AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
5,5/10
156
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaA girl stows away on a ship, and the antics begins.A girl stows away on a ship, and the antics begins.A girl stows away on a ship, and the antics begins.
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Artistas
- Indicado a 1 Oscar
- 1 indicação no total
Ernie Alexander
- Clerk
- (não creditado)
Conrad Binyon
- Boy
- (não creditado)
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Elenco e equipe completos
- Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro
Avaliações em destaque
Grossly underrated splendid sea adventure of an early fur expedition from New York around the Horn to Oregon to do some risky trading with the Indians - all risks are taken, and paid for. But the direction and the acting is efficient to say the least, Franchot Tone is the only gentleman on board, having followed the expedition against his willl, while the rowdy John Carroll as the extremely irresponsible and sympathetically unscrupulous French Canadian is the most colorful part, always promising and doing the wrong thing, and that's how he got a female stowaway on board (Carol Bruce), beautiful and charming enough but all cheated and as unwilling to be part of the adventure as Franchot Tone. Walter Brennan is the major character as the captain, a hard one to deal with sticking ruthlessly to the formalism of discipline, while Leo G. Carroll and Nigel Bruce (both quite young here) add some comedy to ease up the ordeals. Frank Lloyd Wright made "Mutiny on the Bounty" six years earlier, and this is rather in the same vein but without any exaggerated evil - the Indians are as they were in the 1830s on the west coast wilderness, and the leaders of the expedition were well aware of that from the beginning. Eventually even captain Walter Brennan softens up enough to become almost human and saves the situation.
It seems like hardly any time at all since Franchot Tone was sailing aboard HMS "Bounty" but here he is, again, aboard a ship, again flirting with mutiny, on a trading mission to Oregon. It's captained by the fastidious but not inhumane "Thorne" (Walter Brennan) and crewed by a usual mix of seafaring types and by cocky Frenchman "de Montigny" (John Carroll). They have barely left the port when "Stevens" (Tone) discovers a stowaway in his cabin. "Julie" (Carol Bruce) has been snuck aboard by her French beau on the pretext that they are going to France. Before he gets a chance to get to the bottom of things, the captain walks in for some charts and, angry at being deceived, insists that she adopt the role of his cabin boy. The rest of the voyage sees her cause just about everyone to spar and spat before they arrive and the ship's two Scottish traders (Nigel Bruce and Leo G. Carroll) attempt to seduce the locals with trinkets and live piglets. Once their trading colony is set up, what adventurous elements to the plot there were largely disappear. It really just becomes a pretty flat love-triangle style of soap that Brennan looks uncomfortable with, Nigel and Leo G. Look vaguely perplexed by, whilst Tone and the other Carroll just coast along woodenly as they woo the final Carol in this story, who is meantime doing her best "Esmeralda" impersonation. The dialogue is not much to write home about but the seagoing score sometimes livens things up as they ease their halyards and tighten their mizen tops and it passes the time easily enough before an ending I could quite imagine Brennan had fancied doing half an hour earlier.
That's the first time I watch this film, rather hard to find besides You Tube channel. It looks like a Paramount film, more than an Universal one, and the style, atmosphere, is typical of the forties, early or late. Franchot Tone is obviously the lead in this adventure western, and also ship yarn - after all sea adventures was a Frank Lloyd's trademark - very pleasant to discover, where comedy elements are agreeable to bear. John Carroll in a Frenchman character is maybe a miscast, but that doesn't restricts the quality of this feature. The second part is far more exciting than the first, more action packed. This is not the Frank Lloyd that I will remember the most, unlike MUTINY ON THE BOUNTY, but it's worth seeing.
John Jacob Astor is sending an expedition to Oregon to trade for furs and set up a post. His clerk, Franchot Tone, will join Scottish traders Nigel Bruce and Leo G. Carroll in the effort, to get some adventure for the quiet, bookish young man. When voyageur John Carroll smuggles singer Carol Bruce on board, disciplinarian captain Walter Brennan won't turn back to let her off. Instead he makes her cabin boy, and his wrath falls on Tone, when Carroll allows him to take the responsibility for the breach of decorum and naval rules.
