NOTE IMDb
6,0/10
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MA NOTE
L'amitié entre deux associés contrebandiers est menacée par l'arrivée d'une passagère séduisante.L'amitié entre deux associés contrebandiers est menacée par l'arrivée d'une passagère séduisante.L'amitié entre deux associés contrebandiers est menacée par l'arrivée d'une passagère séduisante.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
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You can't go wrong seeing a movie with the three stars that are in this one. But the real feature of this film is the location shooting in Trinidad/Tobago. If this doesn't make you want to choose that as your next vacation you are a hopeless stick-in-the-mud.
The song was also a big hit in 1957. It's a great melody and you hear it and you can't get it out of your mind.
Two men whose friendship his tested by a woman they both have the hots for. And when that woman is Rita Hayworth, who can wonder. She's older now, but still incredibly beautiful.
See a great story and appreciate Trinidad, make those vacation plans.
The song was also a big hit in 1957. It's a great melody and you hear it and you can't get it out of your mind.
Two men whose friendship his tested by a woman they both have the hots for. And when that woman is Rita Hayworth, who can wonder. She's older now, but still incredibly beautiful.
See a great story and appreciate Trinidad, make those vacation plans.
Cubby Broccoli splashed out on three big stars - two of whom fall out over the third - for this high-profile Warwick production (based on a novel by Max Catto), in CinemaScope and Technicolor swamped with local colour. Presumably they got nervous about Mitchum & Hayworth's delayed entrance and it was decided to jettison what was (when it's pointed out) obviously the original flashback structure.
Hence the opening credits superimposed on a limbo dance in full flight and the introduction of the port and much of the supporting cast at what is now the mid-point, with Bernard Lee nipping through the town on his little red scooter in a sequence originally intended to start the film. (Mitchum and Hayworth then disappear from the film for half an hour at this point before making what was going to be their entrance.)
The best scenes are easily those that poignantly pair Jack Lemmon (just starting out in films) with Bonar Colleano (killed soon afterwards in a car crash) in what is now the second half of the film.
Hence the opening credits superimposed on a limbo dance in full flight and the introduction of the port and much of the supporting cast at what is now the mid-point, with Bernard Lee nipping through the town on his little red scooter in a sequence originally intended to start the film. (Mitchum and Hayworth then disappear from the film for half an hour at this point before making what was going to be their entrance.)
The best scenes are easily those that poignantly pair Jack Lemmon (just starting out in films) with Bonar Colleano (killed soon afterwards in a car crash) in what is now the second half of the film.
Max Catto's novel turned into a very odd love triangle involving two skippers of a smuggling vessel in the Caribbean with a luckless red-haired beauty, an immigrant from perhaps Lithuania, who needs to get to Cuba. British production is erratic, with location shots and studio close-ups often occupying the same scene, though the busy, fiery locals are a fun lot (they always seem to be celebrating). Second-half of plot takes a bizarre turn, with sensitive skipper Jack Lemmon getting trapped in the cargo of a burning ship and relying on Robert Mitchum, his old friend/sworn enemy, to pull him through. Mitchum and Lemmon are certainly one of the oddest twosomes in '50s cinema, but they don't play it buddy-buddy and the relationship is kept low-keyed. As the woman who comes between them, Rita Hayworth gets an amusingly irrelevant sequence dancing at Carnivale, but otherwise looks about as beat as her character is supposed to feel (I don't know if this was a case of Method acting or not). The picture isn't boring--nor ham-handed--but neither is it successful as a drama, character study, or action film. It seems to fall between the cracks, but fans of the star-trio should enjoy some of the fireworks. ** from ****
No-one would ever accuse "Fire Down Below" of being a good film but photographed in Cinemascope and Technicolour on location in the Caribbean it's certainly a handsome one, Throw in Robert Mitchum, Rita Hayworth and Jack Lemmon and it becomes a film with star quality as well. The plot is as old as the hills as pals Mitchum and Lemmon fall out over Hayworth, the woman they are transporting 'from nowhere to nowhere'. The film generates a little excitement, (though not much), when Lemmon gets trapped in a ship that is about to blow up. The terrible dialogue is courtesy of Irwin Shaw from a book by Max Catto and director Robert Parrish was hardly the man to turn a pig's ear into a silk purse.
This film was quite enjoyable but I think it could have been immeasurably improved if the director and editor had included more scenes between Robert Mitchum and Rita Hayworth. The episode where Jack Lemmon's character is trapped on the ship is far too drawn out. His crisis should've been shortened and they should've actually shown Rita Hayworth turning to Robert Mitchum because they are kindred spirits, instead of just explaining this occurance later on. Mitchum and Hayworth were off-screen far too long. That major complaint aside, I found the film very entertaining. Mitchum is perfect with the weary, cynical, and intense combination. Hayworth has more depth than usual as the mysterious foreign woman. And Lemmon in a rare dramatic turn is very convincing as the naive and lovestruck young man. Here's an interesting tidbit: the film was executive produced by Cubby Broccoli, the long time producer of the Bond movies, and Bernard Lee, who would play M in the Bond films, has a supporting role in Fire Down Below. 7/10.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesInspired by their location shoot in Trinidad and Tobago, Robert Mitchum recorded a calypso album, while Jack Lemmon scored a harmonica theme for the film.
- GaffesIn the opening title, the copyright date is given as MDCCCCLVII. The four C's, four repeating letters are illegitimate in Roman numerology. MCMLVII is canonical.
- ConnexionsFeatured in Hollywood and the Stars: The Odyssey of Rita Hayworth (1964)
- Bandes originalesFire Down Below
Performed by Jeri Southern
Written by Lester Lee and Ned Washington
[Through the courtesy of Decca Records]
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- How long is Fire Down Below?Alimenté par Alexa
Détails
Box-office
- Montant brut aux États-Unis et au Canada
- 2 050 000 $US
- Durée1 heure 56 minutes
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 2.35 : 1
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By what name was L'enfer des tropiques (1957) officially released in India in English?
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