IMDb RATING
6.5/10
2.3K
YOUR RATING
Shrimpers and oilmen clash after an ambitious wildcatter begins constructing an off-shore oil rig.Shrimpers and oilmen clash after an ambitious wildcatter begins constructing an off-shore oil rig.Shrimpers and oilmen clash after an ambitious wildcatter begins constructing an off-shore oil rig.
Harry Morgan
- Rawlings
- (as Henry Morgan)
Emile Avery
- Fisherman
- (uncredited)
Fred Carson
- Oilman
- (uncredited)
Joseph Cefalu
- Fisherman
- (uncredited)
Adrine Champagne
- Fisherman
- (uncredited)
Frank Chase
- Radio Technician
- (uncredited)
Martin Cichy
- Fisherman
- (uncredited)
Antonio Filauri
- Joe Sephalu
- (uncredited)
Featured reviews
Thunder Bay is directed by Anthony Mann and written by Gil Doud and George W. George. It stars James Stewart, Joanne Dru, Dan Duryea, Gilbert Roland and Jay C. Flippen. Music is by Frank Skinner and cinematography by William H. Daniels.
Offshore oil drillers set up base at Port Felicity, Louisiana and find the town's shrimpers are not at all happy about this threat to their livelihood. Conflict and affairs of the heart do follow.
One of the eight films that James Stewart and Anthony Mann made together, Thunder Bay was relevant in topicality upon its release, and remains so today. Whilst lacking the psychological smarts that the duo's Western productions had, it's a handsome production with the expected qualities in front of and behind the cameras. There's a lot of talky passages, which given the subject matter pulsing away at the core is understandable, but Mann ensures that action and suspense is never far away. It all builds to a crescendo, with loose ends and quibbles conveniently tied up in a Hollywood bow, but such is the skills of actors and director it rounds out as good and thorough entertainment. 7/10
Offshore oil drillers set up base at Port Felicity, Louisiana and find the town's shrimpers are not at all happy about this threat to their livelihood. Conflict and affairs of the heart do follow.
One of the eight films that James Stewart and Anthony Mann made together, Thunder Bay was relevant in topicality upon its release, and remains so today. Whilst lacking the psychological smarts that the duo's Western productions had, it's a handsome production with the expected qualities in front of and behind the cameras. There's a lot of talky passages, which given the subject matter pulsing away at the core is understandable, but Mann ensures that action and suspense is never far away. It all builds to a crescendo, with loose ends and quibbles conveniently tied up in a Hollywood bow, but such is the skills of actors and director it rounds out as good and thorough entertainment. 7/10
What starts off as a cute conman buddy movie turns into an unexpected dual romance as the pals find girls in a small fishing town, and a locals-against-outsiders fight. James Stewart and Dan Duryea, frequent costars, have great chemistry together as friends who are down on their luck. With failures on their resume and nothing but slick tongues, they con their way into a car ride into town, renting a boat for the day, and hosting a business meeting with an important investor - all without paying. Joanne Dru is skeptical, Gilbert Roland is jealous, Marcia Henderson is interested, and Jay C. Flippen believes in their vision: underwater off-shore drilling.
If you like the actual story of the drilling and the local fisherman trying to sabotage their plans, you'll really enjoy Thunder Bay. I was more interested in the love stories, and I was still happy. Dan Duryea usually plays slimy villains, so I can only imagine what a treat it was for him to be the funny comic sidekick with an eye for the ladies. I've never seen him get to smooch someone after exclaiming, "Oh darling!" It's just adorable. If this is the first movie you see of his, you probably won't be able to imagine him playing a bad guy in his other movies.
If you like the actual story of the drilling and the local fisherman trying to sabotage their plans, you'll really enjoy Thunder Bay. I was more interested in the love stories, and I was still happy. Dan Duryea usually plays slimy villains, so I can only imagine what a treat it was for him to be the funny comic sidekick with an eye for the ladies. I've never seen him get to smooch someone after exclaiming, "Oh darling!" It's just adorable. If this is the first movie you see of his, you probably won't be able to imagine him playing a bad guy in his other movies.
"Thunder Bay," strictly a man's picture, may be considered a Western, with boats and oil substituting for horses and guns, on the Gulf Coast off Louisiana...
Stewart and Mann considered as regular partners begun for what they thought were fresh pastures... Stewart is properly tough, wild and laconic as the enthusiastic engineer convinced that oil reserves might lie beneath the Louisiana waters, and Duryea have come up with a drilling platform that resists the fury of even the worst storms... Away they go to find offshore oil, with the encouragement of Jay. C. Flippen willing to ramp up, pumping money on exploration...
The drilling clashes with the plans of shrimp fishermen who are opposing the test on the fishing grounds... It may have an adverse affect on their marine life...
Duryea adds more complications to the action-drama by falling in love with the girlfriend of one of the fishermen, whose sister, Joanne Dru (echoing the sentiments of Janet Leigh in "The Naked Spur") is putting her eyes on Stewart... But the machinations of the two girls seem worthless material against the struggles between the guys, which are actually the main force of the movie...
