La tripulación de un bombardero británico derribado intenta escapar de los nazis y salir de Alemania con vida, llevando consigo una serie de importantes secretos.La tripulación de un bombardero británico derribado intenta escapar de los nazis y salir de Alemania con vida, llevando consigo una serie de importantes secretos.La tripulación de un bombardero británico derribado intenta escapar de los nazis y salir de Alemania con vida, llevando consigo una serie de importantes secretos.
- Nominado para 1 premio Óscar
- 1 nominación en total
- Dr. Ludwig Mather
- (as Albert Basserman)
- Frau Brahms
- (as Ilka Gruning)
- Frau Raeder
- (as Else Basserman)
- Kruse
- (as Robert O. Davis)
Argumento
¿Sabías que...?
- CuriosidadesWhen Ronald Reagan's character is awakened, he complains that in his dream he had a date with Ann Sheridan. Reagan had played opposite Sheridan three times including his two previous features, "Juke Girl" and "Kings Row."
- PifiasThe same shot of a railroad area being blown up is used twice, once to depict the site blown up by the saboteur at the beginning, and soon after as the area being bombed by the RAF bomber plane.
- Citas
[Major Otto Baumeister has told the captured crew that, since they know the location of an underground Messerschmitt underground factory, they will feel his iron fist. Now he separates Flying Officer Johnny Hammond from the rest, questioning him for intelligence]
Maj. Otto Baumeister: That plane you were flying, American-built, wasn't it? One of the new ones. We have heard a good deal about them. We know that they are capable of operating at amazing altitudes. How do you manage to supercharge the engines at the extreme cold of those high altitudes?
Flying Officer Johnny Hammond: If I told you, the others wouldn't find out?
Maj. Otto Baumeister: Certainly not.
Flying Officer Johnny Hammond: They can't hear us out there?
Maj. Otto Baumeister: Quite sure. Now, about the supercharger.
Flying Officer Johnny Hammond: It's done with a thermotrockle.
Maj. Otto Baumeister: A what?
Flying Officer Johnny Hammond: Thermotrockle amfilated through a daligonitor. Of course, this is made possible because the dernadyne has a franicoupling.
Maj. Otto Baumeister: I do not understand you.
Flying Officer Johnny Hammond: I knew you wouldn't. The amsometer on the side prenulates the kinutaspel hepulace. That's the entire secret. There you have it.
Maj. Otto Baumeister: I do not follow you.
Flying Officer Johnny Hammond: Well, maybe I could make it more clear if I drew a diagram.
Maj. Otto Baumeister: Certainly.
Flying Officer Johnny Hammond: [Bending over as though to draw] There's three things you gotta understand. As I said before, the daligonitor is amfilated by the thermotrockle. It's made by its connection with the franicoupling of dernadyne. Even at cruising speed the kinutaspel hepulace is prenulated by the amsometer. Makes no difference. Could be taking off. Snowing or raining, any pilot will tell you that the altitude, 10, 20, 30, 40,000 feet...
[flexing his arm to strike]
Flying Officer Johnny Hammond: [appearing casually in Baumeister's doorway] Oh, Terry. He wants to talk to you.
Flight Lieutenant Terrence Forbes: Oh. The major wants to see me.
[Forbes enters Baumeister's office and sees him under the desk, unconscious. he looks incredulously at Hammond]
Flying Officer Johnny Hammond: The iron fist has a glass jaw.
- ConexionesFeatured in Raoul Walsh and Errol Flynn (2002)
- Banda sonoraWaltzing Matilda
(1895) (uncredited)
Original music by Christina Macpherson (1895)
(Based on the Scottish tune "Craigielee", music by James Barr, with words by Robert Tannahill)
Revised music by Marie Cowan (1903)
Lyrics by A.B. 'Banjo' Paterson (1895)
Partially sung a cappella by Errol Flynn
DESPERATE JOURNEY was the film Flynn's detractors most often ostracized, with it's 'over-the-top' action, and wildly improbable story (downed fliers reap havoc on moronic Nazis, then return to England in a stolen bomber). Certainly, Flynn's ease in both eluding and harassing the Germans, and the infamous tag line he delivers at film's end ("Now to Australia, and a crack at those Japs!") were comic book heroics, at best, and could not be taken seriously. But the same critics that lambasted him ignored the equally far-fetched WWII-themed ALL THROUGH THE NIGHT and ACROSS THE PACIFIC (with Bogart), THEY MET IN BOMBAY (with Gable), and ONCE UPON A HONEYMOON (with Cary Grant). The pity about all this was, when Flynn would appear in superior war pictures (EDGE OF DARKNESS and OBJECTIVE, BURMA!), the films would be 'lumped in' with his more cartoonish epics.
All this being said, as a 'tongue-in-cheek' adventure yarn, DESPERATE JOURNEY is fast-paced and very enjoyable! Directed by action film veteran Raoul Walsh, the story of British bomber 'D-for-Danny', shot down over occupied central Europe, offers a terrific cast, including Ronald Reagan and Arthur Kennedy (in their second teaming with Flynn), and Alan Hale (in his tenth of 12 Flynn films). The gifted Canadian actor, Raymond Massey, also making his second appearance with Flynn, is a thoroughly hiss-able Nazi Major (speaking the gobbly-gook Hollywood passed off as 'German' in these films) who 'loses' the captured fliers (after a brilliantly funny scene with Reagan, which Flynn, jealous of his co-star, attempted to cut, or have re-written for him), then pursues them, futilely, across the continent. The fliers receive aid from a sympathetic German doctor and his beautiful assistant (Nancy Coleman, providing a bit of romance for Flynn), lose Hale (a truly sad moment, in the film's most dramatic escape), and Flynn, Reagan, and Kennedy eventually discover a captured, fueled British bomber, about to be used to attack England, which provides a convenient means of returning home (so Flynn can have his 'crack' at the 'Japs').
At a running time of 108 minutes, the film seldom drags, provides Flynn a chance to give a "There'll always be an England" soliloquy, and has more one-liners than most screen comedies (Reagan's hilarious 'double-speak', describing allied bomber capabilities, leading to knocking Massey out, with the comment, "The Iron Fist has a Glass Jaw.")
The years have been far kinder to DESPERATE JOURNEY than many other war era films, and it holds it's own very well in the 'Indiana Jones' climate of today's action flicks.
It is certainly a 'must' for any Errol Flynn fan's collection!
- cariart
- 17 sept 2003
- Enlace permanente
Selecciones populares
- How long is Desperate Journey?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
Taquilla
- Presupuesto
- 1.209.000 US$ (estimación)
- Duración1 hora 47 minutos
- Color
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.37 : 1