Justine |
| Director |
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| Producer |
Cecil F. Ford
Leo McCarey |
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| Writer |
Claude Binyon
Leo McCarey |
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| Cinematography |
Oswald Morris
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| Musician |
Richard Rodney Bennett
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A priest (William Holden) arrives at a mission-post in China accompanied by a young native girl who has joined him along the way. His job is to relieve the existing priest (Clifton Webb), who is now too old and weak to continue with the upkeep of the church. However, Communist soldiers arrive at the mission and seize it as a command post. Their leader rapes the native girl and impregnates her, only later to realise that Communism is no good for him. In the end, the foursome flee to the border, but are pursued by Communist forces along the way. |
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