It's one of the big "Manifest Destiny" movies of the late pre-War era, extolling what is called "American exceptionalism" and "diversity" these days. Cecil B. Demille turned out UNION PACIFIC; King Vidor NORTHERN PASSAGE; and Fritz Lang WESTERN UNION, all big epics with large casts of well-known performers. This Frank Lloyd production for Universal may seem a bit clunky, confined a bit by its black-and-white photography and its now stereotyped storyline, but it fits nicely into the category, and is full of of tension and excitement. Tone may be a bit old to play a role a lot like his in MUTINY ON THE BOUNTY (which Lloyd also directed) and Carroll is hammy, but Brennan gives a beautiful performance as a Bligh-like captain, nuanced and evolving, capable of portraying a man recognizing his own failures. It's not a great movie, but it is a typically solid effort by Lloyd.
It's one of the big "Manifest Destiny" movies of the late pre-War era, extolling what is called "American exceptionalism" and "diversity" these days. Cecil B. Demille turned out UNION PACIFIC; King Vidor NORTHERN PASSAGE; and Fritz Lang WESTERN UNION, all big epics with large casts of well-known performers. This Frank Lloyd production for Universal may seem a bit clunky, confined a bit by its black-and-white photography and its now stereotyped storyline, but it fits nicely into the category, and is full of of tension and excitement. Tone may be a bit old to play a role a lot like his in MUTINY ON THE BOUNTY (which Lloyd also directed) and Carroll is hammy, but Brennan gives a beautiful performance as a Bligh-like captain, nuanced and evolving, capable of portraying a man recognizing his own failures. It's not a great movie, but it is a typically solid effort by Lloyd.
"This Woman is Mine" is a decent film, though not without a few problems. The biggest of which for me was John Carroll with his incredibly broad and overdone French-Canadian accent. Pepe le Pew and the Frito Bandito are about equally decent representations of foreigners! Additionally, a few of the characters seemed a bit hard to believe...the incredibly rigid Captain (Walter Brennan) and the woman from the title, for examples.
The film begins on shore. A playboy type, Ovide de Montigny (Carroll), convinces Julie (Carol Bruce) that he loves her...and she soon stows away aboard the vessel that he's signed on for a voyage of the Pacific Northwest. The Captain is NOT amused but here's a part of the film that seemed annoying...he blamed Robert (Franchot Tone) even though this was illogical and everyone insisted Robert was not to blame. The Captain was pretty much like this through the whole picture--irrational and quick to ignore everyone when it comes to his many premature conclusions. How is Robert to manage to survive this voyage with a nutty Captain, a woman and her jerk boyfriend??
The film has a lot of nice scenery and the story is modestly enjoyable. Not much more I feel like saying about this one.
The film begins on shore. A playboy type, Ovide de Montigny (Carroll), convinces Julie (Carol Bruce) that he loves her...and she soon stows away aboard the vessel that he's signed on for a voyage of the Pacific Northwest. The Captain is NOT amused but here's a part of the film that seemed annoying...he blamed Robert (Franchot Tone) even though this was illogical and everyone insisted Robert was not to blame. The Captain was pretty much like this through the whole picture--irrational and quick to ignore everyone when it comes to his many premature conclusions. How is Robert to manage to survive this voyage with a nutty Captain, a woman and her jerk boyfriend??
The film has a lot of nice scenery and the story is modestly enjoyable. Not much more I feel like saying about this one.
Você sabia?
- Trilhas sonorasCrossing the Bar in the Morning
Music by Richard Hageman
Lyrics by Bernie Grossman
Sung by Carol Bruce (uncredited)
Principais escolhas
Faça login para avaliar e ver a lista de recomendações personalizadas
Detalhes
- Data de lançamento
- País de origem
- Idioma
- Também conhecido como
- This Woman Is Mine
- Locações de filme
- Empresas de produção
- Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro
- Tempo de duração
- 1 h 32 min(92 min)
- Cor
- Proporção
- 1.37 : 1
Contribua para esta página
Sugerir uma alteração ou adicionar conteúdo ausente