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IMDbPro

Les aventuriers

Original title: Ice Palace
  • 1960
  • Approved
  • 2h 23m
IMDb RATING
6.1/10
424
YOUR RATING
Richard Burton, Jim Backus, Ray Danton, Martha Hyer, Carolyn Jones, Diane McBain, and Robert Ryan in Les aventuriers (1960)
AdventureDramaHistory

After WW1, Zeb and Thor start a cannery business in Alaska but eventually they drift apart with Zeb becoming unscrupulous and Thor becoming involved in Alaskan politics.After WW1, Zeb and Thor start a cannery business in Alaska but eventually they drift apart with Zeb becoming unscrupulous and Thor becoming involved in Alaskan politics.After WW1, Zeb and Thor start a cannery business in Alaska but eventually they drift apart with Zeb becoming unscrupulous and Thor becoming involved in Alaskan politics.

  • Director
    • Vincent Sherman
  • Writers
    • Edna Ferber
    • Harry Kleiner
  • Stars
    • Richard Burton
    • Robert Ryan
    • Martha Hyer
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.1/10
    424
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Vincent Sherman
    • Writers
      • Edna Ferber
      • Harry Kleiner
    • Stars
      • Richard Burton
      • Robert Ryan
      • Martha Hyer
    • 19User reviews
    • 3Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos22

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    Top cast80

    Edit
    Richard Burton
    Richard Burton
    • Zeb Kennedy
    Robert Ryan
    Robert Ryan
    • Thor Storm
    Martha Hyer
    Martha Hyer
    • Dorothy Wendt Kennedy
    Jim Backus
    Jim Backus
    • Dave Husack
    Carolyn Jones
    Carolyn Jones
    • Bridie Ballantyne
    Ray Danton
    Ray Danton
    • Bay Husack
    Diane McBain
    Diane McBain
    • Christine Storm
    Karl Swenson
    Karl Swenson
    • Scotty Ballantyne
    Shirley Knight
    Shirley Knight
    • Grace Kennedy - Age 16
    Barry Kelley
    Barry Kelley
    • Einer Wendt
    Sheridan Comerate
    Sheridan Comerate
    • Ross Guildenstern
    George Takei
    George Takei
    • Wang
    Steve Harris
    • Christopher Storm - Age 16
    Edward Astran
    • Hotel Guest
    • (uncredited)
    Walter Bacon
    • Townsman
    • (uncredited)
    Brandon Beach
    • Hotel Guest
    • (uncredited)
    George Bell
    George Bell
    • Townsman
    • (uncredited)
    Ray Beltram
    • Townsman at Meeting
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Vincent Sherman
    • Writers
      • Edna Ferber
      • Harry Kleiner
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews19

    6.1424
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    Featured reviews

    federovsky

    Craptastic

    Alaskan melodrama in which Richard Burton rises from unemployment to cannery mogul, getting everything he wants through ruthless determination. Carolyn Jones is the other side of the coin, a woman who fails through indetermination to get anything she wants out of life - including Burton.

    It's another Edna Ferber novel about industrial pioneers with an underlying environmental message (the devastation of fish stocks). It's unappealing and humourless, with Burton laying it on too thick, and the drama driven by unpleasant people finding excuses to get on each others' nerves.

    Then (like Ferber's Giant) it starts to creak across generations with lots of unconvincing aging and new characters appearing late in the film we are surprised to have to care about. Finally, just to ratchet up the excitement, it gets all political.

    Watching pack-ice breaking up would be more satisfying.
    8JLRMovieReviews

    Absorbing yet preposterous tale!

    I got this because of the great cast, and I was entertained by it, all the whole. It was helped by good performances and most of the dialogue was well written. Having said that, this melodrama had a sense of camp to it, and there were instances of unintended hilarity for me, as we see Robert Ryan pushing the dog sled. I don't know why that was so funny to me. Richard Burton got more hardened and cold to others, as he barked orders. One wonders how can so much happen to these people. It seemed to get more and more preposterous. It would go from a tragedy into a zippy and carefree scene, like it was totally logical. Looking back on it, the love triangle of Richard, Robert and Carolyn was the best part. But, overall, the entertaining factor outweighs the obvious faults it has. I would recommend this for a non-thinking night at the movies.
    pv71989

