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IMDbPro

Inchon

  • 1981
  • PG
  • 2h 20min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
2.8/10
907
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Laurence Olivier, Jacqueline Bisset, and Ben Gazzara in Inchon (1981)
DramaHistoryWar

Durante la Guerra de Corea, el general Douglas MacArthur idea la invasión anfibia de Inchon en septiembre de 1950.Durante la Guerra de Corea, el general Douglas MacArthur idea la invasión anfibia de Inchon en septiembre de 1950.Durante la Guerra de Corea, el general Douglas MacArthur idea la invasión anfibia de Inchon en septiembre de 1950.

  • Dirección
    • Terence Young
  • Guionistas
    • Robin Moore
    • Laird Koenig
    • Paul Savage
  • Elenco
    • Laurence Olivier
    • Jacqueline Bisset
    • Ben Gazzara
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
    2.8/10
    907
    TU CALIFICACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • Terence Young
    • Guionistas
      • Robin Moore
      • Laird Koenig
      • Paul Savage
    • Elenco
      • Laurence Olivier
      • Jacqueline Bisset
      • Ben Gazzara
    • 19Opiniones de los usuarios
    • 21Opiniones de los críticos
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
    • Premios
      • 5 premios ganados y 1 nominación en total

    Fotos20

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    Elenco principal51

    Editar
    Laurence Olivier
    Laurence Olivier
    • Gen. Douglas MacArthur
    Jacqueline Bisset
    Jacqueline Bisset
    • Barbara Hallsworth
    Ben Gazzara
    Ben Gazzara
    • Maj. Frank Hallsworth
    Toshirô Mifune
    Toshirô Mifune
    • Saito-San
    • (as Toshiro Mifune)
    Richard Roundtree
    Richard Roundtree
    • Sgt. Augustus Henderson
    David Janssen
    David Janssen
    • David Feld
    Won Namkung
    Won Namkung
    • Park
    • (as Nam Goong Won)
    Gabriele Ferzetti
    Gabriele Ferzetti
    • Turkish Brigadier General
    Rex Reed
    Rex Reed
    • Mr. Longfellow
    Sabine Sun
    Sabine Sun
    • Marguerite
    Dorothy James
    • Jean MacArthur
    Karen Kahn
    Karen Kahn
    • Lim
    Lydia Lei
    Lydia Lei
    • Mila
    James T. Callahan
    James T. Callahan
    • General Almond
    • (as James Callahan)
    Rion Morgan
    • Pipe journalist
    Anthony Dawson
    Anthony Dawson
    • General Collins
    Peter Burton
    Peter Burton
    • Admiral Sherman
    John Pochna
    • Lt. Alexander Haig
    • Director
      • Terence Young
    • Guionistas
      • Robin Moore
      • Laird Koenig
      • Paul Savage
    • Todo el elenco y el equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Opiniones de usuarios19

    2.8907
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    Opiniones destacadas

    3bkoganbing

    A remarkable battle in an unremarkable film

    I will say that Inchon did have some nicely filmed battle sequences, but one of the greatest surprise military maneuvers of all time got a short shrift with the rest of the film. A nice documentary type film like The Longest Day would have been ideal. The back story certainly wasn't needed.

    And that horrible makeup job that Laurence Olivier was given must have been done by Tammy Faye Bakker's people. He looks like a refugee from Madame Tussaud's. He sounds nothing like Douglas MacArthur. Olivier had the further misfortune to have his role come so soon after Gregory Peck portrayed MacArthur in MacArthur.

    The story is that Olivier at some point in the early Seventies feeling he had nothing to prove any more to be at the pinnacle of his profession. So he began taking parts strictly for the cash. As this film was produced by the Reverend Sun Yung Moon no one ever said the Moonies lacked cash. Olivier uses the same American type accent he did in Cat On A Hot Tin Roof and in another of his for the money only projects The Betsy.

    The rest of the cast Ben Gazzara, Jacqueline Bisset, David Janssen, Toshiro Mifune etc. act with the smug confidence that they're Moonie checks just cleared the bank.

    The landing at Inchon, done at the dawn hours within a narrow framework of time determined by the tides and on the western side of the Korean peninsula was militarily drawing to an inside straight. No doubt Douglas MacArthur deserves all kinds of kudos for what he did, even his sternest detractors have said it was brilliant. Said it did not get a film worthy of the achievement.

    Inchon may have done one thing though. Laurence Olivier if not the only actor to win both an Oscar and a Razzie in his life certainly became the first to do it.
    barnabyrudge

    Infamous flop. A badly-scripted, badly-acted, and badly-conceived Korean War epic.

    Inchon exists in at least three versions, all of them very rare: a 90 minute British video version called "Operation Inchon"; a 105 minute version; and the full 140 minutes version released theatrically in 1981. This is a review of the 140 minute version.

    The past twenty years or so have turned Inchon into one of the film industry's great jokes. Its huge budget, and the meagre box office returns it made, have also destined it to forever be remembered as the biggest flop of all-time. If ever a film deserved to be labelled as "infamous", then Inchon is it.

