Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueWhen the Alaska fishing season ends, a crooked cannery owner, who owes a huge delivery of salmon to a Seattle company, manipulates local Natives, who have unlimited fishing rights, into ille... Tout lireWhen the Alaska fishing season ends, a crooked cannery owner, who owes a huge delivery of salmon to a Seattle company, manipulates local Natives, who have unlimited fishing rights, into illegally selling their catch to him.When the Alaska fishing season ends, a crooked cannery owner, who owes a huge delivery of salmon to a Seattle company, manipulates local Natives, who have unlimited fishing rights, into illegally selling their catch to him.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
Lorna Gray
- Jane Koster
- (as Adrian Booth)
James Millican
- Bill Garraway
- (as James A. Millican)
Bobby Barber
- Steward
- (non crédité)
Ethan Laidlaw
- Fisherman
- (non crédité)
Charles Morton
- Slim
- (non crédité)
Marshall Reed
- Fisherman
- (non crédité)
Dale Van Sickel
- Fisherman
- (non crédité)
Avis à la une
Matt Garraway runs a salmon fishing business in Alaska. However, at heart, he's a soulless crook and thinks nothing of fishing out of season or using illegal fishing methods to increase his catch. His brother, Bill (James Millican) is a pretty good guy and the other fishermen look up to him. So Matt decides to try to manipulate his brother into staying beyond the end of the season in order to keep all the men working. For a while it works, but Matt keeps manipulating not only Bill but two women...and one of which is a psychotic with a horrible temper. You can't help but think that sooner or later, Matt will get his comeuppance.
This is a B-movie, clocking in at only a little over an hour. Because Bs were much cheapter to make than a standard picture, to keep costs down they usually starred minor stars, such as Paul Kelly who played Matt the master manipulator. Kelly was an excellent actor...just not leading man material in an A picture. Here, he's pretty good and the film engaging. For a B, it's a bit better than average.
This is a B-movie, clocking in at only a little over an hour. Because Bs were much cheapter to make than a standard picture, to keep costs down they usually starred minor stars, such as Paul Kelly who played Matt the master manipulator. Kelly was an excellent actor...just not leading man material in an A picture. Here, he's pretty good and the film engaging. For a B, it's a bit better than average.
Spoilers Of The North concerns brothers Paul Kelly and James Millican, one who runs a cannery and the other rustles fish like they rustle cattle in Texas. Fish pirates have about the same social standing in Alaska as cattle rustlers in Texas.
Kelly has a chance to make a real killing but only if he can deliver a specified amount of salmon and he's accepted an advance payment. It occurred to me during the film that if Kelly just gave the money back all his problems would be solved. At least the financial ones, he's got some romantic complications.
They come in the form of two women, Evelyn Ankers the girl from Seattle he plans to marry and Lorna Gray a half Indian woman whom he just likes to get his rocks off with. Marriage to a mixed blood, not in his family though from what I see, he's no prize.
He and Gray go into the fish piracy business once the fishing season has closed. But let's say that Kelly's love life gets in the way of his illegal fishing and it ends bad.
Gray is some sexy woman and definitely not one to trifle with. Roy Barcroft usually Republic Pictures official western villain makes one of his few non-western appearances in a film we could call a northern. Some of the scenes of the salmon fishing and Indian life up there were quite nice. Stock footage I'm sure, no indication Republic went to Alaska for location shooting.
Spoilers Of The North bears comparison to that other film from the frozen north from Paramount that was done a few years earlier, Spawn Of The North. Watch them side by side and you can see the difference in films with a bigger budget and major studio touches about the same subject.
Not too bad a film from a B picture studio and that Lorna Gray is something else in those tight dresses.
Kelly has a chance to make a real killing but only if he can deliver a specified amount of salmon and he's accepted an advance payment. It occurred to me during the film that if Kelly just gave the money back all his problems would be solved. At least the financial ones, he's got some romantic complications.
They come in the form of two women, Evelyn Ankers the girl from Seattle he plans to marry and Lorna Gray a half Indian woman whom he just likes to get his rocks off with. Marriage to a mixed blood, not in his family though from what I see, he's no prize.
He and Gray go into the fish piracy business once the fishing season has closed. But let's say that Kelly's love life gets in the way of his illegal fishing and it ends bad.
Gray is some sexy woman and definitely not one to trifle with. Roy Barcroft usually Republic Pictures official western villain makes one of his few non-western appearances in a film we could call a northern. Some of the scenes of the salmon fishing and Indian life up there were quite nice. Stock footage I'm sure, no indication Republic went to Alaska for location shooting.
Spoilers Of The North bears comparison to that other film from the frozen north from Paramount that was done a few years earlier, Spawn Of The North. Watch them side by side and you can see the difference in films with a bigger budget and major studio touches about the same subject.
Not too bad a film from a B picture studio and that Lorna Gray is something else in those tight dresses.
Matt Garraway, an unscrupulous salmon fisher tries to hatch a scheme in Sitka to fish past season using a loophole for Native Americans. He gathers a group of accomplices, including two Native Americans and sets to work. His plan faces some grudging opposition from his brother with a conscience and his oblivious fiancée, who comes up from Seattle to take care of him after he's injured. In short, there's more than one reason to find this guy to be a total scuzzbag and you don't feel bad when some problems begin with his operation and his personal life.
The plot is fairly standard for the decade, even with the exotic Alaskan setting. And boy do they make use of the setting: there's so much filler about the salmon industry and the salmon life-cycle, you half wonder if some real salmon cannery hadn't sponsored the movie. Unfortunately, another typical aspect from the era is racist jokes at the expense of Native American people, and this movie has its share. At least they're counterbalanced with the interesting character of Jane, the "half-breed", played by a fairly young Lorna Gray. She's full of conviction and has that spark of fire that makes her worth watching, and she performs the two most singularly interesting acts in the movie. It's because of her that I've given this movie an extra point above a pleasantly forgettable 6/10.
The plot is fairly standard for the decade, even with the exotic Alaskan setting. And boy do they make use of the setting: there's so much filler about the salmon industry and the salmon life-cycle, you half wonder if some real salmon cannery hadn't sponsored the movie. Unfortunately, another typical aspect from the era is racist jokes at the expense of Native American people, and this movie has its share. At least they're counterbalanced with the interesting character of Jane, the "half-breed", played by a fairly young Lorna Gray. She's full of conviction and has that spark of fire that makes her worth watching, and she performs the two most singularly interesting acts in the movie. It's because of her that I've given this movie an extra point above a pleasantly forgettable 6/10.
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Détails
- Durée1 heure 6 minutes
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 1.37 : 1
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By what name was Spoilers of the North (1947) officially released in India in English?
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