    Interesting, but too long AND too short

    I know it sounds like a contradiction, but "Ice Palace" suffers from a long running time while the movie's scenes are too brief to offer anything substantial. Based on a novel by Edna Ferber (who also wrote the best-selling novels Show Boat, Cimarron and Giant, all of which became classic, award-winning films), the movie deals with an almost life-long rivalry between Zeb Kennedy (Richard Burton) and Thor Storm (Robert Ryan) in the wilds of a still territorial Alaska. Zeb is a WWI veteran who comes back home to Seattle to find he can't get a job, thanks to local packers who see him as a troublemaker because he dances to his own tune and not theirs. He heads to Alaska aboard a freighter, along with a bunch of Chinese workers (he meets the character of Wang (George Takei in a demeaning role of a pidgen-English speaking role of comic relief). Zeb meets Thor (Robert Ryan), a local fisherman in the town of Banarov when he is beaten up by local cannery workers and thrown into the bay after stepping in to defend Wang, who's being threatened. Not to belabor a point, but Thor and Zeb become friends and conspire to open a rival cannery in Banarov to avoid having to grovel at the feet of the big cannery across the bay. Zeb then meets Bridie Ballantyne (Carolyn Jones), who is Thor's woman and business partner. He falls for her, makes her fall for him, then realizes it's wrong and decides to leave Baranov. Thor, unknowing of all this, gets him to set up financing in Seattle for the cannery. Zeb does this by marrying Dorothy (Martha Hyer) to get her father to back the cannery, thanks to some advice from best friend and future business partner Dave Husack (a pre-Gilligan's Island Jim Backus). Anyway, when Zeb, Bridie, Thor and Dorothy all meet up, it's like that song where Chicago says to look away. The jig is up and sets the tension for the rest of the movie. Zeb becomes a tyrant, in league with other big packers, while Thor becomes a protector of Alaska, seeking statehood so that federal laws can come in and stop Zeb, called "Czar" Kennedy by the locals. The problems with the movie deal mostly with the length of the novel, which rivaled "Giant." Whereas "Giant" and "Cimarron" dispensed with huge chunks of the books to avoid boring and losing audiences, "Ice Palace" tries to touch on all of the story. This leaves quick scenes that jump and leave the rest of us behind. Characters aren't allowed to develop fully. For instance, Zeb defends Wang and then, feeling guilty about Bridie, decides to leave well enough alone. A moment later, he's a cruel, callous tyrant who calls Eskimo kids "half-breeds" and mistreats his wife, Dorothy (Diane McBain in a wasted role). The costumers and set designers do a marvelous job of advancing Baranov year by year and a little make-up does wonders to make Burton et al age with the times (although Jim Backus, who was 14 years older than Burton, seemed to just let the Just for Men wear off). In no short time, we're introduced to Chris, Thor's son by his Eskimo wife (Dorcas Brower, a gorgeous woman who's character is barely touched upon because she conveniently dies off-screen in childbirth). Grace, Zeb and Dorothy's daughter is seen briefly as a little girl and then as a teenager who elopes with Chris. By this time, Zeb is a shell of a husband and Thor spends his every waking moment railing against Zeb like George Bush against Saddam Hussein. Then, suddenly, Grace is pregnant and she and Chris are flying across the frozen tundra on a three-week journey via dog sled to the nearest town so she can give birth (don't ask). They get lost and Thor and Zeb come to the rescue. Great drama until the scene with Chris fighting a man in a bear suit (watch how the bear throws Chris to the ground, then hams it up in a death scene; it's unintentionally hilarious). No doubt, the movie has a great cast, but most of the roles are underdeveloped and a few are totally out of place. George Takei's voice-over work on the English version of "Rodan" must have seemed a godsend compared to the simpering man-servant Wang. Kar Swenson as the full-blooded Irish father of Bridie is a hoot. Swenson is best known as lumber mill owner Lars Hanson of "Little House on the Prairie" and his Scandinavian accent massacres his attempts at speaking with an Irish brogue. Bridie is also wasted. She's supposed to be the object of love for Thor and Zeb, yet she marries neither, tries to help Thor raise his son, but is rarely shown in the same space as the boy. As she ages, she begins to resemble Bette Davis (it's hard to imagine her later role as Morticia Addams). It's become more and more difficult to believe she can still harbor any love or like for Thor or Zeb, both of whom lose audience sympathy by being total jackasses. Of course, all would seem to come together in the end, despite a despicable plot by Zeb and Dave's son, Bay (Ray Danton), to use his granddaughter Christine (Shirley Knight in another wasted role). But even this is left flapping in the breeze, literally, when Thor and a local pilot do the cliche "small plane in a snow storm hitting a glacier" plot twist. You can guess what happens next, which leaves you feeling cheated.

