In 1997, a retired Japanese intelligence officer claimed in his memoirs that the film was not destroyed by fire but seized. Why? Because the film’s final act showed the British and Chinese defenders fighting back effectively. After the surrender on December 25 (“Black Christmas”), the Kempeitai (Japanese military police) conducted a systematic search for all cinematic materials depicting resistance. They allegedly found the reels in a drainpipe. Rather than destroy them publicly, they shipped the nitrate film back to Tokyo for study—and likely melted it down for war metal. Rumors persist that a 17-minute fragment of Hong Kong On Fire exists. In the 1980s, a collector in San Francisco claimed to own a reel labeled "H.K. Inferno." When screened, it turned out to be a reel of The Real Glory (1939) with a misprinted label.
Principal photography had wrapped only six days prior. Hong Kong On Fire 1941 Movie
The cast and crew scrambled. The negatives were reportedly stored at a studio in North Point. On December 10, as the Japanese 38th Division landed at Tai Po, producer Kwong Siu-ching made a fateful decision. Rather than flee, he attempted to hide the reels in a subterranean vault near the Happy Valley racecourse. For decades, the official story was that the Hong Kong On Fire 1941 movie was incinerated during the Battle of Wong Nai Chung Gap on December 23, 1941. Japanese incendiary shells hit the warehouse district, and with it, the only master copy of the film was destroyed. In 1997, a retired Japanese intelligence officer claimed
If the film had survived, it would be the only feature-length narrative film shot during the actual siege of a WWII colony. It would show the city not as a victim, but as a battleground three weeks before the fall. After the surrender on December 25 (“Black Christmas”),
In 2005, the Hong Kong Film Restoration Project launched a search. Using ground-penetrating radar at the purported vault site in Happy Valley, they found evidence of a subterranean room—but upon excavation, only shattered glass bottles and oxidized metal were found. The nitrate film had long since decomposed into a toxic, flammable dust. Despite never being released, the Hong Kong On Fire 1941 movie remains a powerful ghost in film history. It represents the "what if" of Hong Kong cinema.