After several obstacles, violent storms, romantic distrust, and the retraction of magnate Flippen, who has lost faith in the project, all ends wonderfully when Stewart (hard to believe) discovers not only oil but an abundant source of shrimp...
Subsequently the lovers pair off, and the former enemies become allies as they share their beneficial trades...
Photographed in Technicolor, "Thunder Bay" is a well-produced movie, an entertaining piece of film making...
Stewart and Mann considered as regular partners begun for what they thought were fresh pastures... Stewart is properly tough, wild and laconic as the enthusiastic engineer convinced that oil reserves might lie beneath the Louisiana waters, and Duryea have come up with a drilling platform that resists the fury of even the worst storms... Away they go to find offshore oil, with the encouragement of Jay. C. Flippen willing to ramp up, pumping money on exploration...
The drilling clashes with the plans of shrimp fishermen who are opposing the test on the fishing grounds... It may have an adverse affect on their marine life...
Duryea adds more complications to the action-drama by falling in love with the girlfriend of one of the fishermen, whose sister, Joanne Dru (echoing the sentiments of Janet Leigh in "The Naked Spur") is putting her eyes on Stewart... But the machinations of the two girls seem worthless material against the struggles between the guys, which are actually the main force of the movie...
After several obstacles, violent storms, romantic distrust, and the retraction of magnate Flippen, who has lost faith in the project, all ends wonderfully when Stewart (hard to believe) discovers not only oil but an abundant source of shrimp...
Subsequently the lovers pair off, and the former enemies become allies as they share their beneficial trades...
Photographed in Technicolor, "Thunder Bay" is a well-produced movie, an entertaining piece of film making...
The first of two fifties adventure films with heroes called Steve Martin (the second was
'Godzilla' with Raymond Burr)! Shot on location in Morgan City, Louisiana in rich Technicolor (all the better to show off local girl Joanne Dru's vibrant and extremely durable lipstick), this was Jimmy Stewart's first non-western with Anthony Mann; and although easily the least known of their eight films together remains fun.
To 21st Century environmental sensibilities, oil prospectors no longer seem the heroic buccaneering figures they were once portrayed as. The film does acknowledge the disruptive impact Stewart and Duryea have on this sleepy little backwater; as much due simply to being men as oilmen...
To 21st Century environmental sensibilities, oil prospectors no longer seem the heroic buccaneering figures they were once portrayed as. The film does acknowledge the disruptive impact Stewart and Duryea have on this sleepy little backwater; as much due simply to being men as oilmen...
It's Louisiana 1946. Navy buddies Johnny Gambi (Dan Duryea) and Steve Martin (James Stewart) are a couple of talkers and always with a scheme. They rent a fishing boat but the boat owner's daughter Stella Rigaud (Joanne Dru) immediately distrusts them. It doesn't stop Steve from falling for her. Gambi sets his sights on the younger sister Francesca. The two men are actually wildcatters showing an oil executive their plans to do off-shore drilling. It's a risky new form of drilling. Stella stops her father from helping the oilmen. So they rent from shrimper Teche Bossier (Gilbert Roland) instead but soon it's the shrimpers against the oilmen.
I'm not naturally pro-oil and anti-shrimp. So this comes with some normal resistance. The actual work from the oilmen is interesting. I'm not compelled to root for either side of the dispute. The shrimp is an easy out for the awkward conflict. This movie starts with some innocent fun but it gets a bit darker than I want. I like the start but it all gets a bit muddled especially in the modern sense.
I'm not naturally pro-oil and anti-shrimp. So this comes with some normal resistance. The actual work from the oilmen is interesting. I'm not compelled to root for either side of the dispute. The shrimp is an easy out for the awkward conflict. This movie starts with some innocent fun but it gets a bit darker than I want. I like the start but it all gets a bit muddled especially in the modern sense.
Did you know
- TriviaAlthough filmed in the standard 1.37-1 aspect ratio, this film was chosen by Universal-International as its first widescreen feature, accomplishing this by cropping the top and bottom and projecting it at 1.85-1 at Loew's State Theatre in New York City, as well as other sites. Its initial presentation also marked U-I's first use of directional stereophonic sound, although few theaters in the country had such equipment at the time.
Thunder Bay marked Universal Pictures' entry into the widescreen format craze of the day. Some contemporary reviewers complained that the sound, with its use of three speakers, was loud and distracting. Publicity materials also indicate that the picture was originally planned as a 3-D production.
- GoofsThe townspeople secure a restraining order from the state to stop the blasting in the Gulf of Mexico. Since the blasting is further than 3 miles from shore, the state would not have jurisdiction- these are Federal waters.
- Quotes
Johnny Gambi: Can you, uh, juggle or anything like that? We might pick up a few bucks.
Steve Martin: I can imitate a movie star.
- Crazy creditsOpening credits prologue: LOUISIANA 1946
- ConnectionsFeatured in Forces of Nature: Anthony Mann at Universal (2025)
- How long is Thunder Bay?Powered by Alexa
Details
Box office
- Gross US & Canada
- $2,400,000
- Runtime1 hour 43 minutes
- Color
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content