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Pago Pago, île enchantée

Original title: South of Pago Pago
  • 1940
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 38m
IMDb RATING
6.3/10
170
YOUR RATING
Frances Farmer and Jon Hall in Pago Pago, île enchantée (1940)
ActionAdventureCrimeRomance

The son of an island chieftain, young Kehane defiantly opposes the efforts by crooked pearl hunter Bucko Larson to invade his domain. Larson and his minions hope to dissuade the young man by... Read allThe son of an island chieftain, young Kehane defiantly opposes the efforts by crooked pearl hunter Bucko Larson to invade his domain. Larson and his minions hope to dissuade the young man by introducing him to seductive Ruby.The son of an island chieftain, young Kehane defiantly opposes the efforts by crooked pearl hunter Bucko Larson to invade his domain. Larson and his minions hope to dissuade the young man by introducing him to seductive Ruby.

  • Director
    • Alfred E. Green
  • Writers
    • George Bruce
    • Kenneth Gamet
  • Stars
    • Victor McLaglen
    • Jon Hall
    • Frances Farmer
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.3/10
    170
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Alfred E. Green
    • Writers
      • George Bruce
      • Kenneth Gamet
    • Stars
      • Victor McLaglen
      • Jon Hall
      • Frances Farmer
    • 11User reviews
    • 2Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win total

    Photos17

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    Top cast23

    Edit
    Victor McLaglen
    Victor McLaglen
    • Bucko Larson
    Jon Hall
    Jon Hall
    • Kehane
    Frances Farmer
    Frances Farmer
    • Ruby Taylor
    Olympe Bradna
    Olympe Bradna
    • Malia
    Gene Lockhart
    Gene Lockhart
    • Lindsay
    Douglass Dumbrille
    Douglass Dumbrille
    • Williams
    Francis Ford
    Francis Ford
    • Foster
    Ben Welden
    Ben Welden
    • Grimes
    Abner Biberman
    Abner Biberman
    • Manuel Ferro
    Pedro de Cordoba
    Pedro de Cordoba
    • Chief
    Rudy Robles
    Rudy Robles
    • Luna
    Bobby Stone
    • Hono
    • (as Robert Stone)
    Nellie Duran
    • Laulau
    James Flavin
    James Flavin
    • Cafe Customer
    Nina Campana
    • Hono's Mother
    • (as Nina Compana)
    James B. Leong
    • Waiter
    Harry Woods
    Harry Woods
    • Black Mike Rafferty
    Julie Carter
    Julie Carter
    • Native GIrl
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Alfred E. Green
    • Writers
      • George Bruce
      • Kenneth Gamet
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews11

    6.3170
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    Featured reviews

    8malvernp

    A Warmly Remembered Movie by a Former Eight Year Old Boy

    Around 80 years ago, I saw this film at our small town's only movie theater. I was eight years old, and a juvenile fan of movies that told simple stories involving high adventure, uncomplicated romance, easy identification of the good guys v. the bad ones and scenes that included underwater thrills. South of Pago Pago was such a film, and I found it to be very appealing and a fun experience to watch.

    Recently, I had the opportunity to see it again on YouTube. Apparently, it is hard to find elsewhere. How does it now appear to someone in the twilight of life? It is still enjoyable. The good guys (and gal) are still positive role models and the bad guys are truly repulsive in an unrelenting sort of way. The acting seems natural, and the story of greedy men spoiling a native paradise until meeting their justly deserved fate is spun out in an easily understood way.

    Olympe Bradna, who plays Jon Hall's girl friend, continues to remind me of Debra Paget as she has for many years. And Frances Farmer, whose real life involved a truly tragic story, is just as beautiful and stirring as she seemed to me so long ago. The underwater sequences are still exciting. The setting and costumes greatly add to the movie's appeal.

    All in all, South of Pago Pago is a film that deserves to be objectively reconsidered by a new audience.

    And how about the great movie trivia question that it poses. What do South of Pago Pago and The Jolson Story have in common? Give up? Same director!
    10leew-7

    A flawless, exquisite Polynesian tapestry; should be a model for the genre

    Edward Small took director Alfred E. Green's cast and crew - an uncommonly attractive and brilliant assemblage - to the south seas to do the majority of this curiously undersung piece on location. Far less stylized/dated than Goldwyn's THE HURRICANE, it is admittedly riddled with cliches and formula, but packaged in such visual and technical excellence it scarcely matters.

    There are scenes that will stop the heart. Chiseled adonis Jon Hall and porcelain idol Frances Farmer outlined in profile(s) against the steaming background volcano take the romantic closeup to a level that defies comparison.

    Edward Small's films typically were strings of frames any one of which was an individual work of art in itself. What can one say but that with this one he outdid even himself, as did workhorse composer Edward Ward on song and score, some years prior to his work on Universal's stunning PHANTOM OF THE OPERA?
    7lugonian

    Pearls of the South Seas

    SOUTH OF PAGO PAGO (United Artists, 1940), an Edward Small Presentation, directed by Alfred E. Green, is a South Seas adventure tale starring Victor McLaglen, Jon Hall and Frances Farmer in the leads. As much as this movie might have started a trend of other South Seas adventures that were common ground during the 1940s, with many produced in lavish Technicolor, this is not the first of this cycle. In 1937 alone, Jon Hall got his first big break in a leading role opposite sarong girl Dorothy Lamour in THE HURRICANE (Samuel Goldwyn) while Frances Farmer was featured in a Technicolor adventure of EBB TIDE (Paramount), based on the novel by Robert Louis Stevenson. Three years later, their paths would meet for this black and white adventure tale with enough island scenery that might have been more effective had it been produced in Technicolor.

