CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
6.0/10
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TU CALIFICACIÓN
Agrega una trama en tu idiomaA group of people come together in the Swiss Alps to climb a previously unconquered mountain, revealing their inner selves in the process.A group of people come together in the Swiss Alps to climb a previously unconquered mountain, revealing their inner selves in the process.A group of people come together in the Swiss Alps to climb a previously unconquered mountain, revealing their inner selves in the process.
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Elenco
Alida Valli
- Carla Alton
- (as Valli)
Cedric Hardwicke
- Dr. Nicholas Radcliffe
- (as Sir Cedric Hardwicke)
Edit Angold
- Frau Knubel
- (sin créditos)
Irmgard Dawson
- Swiss maid
- (sin créditos)
Fred Essler
- Knubel
- (sin créditos)
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Todo el elenco y el equipo
- Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro
Opiniones destacadas
Which has lasted the test of time.
An odd bunch of people who come together with the goal of climbing the Alpine mountain as in the name of the movie but they make it work.
It does not use up to much time getting to know the group letting their stories unfold as the movie story unfolds.
Glenn Ford does not have much kit but he seems to scrounge it just when he needs it without ever having to ask.
As in most films there is a love story which fits right in with the plot.
A canny feel good movie and a pleasant way to spend 98 minutes of anyone's time.
An odd bunch of people who come together with the goal of climbing the Alpine mountain as in the name of the movie but they make it work.
It does not use up to much time getting to know the group letting their stories unfold as the movie story unfolds.
Glenn Ford does not have much kit but he seems to scrounge it just when he needs it without ever having to ask.
As in most films there is a love story which fits right in with the plot.
A canny feel good movie and a pleasant way to spend 98 minutes of anyone's time.
One of your slower ascensions, made all the more lumbering by its six ascenders having to stop periodically to fight inner demons and examine consciences. And since what is on their minds are questions like "What Is Reality?" and the one that seems to occur, with weary regularity, in all mountain climbing movies, "Why Must I Challenge This Peak?", it makes for a fairly boring expedition, as well. Don't know about you but about forty per cent of the way through I felt like yelling at the screen, "Either shut up or get off the friggin mountain!" And no amount of pretty location shooting (subverted by really phony looking, sound stage "mountain" shooting) and good acting by Valli, Raines, Homolka and Bridges can withstand such a reaction. Give it a C.
It takes a while for "The White Tower" to take off. After the long, slow start, this film keeps picking up speed until the surprise ending (or near the end), which takes on new meaning today as a result of the recent controversy concerning Mt. Everest and comments by Sir Edmund Hillary. I don't want to give away the ending of the film, but be sure and read what Sir Edmund Hillary had to say a few days ago about the peak he conquered in 1953, three years after "The White Tower" was released and relate his words to what happens in the picture.
In beautiful Technicolor but before Cinemascope, it is easy to spot the interior sets, yet the exterior ones are breathtaking, even on a small screen. The cinematography is first rate. Too bad the script and direction weren't as effective. The script attempts to work a soap opera romance into the proceedings which becomes so melodramatic and naive that the viewer is asked to believe that attractive and likable Glenn Ford as Martin Ordway would risk his life and limb for the loves of a woman, even the vivacious Alida Valli as Carla Alton.
The performers do the best they can with what they're given. Lloyd Bridges as Hein, the never-say-die Nazi, makes a hearty effort to bring his despicable character to life as does Claude Rains in the somewhat nondescript role of Paul DeLambre.
Enjoy the scenery, the fine cast, and the excitement of the last fifteen minutes or so of the show and maybe you'll forget about the tired, hackneyed beginning and middle.
In beautiful Technicolor but before Cinemascope, it is easy to spot the interior sets, yet the exterior ones are breathtaking, even on a small screen. The cinematography is first rate. Too bad the script and direction weren't as effective. The script attempts to work a soap opera romance into the proceedings which becomes so melodramatic and naive that the viewer is asked to believe that attractive and likable Glenn Ford as Martin Ordway would risk his life and limb for the loves of a woman, even the vivacious Alida Valli as Carla Alton.
