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Eva Gabor, Richard Arlen, John Miljan, J. Carrol Naish, and Mikhail Rasumny in Forced Landing (1941)

User reviews

Forced Landing

4 reviews
5/10

A chance to see a very young Eva Gabor.

"Forced Landing" is a cheaply made film that doesn't have a lot to recommend it. However, at the same time, for what it is, it's pretty good and entertaining. Plus, it gives you a chance to see a young Eva Gabor--and she looks so amazingly different from the lady who later starred on "Green Acres"! The film is set in the fictional Pacific nation of Mosaque. Oddly, the residents all look Mexican--especially the leader of the revolutionary forces (J. Carrol Naish). I am not sure why they didn't place the film in Central America or perhaps the Caribbean, as there are no places even remotely like Mosaque in the Pacific. This isn't really a complaint--just an observation.

Dan Kendall (Richard Arlen) is an American who inexplicably has joined the Mosaque air force. Considering his dislike for the dictator, the Colonel, it is odd. Obviously he loves to fly and this ends up nearly costing Dan his life. During the course of the film, he ends up meeting and falling in love with Johanna Van Deuren (Eva Gabor)--the Colonel's girlfriend! Considering he's a despot, you can assume this will eventually unleash the Colonel's wrath. What exactly happens next, you'll have to see for yourself.

This is a decent adventure movie. Nothing more, nothing less. But I did enjoy it and felt it was a decent time-passer.
  • planktonrules
  • Feb 28, 2014
  • Permalink
5/10

Action in the air and the jungle

Richard Arlen starred in some 90 movies from 1930 through the mid-1950s. And, he made nearly twice as many films in his lifetime as most of the biggest stars during that same time – including Humphrey Bogart, Gary Cooper, Cary Grant, Frederic March, Gregory Peck, James Stewart, and Spencer Tracy. Yet, Arlen is barely known today, while the names of these stars and others will long be remembered.

The main reason is because Arlen was a B-movie star, who cranked out half a dozen or more movies every year for Paramount and others as regular theater fodder. He was an attractive enough actor, and he had talent. He usually plays roles in which he is a self-assured, confident man. His career is an example of the difference one or two small breaks can have in an actor becoming a big-name star.

A lot of Arlen's films were of the action type – many involving flying. "Forced Landing" is such a film. Arlen was an RAF pilot in WW I, and a very accomplished flyer. His co-star in this movie is Eva Gabor, making her film debut. For those reasons, and an interesting plot, this movie is worth seeing. You'll have to overlook the poor production quality otherwise. And the terrain for this one might have it set anywhere from Mexico to South America. "Forced Landing" came out in July, 1941, and was made by Paramount – one of the big five Hollywood studios of the time. One can compare this film with some of the big films Paramount put out in the same period to see the difference in product quality. Look at "Hold Back the Dawn" also in 1941, starring Olivia de Havilland, Charles Boyer and Paulette Goddard. It had six Oscar nominations.

One very interesting fact about Arlen's career is that he was the star in "Wings," the 1929 silent film that won the very first Oscar for best picture. A co-star in that film was Gary Cooper, who would win the first of two Oscars the year after "Forced Landing" for "Sergeant York." Arlen never received a nomination throughout his career.
  • SimonJack
  • Mar 28, 2014
  • Permalink
4/10

The Dollar Bills Get Shortchanged

Pilot Richard Arlen finds himself stranded in the island republic of Masque. In short order, he finds himself in love with Eva Gabor (in her first screen appearance) and flying for the civilian airline. Miss Gabor is Dutch (?) and the daughter Victor Varconi, who's building a fort in the hills. But someone has been sabotaging the flights in of payrolls and supplies.

You can usually rely on the Dollar Bills, producers William Pine and William Thomas to produce a sturdy B from standard plots using skilled performers who can be had for little cash. There are certainly those here, and the acting honors are carried by kindly rebel general J. Carroll Naish. But this one just doesn't measure up to their usual mediocre standard under the direction of Gordon Wiles. Perhaps it is my general dislike for Richard Arlen. His career seemed to peak in the late silent era. Although he maintained leading man status in lesser studios and cheaper vehicles all the way into the Geezer Westerns of the 1960s and even beyond, his performances never seemed to age with his face. Nonetheless he worked through his death in 1976 at the age of 76. With Nils Asther, Evelyn Brent, John Miljan and, of course, Jack Norton as a drunk.
  • boblipton
  • Aug 15, 2025
  • Permalink

eva's very first full length film!

Richard arlen, eva gabor (the nice sister). Pretty rough copy. Sound and picture are just awful. Gabor's very first appearance in a film. Arlen had been in silent and talkie films for twenty years! In the story, dan and johanna meet in mosaque. Unfortunately, they are on opposite sides of a struggle, where johanna's father is trying to build a fort. But colonel golas is behind the resistance, which doesn't want the fort to be completed, and is sabotaging the work however he can. Dan and johanna will need to decide with side they are on. Directed by gordon wiles. Died young at 46. Won an oscar for transatlantic. That's pretty good, since he only directed eleven films before he passed away. A sixty seven minute shortie from paramount. The basic story is solid, but the film quality is so bad, it's an effort to get through it. Unknown if the film from 1935 is a similar story. The 1941 version may be important, if only known as the debut of eva gabor.
  • ksf-2
  • Nov 28, 2023
  • Permalink

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