    "Ice Palace" plays out more like the pilot for a TV show, where you hope unresolved issues will be answered. Actually, it probably should have been made into a TV show a la "Peyton Place" where the whole story line could have been given its proper due. All in all, it's an interesting little film to watch if you happen to be the kind of person who doesn't hit the "pause" button when the phone rings or the doorbell rings in the middle of the viewing. If you miss a scene, don't worry. You'll be just as confused as if you had watched it.
    5AlsExGal

    Boring soap opera...

    ... based on the Edna Ferber novel. It's the multi-generational story of two men, Zeb Kennedy (Richard Burton) and Thor Storm (Robert Ryan), who begin as friends and fishermen in Alaska during the years after WWI. When they both fall for the same woman (Carolyn Jones), the two split, with Zeb becoming a bitter but wealthy cannery magnate, while bitter but motivated Thor fights for Alaskan rights and eventually statehood. Their children and grandchildren also grow to adulthood against this backdrop.

    The novel was a big hit, although critics thought it was bad. Its success is credited with helping Alaska become a state in '59. The movie is a big, ponderous bore, stretching an interminable 143 minutes, with Burton and Ryan trying to out-scowl each other. A bear attack looks very silly, with a guy in an obvious bear costume stomping around an unconvincing snowy forest set. This was Diane McBain's debut, as well as the credited movie debut of 22-year-old George Takei, playing a Chinese immigrant friend and servant to Burton. At one point, Takei's character is supposed to be frantic, and he lapses into his native "Chinese" language, but it's hilariously apparent that the Japanese-descended Takei is just spouting gibberish.
    7enlewellyn

    I'm keeping my copy!

    The growing tension between Richard Burton and Robert Ryan is amazing. Both actors were as serious, driven, righteous (in their own minds), and caring as the other. All performances were believable and interesting. The change from generations to generation was seamless. And character change melded nicely with Ryan and Burton. Carolyn Jones however did not impress me as much as she did in the beginning. She somehow lost her luster as the film seemed to continue without her. Strangely this also was her role through the duration of the film. And I felt she seemed to be going through the motions towards the end. Just my opinion. I also found the characters of Christopher and Grace charming at first and utterly brainless towards the end. You have to see it and the circumstances to believe it. The innocent bliss that leads them throughout the film culminates. To mention Jim Buckus, his performance was quite an agitation to most every event in the film due to his characters business interests. Believable even if you still see him as Mr Howell! LOL! Four years later, character development, who can say, Recommended if you looking for a (mini) epic that might just keep your interest.

    I'm keeping my copy!

    Otherwise outstanding performances

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Put into production by Warner Bros. solely on the strength of the success of the same studio's Géant (1956), also based on an Edna Ferber novel--some critics dubbed it "Giant on the Rocks"--four years earlier. The same year also produced a big-budget MGM remake of yet another Ferber novel, "Cimarron" (La ruée vers l'Ouest (1960)), but neither that film nor "Ice Palace" succeeded with critics or audiences.
    • Goofs
      During the search for the kids there is a blizzard but when showing the plane flying the skies are partly cloudy.
    • Connections
      Referenced in American Masters: Tyrus (2017)
    • Soundtracks
      Smiles
      (uncredited)

      Music by Lee S. Roberts

      Lyrics by J. Will Callahan

      Sung by the soldiers on the train

      Played during the opening scene on the dock

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    FAQ14

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • June 23, 1961 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Ice Palace
    • Filming locations
      • Juneau, Alaska, USA(on location)
    • Production company
      • Warner Bros.
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      2 hours 23 minutes
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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