Pendant la Guerre froide, une équipe scientifique remet en état un sous-marin japonais et embauche un ancien officier de la marine pour découvrir une base nucléaire chinoise cachée sur une î... Tout lirePendant la Guerre froide, une équipe scientifique remet en état un sous-marin japonais et embauche un ancien officier de la marine pour découvrir une base nucléaire chinoise cachée sur une île et déjouer un complot communiste contre les États-Unis qui pourrait déclencher la Trois... Tout lirePendant la Guerre froide, une équipe scientifique remet en état un sous-marin japonais et embauche un ancien officier de la marine pour découvrir une base nucléaire chinoise cachée sur une île et déjouer un complot communiste contre les États-Unis qui pourrait déclencher la Troisième Guerre mondiale.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Nommé pour 1 Oscar
- 1 victoire et 2 nominations au total
- Welles
- (non crédité)
- Chin Lee
- (non crédité)
- French Reporter
- (non crédité)
- Mr. Aylesworth
- (non crédité)
- Crewman
- (non crédité)
- French Reporter
- (non crédité)
- Quartermaster
- (non crédité)
- Crewman
- (non crédité)
- Japanese Eddy
- (non crédité)
Avis à la une
First of all the bucket scene happened before the ramming scene - not after. Plus, submarines have buckets on them. Isn't that strange. It seems the makers of submarines sort of figured stuff like that out - sometimes subs take on water and it must be moved. And yes, they would have lots and lots of buckets. More than one sub in WWII was saved because of them. The reviewer may also not have seen the part where the buckets are being returned.
He also comments on if the sub was already underwater, where were they taking the water. Again, submariners got that one figured out too. They were taking it to a place where there was a working pump to pump the water off the sub.
Overall it was a decent diversion. But then I'm a fan or Richard Widmark so I may be biased.
A bit of a romp this one as it revels more in the gaudy sweep of the telling rather than the tension from narrative detail. The plot doesn't really matter so much as it is a simple device for the voyage. Along the way we get personal conflicts, crew tensions and underwater stand-offs as well as some fire-fights. At no point was I hooked but it is rather entertaining in the way that school-boy adventure stories are full of tough men, sacrifice and action. In this regard it suits the people making it and Fuller directs with simple but bright colours easy to understand and engage with even if they are too simple to be real. So it is with the characters and plot but it still works. The romantic side of the story is a flop and I didn't see why a female character couldn't just be a character and had to be a love interest (well, obviously I understand why this decision is made, but I didn't see the value of it in the story).
The headlining of Richard Widmark is rarely a bad thing and he fits this tough action drama with his stern delivery and commanding presence. There is no doubting that Darvi is sexy and a good presence when it comes to being coy and flirtatious however when more is asked of her she is found wanting as she lacks the range. The rest of the cast fit in well around them nobody brilliant of course but everyone able to be at the level required by the material.
Not that intelligent or complex a film but a solid enough wartime action film which will do the job if that's all you're looking for.
The French accent, the smooth skin, the sharp facial bone structure, those arched eyebrows, that smoldering stare, and that oh-so-sexy slightly cross-eyed look just made a guy want and wonder. Her voice was strong and yet soft at the right moments. There was something about her that made a man want scoop her up into his arms and say, "Hey, baby, it's gonna be okay!"
It's too bad that she was perhaps a victim of her own sexuality as it is rumored that Mrs. Darryl Zanuck discovered there might have been some hanky-panky with Mr. 20th Century Fox.
Richard Widmark is fittingly commanding and cantankerous as the sub skipper, and Cameron Mitchell does what he did so well in playing the comic relief sidekick sonar guy.
The script and it's dialog is something straight out of a comic book, but you've got to love it. It's got all of the marbles in one bag: submarines, underwater battles complete with ramming full speed ahead, a silent running sweatout, crash dives, commando shore raids, evil Commies, a spy guy named Chin Lee, a B-29 bomber, and just to put the cherry on the Boston cream pie, the obligatory nuclear explosion.
Check Bella Darvi out opposite Kirk Douglas in "The Racers". There again, the lady is smokin' hot!
So, if you want a good time, pop some corn, pull up a chair, and watch "Hell and High Water"!!!
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThe film was initially banned in France on political grounds. An article noted that France had also banned Soviet films with political themes, and that "a number of European countries are sensitive to films with political themes and refuse them exhibition permits, rather than rouse the ire of either the U.S. or Russia."
- GaffesOn the submarine, the captain (Richard Widmark) has a cup of coffee in his hand as the sub hits the sea bottom with a thud. Denise (Bella Darvi) who is sitting on a stool is about to fall off. The captain grabs her using both hands, the cup of coffee having disappeared.
- Citations
Hakada Fujimori: I am sorry to tell you, your friend is dead.
Captain Adam Jones: [stunned] Dead...?
Hakada Fujimori: His plane crashed returning from an Arctic expedition. No-one survived.
Captain Adam Jones: [sadly] He never *did* like to fly!
- ConnexionsFeatured in Myra Breckinridge (1970)
Meilleurs choix
- How long is Hell and High Water?Alimenté par Alexa
Détails
Box-office
- Budget
- 1 870 000 $US (estimé)
- Durée
- 1h 43min(103 min)
- Rapport de forme
- 2.55 : 1