    Laurence Olivier top-bills as Gen. Douglas MacArthur. Highly decorated for his WWII heroics, MacArthur is called upon to repel an army of communist forces from North Korea who have invaded their South Korean neighbours in 1950. Against the will of his colleagues, MacArthur masterminds an ambitious landing at the awkwardly-situated port of Inchon. Interwoven into this invasion story are several sub-plots, including the story of Barbara Hallsworth (Jacqueline Bisset), an American lady who leads a group of orphans to safety, and her husband Maj. Frank Hallsworth (Ben Gazzara), who is ordered to seize and hold a strategically important lighthouse in Inchon harbour.

    It is extraordinary that a budget of over $45 million was allocated to such a badly scripted film. The dialogue is utterly laughable, almost in the style of an exceptionally bad, cheesy TV mini-series. Left helpless in the firing line by the terrible script, the actors (many of them greatly talented) give undisciplined performances. Olivier's turn as MacArthur, for example, is surreal in its awfulness. The battle scenes are done on a big scale but fail to convey authenticity or realism. And, worst of all, there's a peculiar religious subtext as MacArthur repeatedly rants on about the God-given justness he senses in the cause of America and her allies. The film has curiosity value (it's perversely interesting to see so many stars in such deep trouble) but beyond that it offers nothing worth your time.
    1brower8

    Major disappointment!

    I never got to see this movie in a theatrical release; I got to see the first part of it cut up for cable TV -- on a cable channel not known for movies. I wanted, honestly, to see a reverential treatment of the UN side of the Korean War, a war whose importance is now greatly underrecognized, and especially of one of the key battles in history. The war was, after all, the first in which the commies did not succeed in turning over a domino, so to speak.

    The movie got off to a bad start with one of the actors (Ben Gazzara) launching into a long narrative monologue about the father of General MacArthur while on an airline flight. First of all, General Douglas MacArthur is the key figure of the movie, and his father was already long dead and irrelevant to the plot. Second, the long-winded monologue is not ordinary conversation of the type that one would expect between airline passengers! With the possible exception of university professors who can't be fired and dictators who can't be criticized, nobody gets away with such long-winded, irrelevant, narrative monologues in normal life.

    Absurdities pile upon absurdities, and irrelevancies pile upon irrelevancies. Soldiers synchronize watches whose second hands aren't moving, and one gets a closeup of such an action. If you are going to show a close-up of any action, then make it real. Maudlin events at an orphanage take up much footage. Well, the Korean War was a carnage for civilians of all types, wasn't it? Soldiers taking Inchon fail to show fear -- and I can't imagine anyone going behind enemy lines not being scared out of his wits unless a psycho. Taking the lighthouse at Inchon, soldiers notice that the lighting and lens assembly was made in France (anyone who knows anything about lighthouses == and I live in a state that has lots of them -- knows that the lighthouse mechanisms and lenses from about a century ago all came from France).

    The best movie about the Korean War remains MASH, and it centers upon support units. The brilliant invasion of central Korea at Inchon deserves far better treatment than this quicksand.
    2mhthehammer

    Not worth the search on Youtube

    You know a movie is gonna be bad when it warns that the events depicted in this fictional movie are fictional, but that's the least of the problems with the over-budget, over-directed, and overly long wet blanket war epic Inchon. The movie takes place during the Communist overthrow in Korea and the Battle of Inchon in 1950. It also throws in stories involving Barbara (Jacqueline Bassett) driving through South Korea with orphan children to meet her ex-husband Lt. Hallsworth (Ben Gazzara) and Douglas MacArthur (Laurence Olivier) setting up plans for battle and raiding a lighthouse to signal the battleships. I guess Terence Young was trying to channel David Lean with a giant cast of extras in grand sets and landscapes, but in Inchon, the story and subplots connect so little it feels more like a pilot for a 1950's TV show than a movie. However, the cornball melodrama, overabundance on pyrotechnic effects, and horrendous writing makes it more on par with the material for B-movies. More problems: the Korean invasion scenes tie very little to what's going on in the story, the battle sequences seem randomly scattered for no coherent reason, every extra overacts when blown up, and the love story is meaningless. Worst of all, when MacArthur showed up thirty minutes in, the movie seemed to jump ship on one story and steer focus to another, almost as if the screenwriter forgot who the main characters were and wanted to mimic Patton. Well to my knowledge, Laurence Olivier is no George C. Scott and Robin Moore and Laird Koenig are no Francis Ford Coppola and Edmund H. North, either. To compare Inchon to Michael Bay's Pearl Harbor would be an extraordinary insult, as Mr. Bay has more respect for explosions and knows how to keep his schlocky storylines consistently. Inchon, on the other hand, is a complete messy disaster from start to finish. (1 Corn Cob Pipe out of 5)
    1Aussie Stud

    "...and the winner for Worst Actor goes to... Laurence Olivier!"

