After Pearl Harbor, Alcatraz convicts Champ Larkin and Jimbo escape to a lighthouse island, taking hostages. A Nazi spy ring also targets the island, leading to a conflict between the convic... Read allAfter Pearl Harbor, Alcatraz convicts Champ Larkin and Jimbo escape to a lighthouse island, taking hostages. A Nazi spy ring also targets the island, leading to a conflict between the convicts' greed and patriotism.After Pearl Harbor, Alcatraz convicts Champ Larkin and Jimbo escape to a lighthouse island, taking hostages. A Nazi spy ring also targets the island, leading to a conflict between the convicts' greed and patriotism.
- Prison Guard
- (uncredited)
- Man in Plane Factory
- (uncredited)
- Nick
- (uncredited)
- Radio Operator
- (uncredited)
- Second Pilot in Hangar
- (uncredited)
- Submarine Officer
- (uncredited)
- Second Radio Operator
- (uncredited)
- Luther
- (uncredited)
- Prison Warden
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
A note about the cast. James Craig must be the worst actor ever to work in Hollywood. He looks good, but he telegraphs every move he makes and acts like a Ray Harryhausen mockup. Frank Jenks made a great living playing wisecracking sidekicks - and for good reason. Bonita Granville looks as good as ever, but she underplays her role for a change to good advantage. John Banner (from Hogan's Heros) plays the Nazi big cheese. If it weren't for his voice, I would never have recognized him. Slender, sophisticated, and rather handsome. Nobody else is really notable except, perhaps, Erford Gage who plays the undercover Nazi spy. What an odd looking guy.
At 65 minutes this won't take up much of your time, but I think it's worth it. But then I was a fan of Brass Bancroft and Dick Tracy. Besides, I like lighthouses.
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe name on the crate the escapees were clinging to in San Francisco Bay is "H. Schlom". Herman Schlom is the film's producer.
- GoofsIn the film, Champ and Jimbo are depicted as being cellmates. At Alcatraz, the policy throughout the prison's entire twenty-nine year history was that each cell housed only one man. Nobody ever had a cellmate. After the 1946 Battle of Alcatraz rendered large portions of "C" Block uninhabitable, the affected convicts were either temporarily transferred to the unused and antiquated "A" Block or transferred to another prison entirely. This was solely due to maintain the one cell/one man rule.
- Quotes
[first lines]
Champ Larkin: [voice over over shots of Alcatraz] You gotta admit, it's a pretty piece of masonry, that Alcatraz, but it never was a choice spot for a vacation, and this war soured the place but good. There it is, sticking up like a nose on your face right in the middle of San Francisco Harbor.
Champ Larkin: [voice over as the shot now switches to inmates inside] And there's us, sitting on top of the sweetest target on the west coast with no place to go if somebody decided to start dropping scrap iron. Eight hundred big time hoodlums waiting for it: pennies from heaven.
- ConnectionsReferenced in L'Amérique face à l'Holocauste: The Homeless, The Tempest-Tossed (1942-) (2022)
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Languages
- Also known as
- A siete millas de Alcatraz
- Filming locations
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- $134,549 (estimated)
- Runtime1 hour 2 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1