A sailor poses as a German spy during WWII after being held on an enemy submarine. He takes on the identity of a German whose ship was sunk.A sailor poses as a German spy during WWII after being held on an enemy submarine. He takes on the identity of a German whose ship was sunk.A sailor poses as a German spy during WWII after being held on an enemy submarine. He takes on the identity of a German whose ship was sunk.
- Directors
- Writers
- Stars
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Robert B. Williams
- Destroyer Commander Tom Bristol
- (as Robert Williams)
Sam Ash
- Convoy Ship's Engineer
- (uncredited)
Trevor Bardette
- Convoy Ship Commander
- (uncredited)
Sven Hugo Borg
- U-Boat Lt. Dorner
- (uncredited)
Egon Brecher
- Prof. Van der Brek
- (uncredited)
Frederic Brunn
- Kohl
- (uncredited)
Anthony Caruso
- Benny, Seaman's Union Hall Man
- (uncredited)
Paul Conrad
- Convoy Ship Lt. Nolan
- (uncredited)
Ralph Dunn
- American Naval Officer
- (uncredited)
Carl Ekberg
- Guard
- (uncredited)
George Eldredge
- George Acton, Nazi Spy
- (uncredited)
Eric Feldary
- Hans Braustig, Injured Sailor
- (uncredited)
Arno Frey
- U-Boat Officer Hagemann
- (uncredited)
Terry Frost
- Plane Radioman
- (uncredited)
- Directors
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
Bruce Bennett is a merchant mariner whose ship is torpedoed after a German spy aboard sent the coordinates to the Nazty Nazis. Bennett spots him going overboard, and takes his place and documents, convincing Gestapo man John Wengraf he is the spy. Wengraf assigns him to spy on prisoners they're taking back to the Fatherland, brilliant scientists they hope will turn coat to save their families, if not themselves. Meanwhile, up above, a crippled ship and its naval convoy decide to play cat-and-mouse with the sub's captain, Erik Rolf.
The sub-vs-destroyer sequences are ok, and Bennett plays the sort of guy who thinks with his fists, and that's enough to come out on top after a few speeches. Shot on a couple of sets, it's clearly B material directed by Lew Landers with uncredited assistance from Bud Boetticher.
The sub-vs-destroyer sequences are ok, and Bennett plays the sort of guy who thinks with his fists, and that's enough to come out on top after a few speeches. Shot on a couple of sets, it's clearly B material directed by Lew Landers with uncredited assistance from Bud Boetticher.
The story was much more interesting than what I was expecting. But between the poor acting and the stupid fist-a-cuffs scenes, made this movie seem mor like local playhouse production than a released movie.
This is not to say that the film did not have some good scenes and a few good actors but it felt like a skid row movie that could have been excellent if only given a larger budget.
The film is not a disaster but after watching it could have been much better with better supporting actors. It reminded me of some of the "B" movies that you see late at night on local channels .
Not the best movie but better than many.
This is not to say that the film did not have some good scenes and a few good actors but it felt like a skid row movie that could have been excellent if only given a larger budget.
The film is not a disaster but after watching it could have been much better with better supporting actors. It reminded me of some of the "B" movies that you see late at night on local channels .
Not the best movie but better than many.
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- La cámara de la muerte
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 1h 6m(66 min)
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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