    I never thought I'd ever hear that line in my entire life. Laurence Olivier is a highly esteemed well-established actor with many film accreditations under his belt from a career in the film industry that has spanned well over six decades. Why he chose to sign on to this monstrosity of a film is just beyond belief.

    "INCHON" had the misfortune of being released in 1981, the first year the infamous Golden Raspberry Award (a.k.a. Razzie) came into existence and it grandly swept nearly every category including Worst Picture and Worst Actor.

    Upon it's theatrical release, "INCHON" was heavily panned by the critics and played in theaters to which no one bothered showing up. It was pulled almost a few weeks after its initial release. The production and creativity involved with this highly-expensive film project involved nearly 5 whole years in the making, a crew of 250 technicians, 3000 actors (mostly extras), 18 tanks, 12 armored personnel carriers, 24 jeeps, a plethora of explosives and special effects and a bloated budget of nearly 48 million dollars. Did I also forget to mention that this film was financed by the Reverend Sun Myung Moon?

    Yes, in published interviews with Reverend Moon, he has openly stated that 'God' himself TOLD him to make this movie. With that controversy aside, "INCHON" itself is a repulsive scrap of film. The premise for "INCHON" is loosely based on the incidents involving the United Nations forces landing at Inchon, port city of Seoul, during the Korean War on September 15, 1950. It is a wretched retelling of General Douglas MacArthur's amphibious victory in the early stages of the Korean War.

    Laurence Olivier portrays MacArthur, supported by an international star cast which would include Ben Gazarra, Richard Roundtree, David Janssen and Jacqueline Bisset who looks absolutely ridiculous in the role as the wife of an Army Major. Unfortunately, the biggest problem here is that the director, Terence Young, finds it impossible to overcome the poor script which generally leaves only the wartime melodrama and pyrotechnics for interest.

    There is absolutely nothing positive about "INCHON" to talk about. The unedited version runs for nearly two and a half hours. It is a painful experience to watch this off-base and factually incorrect travesty. Furthermore, I find it extremely embarrassing to watch Laurence Olivier making a fool out of himself by appearing in this noisy and absurd garbage when he should have been finding time to redeem his reputation after starring in the Razzie-winning "THE JAZZ SINGER".

    Shame on everyone involved in this movie. It is extremely impossible to find a copy of "INCHON" at your local video store and no cable channel would dare run it, which is just as well. Trust me, you don't want to see this movie.

    My Rating - 0 out of 10

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    Argumento

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    • Trivia
      In an interview during production, Sir Laurence Olivier explained why he agreed to be in the cast, "People ask me why I'm playing in this picture. The answer is simple; money, dear boy. I'm like a vintage wine. You have to drink me quickly before I turn sour. I'm almost used up now, and I can feel the end coming. That's why I'm taking money now. I've got nothing to leave my family, but the money I can make from films. Nothing is beneath me if it pays well. I've earned the right to damn well grab whatever I can in the time I've got left."
    • Errores
      This film depicts a fictionalized version of the tragic Hangang Bridge bombing which killed nearly 1,000 South Korean refugees. In the film's version of the events, the North Koreans need to cross the bridge in order to advance into Seoul. Why do the tanks fire on the bridge, causing damage to the structure, when it is necessary for them to cross it intact?
    • Citas

      Adm. Sherman: All right, let's admit we take the beaches. We land here, at Inchon. What's say we can't reinforce the Marines for the whole of 12 hours? What's to prevent another fiasco like at Anzio?

      Gen. Douglas MacArthur: Admiral, I was not at Anzio.

    • Créditos curiosos
      Firm Grip "Fingers" DePalma
    • Versiones alternativas
      Aired in 2001 on the "GoodLife TV Network," owned at the time by the Unification Church, in a version derived from the original premiere cut containing all of the David Janssen/Rex Reed scenes. This version removes profanity by silencing the soundtrack but apparently makes no actual cuts for violence or other content, and runs 138 minutes. This version has been the source of several bootlegs since its airing.
    • Conexiones
      Featured in At the Movies: Stinkers of 1982 (1983)

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    Preguntas Frecuentes

    • How long is Inchon?
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    Detalles

    Editar
    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 17 de septiembre de 1982 (Estados Unidos)
    • Países de origen
      • Corea del Sur
      • Estados Unidos
      • Irlanda
      • Italia
    • Idiomas
      • Inglés
      • Coreano
    • También se conoce como
      • Инчхон
    • Locaciones de filmación
      • Inchon, Corea del Sur
    • Productoras
      • One Way Productions
      • Unification Church
    • Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro

    Taquilla

    Editar
    • Presupuesto
      • USD 46,000,000 (estimado)
    • Total en EE. UU. y Canadá
      • USD 5,200,986
    • Fin de semana de estreno en EE. UU. y Canadá
      • USD 2,326,112
      • 19 sep 1982
    • Total a nivel mundial
      • USD 5,200,986
    Ver la información detallada de la taquilla en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

    Editar
    • Tiempo de ejecución
      2 horas 20 minutos
    • Color
      • Color
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 2.35 : 1

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