The performers do the best they can with what they're given. Lloyd Bridges as Hein, the never-say-die Nazi, makes a hearty effort to bring his despicable character to life as does Claude Rains in the somewhat nondescript role of Paul DeLambre.
Enjoy the scenery, the fine cast, and the excitement of the last fifteen minutes or so of the show and maybe you'll forget about the tired, hackneyed beginning and middle.
This is one of those movies that is fitting to it's era... Actually, not a bad and personal romance and adventure with odd assortment of characters who each for their own reasons want to climb this 'White Tower' mountain... With a great cast.. Claude Rains, L Bridges, C Hardwick, etc.. but most of all VALLI, a special woman among women.. (also in the 'The Third Man')... I'm a great fan of 'The Third Man' and fell in love with her,.... and seeing Valli again was a real treat..
Great vistas (quite abit of on-location shooting in the French Alps), photography, color.... For those who know what I mean,.. this has a 'kinda' "High and Mighty" feel to it.. One other note germane to that era of film making, the ages to the characters/actors.. all older and more mature than what we're used to today... Chauk one up for the good old days.. ENJOY
Great vistas (quite abit of on-location shooting in the French Alps), photography, color.... For those who know what I mean,.. this has a 'kinda' "High and Mighty" feel to it.. One other note germane to that era of film making, the ages to the characters/actors.. all older and more mature than what we're used to today... Chauk one up for the good old days.. ENJOY
Old-fashioned in the best sense, this mountaineering adventure boasts a stellar cast--Glenn Ford, Alida Valli, Cedric Hardwicke, Claude Rains, Lloyd Bridges, and Oskar Homolka--and a simple premise: a young woman (Valli) returns to the Swiss Alps to conquer the eponymous mountain that claimed her father's life years before. But she has to persuade several other climbers to brave the perilous ascent with her. Each has his own reason for accepting, while the lone American member (Ford), at first tagging along just to spend time with the beautiful Valli, gradually finds a deeper reason of his own.
The recent Second World War looms large over the story. Indeed, the White Tower itself is a clear metaphor for it: the three main characters all have something left to prove, and the higher they climb, the more the reveal about themselves, the more fractured the team becomes. It's not as psychologically complex as it sounds, though. You can easily work out who's who and how the relationships are going to develop as the story unfolds.
The joys here are the cast, the scenery, several gripping climbing sequences, and a lush score that evokes that aching sense of something lost that's also somehow within reach again...if only love can prevail.
Corny, maybe, but if you like old Hollywood and adventure films, this one will work like a charm.
The recent Second World War looms large over the story. Indeed, the White Tower itself is a clear metaphor for it: the three main characters all have something left to prove, and the higher they climb, the more the reveal about themselves, the more fractured the team becomes. It's not as psychologically complex as it sounds, though. You can easily work out who's who and how the relationships are going to develop as the story unfolds.
The joys here are the cast, the scenery, several gripping climbing sequences, and a lush score that evokes that aching sense of something lost that's also somehow within reach again...if only love can prevail.
Corny, maybe, but if you like old Hollywood and adventure films, this one will work like a charm.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaTed Tetzlaff, who directed this, was better known as a cinematographer. He spent more than a decade under contract to Paramount, where he became Carole Lombard's favorite director of photography. When Lombard was loaned out to Universal for the original 1936 version of My Man Godfrey, she specifically requested Tetzlaff be loaned out as well.
- ErroresWhen the climbers reach their first camp, the guide tells them that they will pitch two tents, but only take one tent up the mountain the next day. When they reach their second camp they have two tents pitched as well.
- Citas
Martin Ordway: Oh, what do we have here?
Paul DeLambre: [holding two bottles] Brandy. One for medicinal purposes, and one for celebration - when we reach the top.
Martin Ordway: What if you don't?
Paul DeLambre: Then for consolation.
- ConexionesReferenced in Screen Directors Playhouse: The Titanic Incident (1955)
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- How long is The White Tower?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
- Tiempo de ejecución1 hora 38 minutos
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.37 : 1
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