Bombs Over Burma (also known as The Devil's Sister) is a 1942 American war film directed by Joseph H. Lewis, based on a story by Milton Raison.
[3] In 1942, Chinese guerrillas fighting for the Allied cause in Burma during World War II are helping to build a road.
Using a scientific device, the English nobleman is instrumental in the coordination of a Japanese air attack on supply trucks attempting to cross a key bridge.
The review in The New York Times succinctly called it a "dud", loaded with stock shots, even recognizable "California architecture.
"[7] Later reviews such as that of Leonard Maltin, noted that the film was an "... interesting if failed attempt to make a hard-hitting, topical film ... Director/cowriter Lewis' visual flair can't save a talky, pedestrian script.