Submarine Command (John Farrow, 1951) VHSRip VO

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camil899
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Submarine Command (John Farrow, 1951) VHSRip VO

Mensaje por camil899 » Vie 27 Feb, 2009 23:59

Publicado por monad915 en KARAGARGA
Titulo: Submarine Command
Pais: Estados Unidos
Director: John Farrow
Productor: Paramount Pictures
Reparto: William Holden; Nancy Olson; William Bendix, Don Taylor; Arthur Franz
Guion: Jonathan Latimer
Musica: David Buttolph
Fotografia: Lionel Lindon
Duracion: 87 minutos
Sinopsis: Submarine Command reunites the romantic leads from Sunset Boulevard, William Holden and Nancy Olsen. Holden is cast as Commander White, who during an enemy attack orders that his submarine dive to avoid destruction. Though his action saves his crew, it results in the death of the machine-gunner left topside during the attack. With the exception of vindictive chief torpedo-man Boyer (William Bendix), no one holds White to task for his decision -- save for White himself, who is plagued with guilt and doubt ever afterward. Helping to alleviate White's self-flagellation is his fiancee Carol (Olsen). The thrill-packed climax finds White's submarine engaged in a sabotage action against communist forces off the coast of Korea.(http://www.allmovie.com)

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Datos Tecnicos:
AVI File Details
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Name.........: Submarine Command.avi
Filesize.....: 815 MB (or 835,058 KB or 855,100,246 bytes)
Runtime......: 01:24:33 (152,050 fr)
Video Codec..: DivX 5.0
Video Bitrate: 1212 kb/s
Audio Codec..: 0x0055(MP3) ID'd as MPEG-1 Layer 3
Audio Bitrate: 128 kb/s (64/ch, stereo) CBR
Frame Size...: 640x480 (1.33:1) [=4:3]

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Movie Review
Submarine Command (1951)
' Submarine Command,' in Which Holden and Bendix Play Lead Roles, Opens at the Globe
By BOSLEY CROWTHER
Published: January 19, 1952


Through a good three-quarters of the progress of Paramount's "Submarine Command," which came yesterday to the Globe Theatre, it looks as though this unpretentious film about a naval officer is going to ring an unexpected bell. For the major fraction of its story is not given over, as you might suppose, to the usual melodramatics of life in an underseas boat. Neither is it complicated with blondes in the torpedo tubes.

Surprisingly, it is the story of a submarine officer's running fight with a sense of guilt for having crash-dived the boat while the commander was lying wounded on the bridge. And rather than dwell at great length on the nature of submarine war, it centers upon the wearying routine of naval life in time of peace.

So long as it sticks to this area—to the psychological conflict in its man, distressed as he is by his conscience, by the cold contempt of an old hand in his crew and by the petty annoyances of a dreary desk job ashore—the story and the film are perpetually on the verge of an intriguing surprise. For the screen play by Jonathan Latimer is a compact and levelheaded job, the direction of John Farrow is naturalistic and the performers are uniformly good.

William Holden is human and compelling as the distracted officer and Nancy Olson is pretty and respectable as his uncomprehending wife. Don Taylor as a breezy wartime comrade and William Bendix as the hard-bitten old hand who cannot forgive his superior are likewise entirely good, even though the long arm of coincidence gives them both a heavy pushing around.

Likewise, the ways of submariners and the atmosphere of Navy life, both afloat and ashore, are represented with remarkable plausibility and power. In this reviewer's recollection there has never been a more solid and substantial comprehension of "Navy" in a Hollywood fiction film, thanks to responsible direction and actuality shooting around a Navy yard.

But, unfortunately, the story goes sky high at the end in a purely theatrical blowout with the old ship in the Korean War. And also the psychological tension is completely and dismally relaxed in a blood-and-thunder adventure that has the officer recapturing his morale. It is disappointing to see a picture come so close and miss.(http//movies.nytimes.com)