PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
6,4/10
2,3 mil
TU PUNTUACIÓN
En 1942, Kenneth Braden, del equipo de demolición submarina, es enviado a una isla japonesa para fotografiar códigos secretos de radio.En 1942, Kenneth Braden, del equipo de demolición submarina, es enviado a una isla japonesa para fotografiar códigos secretos de radio.En 1942, Kenneth Braden, del equipo de demolición submarina, es enviado a una isla japonesa para fotografiar códigos secretos de radio.
- Dirección
- Guión
- Reparto principal
Alan Hale Jr.
- Lt. Pat Malone
- (as Alan Hale)
Edd Byrnes
- Pharmacist Mate Ash
- (as Edward Byrnes)
Robert Aiken
- Seaman Ford
- (sin acreditar)
Fred C. Blau Jr.
- Junior
- (sin acreditar)
Carl Christian
- Ships Crewman
- (sin acreditar)
Robert Christopher
- Ship's Officer
- (sin acreditar)
Mary Lou Clifford
- Grass Hut Girl
- (sin acreditar)
George Crise
- Murphy, Radio Operator
- (sin acreditar)
Francis De Sales
- Captain Quinn
- (sin acreditar)
Reseñas destacadas
This film is a good thriller of a top secret naval operation in the South Pacific during World War II. James Garner's assignment calls for him to swim to a Japanese-controlled island and decipher a code that the Navy needs to anticipate enemy intentions. The film has a claustrophobic feel to it as most of the scenes are filmed below topside as the submarine makes its way to the destination island. There are Japanese destroyers about, dropping depth charges and making matters uncomfortable for the crew. Edmond O'Brien is the sub's by-the-book commander, still shaken by the loss of a crew member during a recent assignment, and he and Garner share a mutual dislike that sets in motion Garner's mission-impossible task. Garner's whirlwind courtship with Andra Martin is the only false note of the movie which adds nothing to the plot. The cast and tech credits are good.
Robb White's World War II naval-combat/coming-of-age novel is one of my lifetime favorites, so I eagerly anticipated seeing this movie on video. Unfortunately, the book spoiled it for me. I'm sure I would have liked this movie much better if I had never read the book. To be fair, this is a good war flick on its own merits.
It's 1942. Submarine Commander Paul Stevenson (Edmond O'Brien) struggle with the life and death of war in the South Pacific. Meanwhile, Navy frogman Lieutenant Braden (James Garner) is having a romance in San Diego with Sally. It turns out that she had been accessing him in secret. With recommendation from her, he is given a secret mission on Stevenson's boat.
This is a solid submarine war movie. While Garner is leading man material, he isn't given enough room to be his charismatic self. It's the early days of his stardom. There is a real submarine and real plane work. Once the movie gets back on land, Garner is by himself and the mission needs to move faster. It's too much waiting and the flashback doesn't help. It's a lot of quietly skulking around. It's not the most exciting of thrills. This is interesting to see an early movie with Garner as the leading man.
This is a solid submarine war movie. While Garner is leading man material, he isn't given enough room to be his charismatic self. It's the early days of his stardom. There is a real submarine and real plane work. Once the movie gets back on land, Garner is by himself and the mission needs to move faster. It's too much waiting and the flashback doesn't help. It's a lot of quietly skulking around. It's not the most exciting of thrills. This is interesting to see an early movie with Garner as the leading man.
Navy frogman goes on super secret mission to steal ultra secret Jap code books. Pretty phony actually - seems the Nips would have shouted "oy li chu dat lee ho phuk di hong fong fuuuuuuuuu!", or "those explosions looked like a ruse, let's check on the code books!". When Garner exited the water he made enough noise to wake the whole island, no real commando would have done that. Still not a bad film, fairly exciting: it had the usual Navy ships during combat footage plus a few "toys in the tub" scenes. I appreciated the submarine; it was cramped, hot, and miserable looking, exactly like the genuine article. I abhor those movie subs that sport hallways and rooms more fitting to the Trump mansion than a Naval vessel.
9bux
O'Brien is the sub commander, who loses the trust of his crew, Garner the naval officer assigned a commando mission-but the real story here is the vintage cast-Richard Bakalyan and Warren Oates are joined by TV's familiar faces: Edd (Kooky) Byrnes, Henry (Otto Schmidlapp from "Life of Riley") Kulka, and Alan (the Skipper from "Gilligan's Island") Hale Jr. The fine performances are punctuated by adequate action scenes that result in a very watchable picture.
¿Sabías que...?
- CuriosidadesDebut of Warren Oates.
- PifiasThere are a lot of uniform errors, and, there is no way that the Navy would allow an ensign to remain for 15 years.
- Citas
Commander Paul Stevenson: Oh, uh, one more thing, Mr. Braden, you don't get captured.
Lt. j.g. Kenneth M. Braden: Mm-hmm. I wouldn't think of it, sir.
- Créditos adicionalesOpening credits: SOMEWHERE IN THE SOUTH PACIFIC - 1942
- ConexionesEdited from Destino: Tokio (1943)
- Banda sonoraPlease Be Kind
(uncredited)
Music by Saul Chaplin
Played when Braden and Sally are lying on the beach and often in the score
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Detalles
- Duración1 hora 52 minutos
- Relación de aspecto
- 2.35 : 1
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By what name was Infierno bajo las aguas (1959) officially released in India in English?
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