    Opening title: "This is a story of days not so long ago, when Singapore spawned a race of steel-fisted, iron-jawed adventurers, who lived happy, fought hard and died hard - as they ravaged unknown seas, lured by the priceless lusture of virgin pearls." Opening in Shanghai, China, at the Tingle Tangle Café, hostess Ruby Taylor (Frances Farmer) meets with Portuguese sailor, Manuel Forro (Abner Biberman) with news about rich pearl beds that can be found off the shores of Manoa. This news reaches Ruby's friends, Captain Bucko Larson (Victor McLaglen) and his first mate, Williams (Douglass Dumbrille), who invite both Ruby and Manuel aboard their steamer, the L.A. Dessa, bound for the island south of Pago Pago. Before reaching Manoa, Manuel, who's upset about being cheated of his promised share, is thrown overboard to the sharks by Bucko. Greeted by the natives, the crew is met by Kehase (Jon Hall), son of the island chief (Pedro De Cordoba). Although loved by Malia (Olympe Branda) since childhood, Kehase takes an immediate interest in Ruby, a beautiful white woman. Also on the island is Mr. Lindsay (Gene Lockhart), a white man who's been living among the natives for nine years, is not please by the presence by these visitors, which may mean trouble for his happy paradise. His instincts are correct. As the native boys dive for pearls, danger lurks for some, leading to certain deaths or injuries. Kehase insists the pearl diving must stop. Not wanting to leave the island with just twelve pearls to their name, Bucko uses Ruby to lure Kehase away, even to a point of marrying him and honeymooning on the island of Tua Tua. With Kehase temporarily out of the way, Bucko and his mates resume their greedy force amongst the native boys, risking their lives diving for more pearls and turning a once happy community into a fearful one. Also seen in the cast are: Francis Ford (Foster); Ben Weldon (Grimes); and Harry Woods (Black Mike Rafferty).

    A South Seas tale that plays like a Saturday afternoon matinee is one that has done no harm in Jon Hall's movie career, considering a handful of similar adventures that would follow later on, especially those six over at Universal opposite the exotic Maria Montez. Hall does well as the island leader, but his accented manner of talking fails to come off convincingly. Aside from native drum playing and dancing, shipboard fights pearl diving dangers, the movie also contains off-screen chanting and singing to the title tune of "South of Pago Pago" by Chet Forrest, Bob Wright and Frank Loesser to round out the story. When Frances Farmer makes her first screen entrance in the cafe, her character, clothes and hairstyle strongly resemble that of her Lotta character from her breakthrough film, COME AND GET IT (1936). Once the story shifts towards the island of Manoa, she not only lets her hair down, figuratively, she appears slightly heavier in her physical appearance than before. Olympe Bradna, on loan from Paramount, makes a beautiful island girl. She even participates in a lively island dance with Jon Hall.

    Not as well known as other films of this type, SOUTH OF PAGO PAGO did become available on VHS through VCI Home Video around 1998, and later onto DVD, assuring its rediscovery. Though cable television broadcasts are uncertain, it was once popular viewing on the late show or afternoon broadcasts during the 1960s and 1970s before taken out or circulation. Overlooking certain outdoor scenes that appear more indoor studio bound, with ordinary scripting, SOUTH OF PAGO PAGO moves swiftly during its 97 minutes of action and adventure. (*** pearls)
    5psych-shawn

    Watch "The Hurricane" Instead

    This movie was an attempt to imitate the success of "The Hurricane" which was made three years earlier also starring Jon Hall as a Tarzan- like South Pacific Islander. Unfortunately, South of Pago Pago was NOT directed by John Ford and it showed.

    The script is very predictable, the characters are one-dimensional and the acting varies from wooden to hammy. Whereas "The Hurricane" was able to develop a real insight into the soul of the islanders and their way of life, "South of Pago Pago" portrays them too simplistically to ever really identify with.

    Please watch "The Hurricane" instead.
    6none-85

    Frances Farmer is the main attraction.

    It's a strange movie. Frances Farmer is the main attraction. This is not her ideal role- her patrician blond beauty seems a little out of place here. Although only 27 when she made the movie, she does not look quite as breathtaking as when she made Come and Get It 4 years earlier. Nevertheless, it is one of the few movies one can see Frances in. Jon Hall is an interesting character. I remember him from the 1950s as Ramar of the Jungle. Apparently he never sustained the successes in his early movies.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Alfred Green replaced Tay Garnett as director.
    • Goofs
      Early in the film, Frances Farmer's character asks for a Singapore Sling. There was no cocktail known by that name until the 1930s, around fifty years after the time this film is set.
    • Connections
      Referenced in La British Compagnie (2016)
    • Soundtracks
      South of Pago Pago
      Music by Lew Pollack

      Lyrics by Chet Forrest and Bob Wright

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • June 1, 1949 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Au sud de Pago Pago
    • Filming locations
      • Santa Catalina Island, Channel Islands, California, USA(underwater scenes)
    • Production company
      • Edward Small Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • $800,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      1 hour 38 minutes
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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    Frances Farmer and Jon Hall in Pago Pago, île enchantée (1940)
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