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In Venezuela during the 1950s, a vacationing Texas oilman is asked to help extinguish an oil derrick fire and he succumbs to the charms of a visiting New York novelist.In Venezuela during the 1950s, a vacationing Texas oilman is asked to help extinguish an oil derrick fire and he succumbs to the charms of a visiting New York novelist.In Venezuela during the 1950s, a vacationing Texas oilman is asked to help extinguish an oil derrick fire and he succumbs to the charms of a visiting New York novelist.
Roy Aversa
- Waiter
- (uncredited)
Gil Barreto
- Minor Role
- (uncredited)
Nick Borgani
- Waiter
- (uncredited)
Paul Bradley
- Nightclub Patron
- (uncredited)
Luis Cabello
- Boatman
- (uncredited)
George Calliga
- Nightclub Patron
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
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Ten years before John Wayne did the Hellfighters another film that was clearly based on oil fire fighter Red Adair was made by Cornel Wilde on location in Venezuela. Maracaibo starred Wilde and Mrs. Wilde Jean Wallace together with Abbe Lane, Francis Lederer, Joe E. Ross and Michael Landon.
Although there was the usual rough house in the Wayne film, Maracaibo for the first two thirds is a second rate romance. The film gets really good only when the oil fire fighting gets started. The reason for that was that Wilde was trying to showcase Jean Wallace who plays a romance novelist. She and Abbe Lane, a girl who's been around vy for Wilde. Lane has history with Wilde, but she's also engaged to marry Lederer who plays a deaf and dumb oil millionaire who signs throughout the film and his words are interpreted by Landon, an orphan kid who Lederer raised.
Maracaibo did not have the budget Hellfighters did and it shows. Still producer Wilde got good results for actor Wilde and the rest of the cast. I must also point out a nice performance by Joe E. Ross in the sidekick role to Wilde.
The location shooting added to the authenticity of the film. If he had cut out the romance and say made Jean Wallace a female oil fire fighter in that male preserve this could have been a classic. As it is it's an average good action film.
Although there was the usual rough house in the Wayne film, Maracaibo for the first two thirds is a second rate romance. The film gets really good only when the oil fire fighting gets started. The reason for that was that Wilde was trying to showcase Jean Wallace who plays a romance novelist. She and Abbe Lane, a girl who's been around vy for Wilde. Lane has history with Wilde, but she's also engaged to marry Lederer who plays a deaf and dumb oil millionaire who signs throughout the film and his words are interpreted by Landon, an orphan kid who Lederer raised.
Maracaibo did not have the budget Hellfighters did and it shows. Still producer Wilde got good results for actor Wilde and the rest of the cast. I must also point out a nice performance by Joe E. Ross in the sidekick role to Wilde.
The location shooting added to the authenticity of the film. If he had cut out the romance and say made Jean Wallace a female oil fire fighter in that male preserve this could have been a classic. As it is it's an average good action film.
Cornell Wilde is a Texan with one of those appearing/disappearing accents. He flies into Caracas, goes water-skiing in his ice-cream suit, tries to put out an oil-well fire in the water fields. He also makes a play for best-selling author Jean Wallace. She's interested, but a bit frigid at first, and there's Wilde's ex-fiancee Abbe Lane.
There are some shots of Venezuela and the oil wells on fire are composited in from the Salton Sea. I can't judge the excellence of the technical work, because the copy I looked at had been a poor VHS tape at some stage, with the sort of blocky artifacts common to those. With Francis Lederer, Joe E. Ross, and Michael Landon as the green kid who fouls up.
There are some shots of Venezuela and the oil wells on fire are composited in from the Salton Sea. I can't judge the excellence of the technical work, because the copy I looked at had been a poor VHS tape at some stage, with the sort of blocky artifacts common to those. With Francis Lederer, Joe E. Ross, and Michael Landon as the green kid who fouls up.
Did you know
- TriviaIn 1972, Cornel Wilde acquired the television distribution rights to the film.
- SoundtracksMaracaibo Moon
Written by Laurindo Almeida and Cornel Wilde (as Jefferson Pascal)
Sung by Jean Wallace (as Miss Wallace)
Details
Box office
- Budget
- $1,000,000 (estimated)
- Runtime1 hour 28 minutes
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Top Gap
By what name was Tueurs de feux à Maracaibo (1958) officially released in India in English?
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