Val rescues Captain Deever and Eric Blake from a shipwreck. Eric saves Val from an octopus. Their friendship grows, unaware Val is a fugitive and Eric a detective tasked with arresting him. ... Read allVal rescues Captain Deever and Eric Blake from a shipwreck. Eric saves Val from an octopus. Their friendship grows, unaware Val is a fugitive and Eric a detective tasked with arresting him. They get married but their pasts collide.Val rescues Captain Deever and Eric Blake from a shipwreck. Eric saves Val from an octopus. Their friendship grows, unaware Val is a fugitive and Eric a detective tasked with arresting him. They get married but their pasts collide.
- Director
- Writers
- Stars
- The Rector
- (as Housley Stevenson Sr.)
- Best Native Diver
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
Isle of Fury is a pretty stereotypical Somerset Maugham plot coupled with a stereotypical South Seas island romance. None of the actors are very good, with the possible exception of E.E. Clive as a Bible-quoting doctor and Paul Graetz as the blackmailing ship's captain.
A mustached Bogie gives probably the worst performance of his career as Stevens, and the romance between is Donald Woods and Margaret Lindsay is silly, as the two have no chemistry whatsoever.
However, the highlight of this otherwise totally forgettable film is the sequence where Bogie battles an octopus - it has to be seen to be believed.
Knowing how things operated at Warner Brothers and also having seen both the original and remake they did of The Dawn Patrol, I'm willing to wager half the next month's rent that whole chunks of the film, all the action sequences are just carried over from the original film. That's just how Jack Warner did things over at his studio.
I'm also willing to bet knowing the original source is Somerset Maugham who also wrote that racy epic Rain baed in the South Seas that the original since it was before the Code was a great deal spicier. The new version is 9 minutes longer and probably the spice has been removed.
Warner Brothers never got anywhere near the South Seas, probably the film was shot in Catalina. The plot concerns Bogart and Lindsay who are being married as the film opens when news of a foundering sailing ship off their island and hung up on a reef brings a call for rescue. Only two get rescued, the captain Paul Graetz, and a mysterious passenger Donald Woods.
Bogart and Woods hit it off and become friends and Lindsay and Woods hit it off even better. Both Bogart and Woods however have something in their respective pasts.
The part that Bogey plays is something he might have done later on with bigger budgets. This film was done on the cheap, the special effects are crude by today's standards. Today of course the movie going public would demand location shooting in some place like Fiji or Samoa.
It's B picture from Bryan Foy's B picture unit at Warner Brothers so take it for what it's worth.
I've seen Bogart in some odd films given his later film persona - the rather experimental "Midnight" and the early talkie "Bad Sister" - but this is the only truly bad film in which I've seen him, and by bad I mean dull and predictable.
** (out of 4)
A rather bland love triangle set in the South Seas as Val (Humphrey Bogart) and Lucille (Margaret Lindsay) are married during a rough storm and minutes later there's a boat crash and Eric (Donald Woods) washes ashore. Soon all three become friends but Lucille begins to have extra feelings Eric as she starts to realize that she'll never fulfill her dreams on this island. This here is a remake of the 1932 film THE NARROW CORNER, a film I haven't seen so I can't compare the two. With that out of the way, this film here makes for some slight entertainment but in the end pretty much everyone can skip it unless you're fans of the cast. The biggest problem is, once again, the screenplay which was clearly not given too much attention, which I guess can be understood since this was meant to be the second film on a double bill. The screenplay never really knows what it wants to do because one moment we're on an adventure and then the next we're tied up in a love triangle that never really seems to work either because more attention is spent on Bogart and Woods instead of Woods and Lindsay. The film is certainly confused in what it wants to do but like many "B" movies it's at least smart enough to throw everything in and just hope something sticks. This film throws in a real crazy sequence where Bogart dives down to get some pearls and is attacked by a large octopus and soon enough Woods is underwater fighting it as well. I'm not sure what it is but no matter what movie you're watching it's always a plus when a killer octopus shows up. As far as the performances go I wasn't too thrilled with Lindsay who seemed to be sleepwalking throughout the film but I did enjoy Bogart and Woods. I thought these two actors really kept the film moving as they had a nice chemistry together and you have to love Bogie's mustache. The ending is pretty weak but the film only runs 62-minutes and makes for a decent time killer, although only fans of the stars should really seek it out.
Did you know
- TriviaOne of only two films in which Humphrey Bogart sported a mustache. (The other was La caravane héroïque (1940).)
- GoofsLucille is not wearing a ring in the hours immediately following the wedding, but a couple days later she is.
- Quotes
Lucille Gordon: [Val is getting a diving suit ready] What are you going to do?
Val Stevens: I'm going down there myself.
Lucille Gordon: [slightly incredulous] You're going to dive?
Val Stevens: If they won't, I've got to. I'm the boss of this outfit - I've got to make them believe that I can do anything they can do, better than they can do it.
Lucille Gordon: But you're not a pearl diver!
Val Stevens: [laughs] With this diving outfit on, I am!
- ConnectionsFeatured in Sh! The Octopus (1937)
Details
- Runtime
- 1h(60 min)
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1