Agrega una trama en tu idiomaOn the beautiful island of Samarang, in the Malay Straits, the natives of a small village depend on the ocean's bounty for their livelihood.On the beautiful island of Samarang, in the Malay Straits, the natives of a small village depend on the ocean's bounty for their livelihood.On the beautiful island of Samarang, in the Malay Straits, the natives of a small village depend on the ocean's bounty for their livelihood.
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- Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro
Argumento
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- TriviaThis film is one of over 200 titles in the list of independent feature films made available for television presentation by Advance Television Pictures announced in Motion Picture Herald 4 April 1942. At this time, television broadcasting was in its infancy, almost totally curtailed by the advent of World War II, and would not continue to develop until 1945-1946. Because of poor documentation (feature films were often not identified by title in conventional sources) no record has yet been found of its initial television broadcast.
- ConexionesEdited into El monstruo del mar (1953)
Opinión destacada
Shark Woman was a terrible title for this -- better to see it listed here as Samarang. There is a shark, and there most certainly is a woman, but there isn't really any reason to put them together except to sound like some kind of film that this isn't. I should point out this movie is SILENT with an orchestral track tacked onto the Alpha video release. That music has nothing to do with the story or setting, but honestly the movie manages to retain some (very) minor interest despite this. Intertitles explain the story and add some commentary.
Despite it's categorization here on imdb, it's not a documentary. More-or-less a rip-off of Murnau's TABU, but with even less effort at being a real-life story, and with a somewhat happier ending. Fairly cute in its way, with some interesting insert shots. Lovely locations and the principal actors have the looks and build to run around half-dressed (a la Joel McCrea and Delores Del Rio in 1932's Bird of Paradise). I'm not convinced that our principals are actually the same ethnicity as the rest of the village; 'Ahmang' looks quite European, and when he and 'Sai-Yu' both put their hands on his little brothers back, it's rather obvious that they're both much paler than he. Also, sometimes 'Sai-yu' has rather different skin tone from one shot to another (e.g., she appears rather darker when she climbs out of the water dripping wet) but that may owe to different film stock.
Plot includes a love triangle, pearl diving and -- well, why not -- cannibals. Lots of animal shots to help pad the running time -- not to be confused with time the principals spend running, which is quite a bit when they're being chased by cannibals. Continuity errors run fairly high regarding the dryness of Sai-Yu's hair, and the choice of her bikini tops, which tend to change from shot to shot. Most notable is when she dives in wearing one top, swims to a boat, and then emerges with no top at all. There's no explanation for this, but no matter; nobody gives this the slightest notice, and it spontaneously reappears later on. In between is 15 minutes of the two principals running around on a tropical island, which may very well be the film's intended selling point. There is some drama to give it some conclusion (and it's not really giving anything away to tell you that it involves a shark), but otherwise a largely cheerful Pacific Island-type movie with plenty of boa constrictors and orangutans. And that rounds out SAMARANG.
Despite it's categorization here on imdb, it's not a documentary. More-or-less a rip-off of Murnau's TABU, but with even less effort at being a real-life story, and with a somewhat happier ending. Fairly cute in its way, with some interesting insert shots. Lovely locations and the principal actors have the looks and build to run around half-dressed (a la Joel McCrea and Delores Del Rio in 1932's Bird of Paradise). I'm not convinced that our principals are actually the same ethnicity as the rest of the village; 'Ahmang' looks quite European, and when he and 'Sai-Yu' both put their hands on his little brothers back, it's rather obvious that they're both much paler than he. Also, sometimes 'Sai-yu' has rather different skin tone from one shot to another (e.g., she appears rather darker when she climbs out of the water dripping wet) but that may owe to different film stock.
Plot includes a love triangle, pearl diving and -- well, why not -- cannibals. Lots of animal shots to help pad the running time -- not to be confused with time the principals spend running, which is quite a bit when they're being chased by cannibals. Continuity errors run fairly high regarding the dryness of Sai-Yu's hair, and the choice of her bikini tops, which tend to change from shot to shot. Most notable is when she dives in wearing one top, swims to a boat, and then emerges with no top at all. There's no explanation for this, but no matter; nobody gives this the slightest notice, and it spontaneously reappears later on. In between is 15 minutes of the two principals running around on a tropical island, which may very well be the film's intended selling point. There is some drama to give it some conclusion (and it's not really giving anything away to tell you that it involves a shark), but otherwise a largely cheerful Pacific Island-type movie with plenty of boa constrictors and orangutans. And that rounds out SAMARANG.
- skinnybert
- 28 jul 2023
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Detalles
- Tiempo de ejecución59 minutos
- Color
- Mezcla de sonido
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.37 : 1
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Principales brechas de datos
By what name was Samarang (1933) officially released in Canada in English?
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