La patrulla perdida (John Ford, 1934) DVDRip VOSE + AE
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Subtítulos en castellano de España. Los he cristianizado partiendo de la versión L.A. de Shoocat.
http://www.opensubtitles.com/es/subtitl ... -patrol-es
http://www.opensubtitles.com/es/subtitl ... -patrol-es
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Re: La Patrulla Perdida (J. Ford, 1934) DVDRip VOSE + Audio Esp.
La duración es la misma que el ripeo del post inicial, por lo que es de esperar que los subtítulos encajen bien (en todo caso, tal vezl algún delay; cuestión de décimas).serdar002 escribió:Amnesiac for KG whose announcement I've copied. Upgrade of the old fragment rip. IMDB
Screenplay: Dudley Nichols
Adaptation: Garrett Fort
Based on Patrol by Philip MacDonald
Studio: RKO Radio Pictures
Executive Producer: Merian C. Cooper
Music: Max Steiner
Cinematographer: Harold Wenstrom
Editor: Paul Weatherwax
Cast: Victor McLaglen, Boris Karloff, Wallace Ford, Reginald Denny, Billy Bevan1
Mordant Hall, NY Times, April 2, 1934:
Victor McLaglen, Reginald Denny, J.M. Kerrigan and Others in the Picture, 'The Lost Patrol.'
In "The Lost Patrol," a picture now sojourning at the Rialto, women are conspicuous by their absence. It is an audible adaptation of Philip MacDonald's novel "Patrol," which was exhibited here in silent film form several years ago. The present production is highly effective from a photographic standpoint, but the incidents are often strained.
This offering, however, possesses an impressive conception of the agony of thirst and also of the scorching heat endured by the British cavalrymen when they lose their bearings in the Mesopotamian desert. In an opening scene the sole commissioned officer is killed by an unseen Arab sharpshooter, leaving a sergeant, acted by Victor McLaglen, in charge of eleven men.
As the men trudge over the undulating sands, leading their tired horses, they make the most of the little water remaining in their flasks. Then suddenly they see trees in the far distance and experience tells them it may be only a mirage. Nevertheless they stagger on and on until they discover that they are actually nearing a welcome oasis, and soon they arrive at the spot, where they enjoy water to their hearts' content and dates; also the shade of the trees. What's more, there is an abandoned mosque.
The sergeant, a disciplinarian, talks of leaving the next day, still not knowing what direction to take. A soldier named Brown declares that it is a pity to leave such a paradise, and another named Quincannon scoffs at the word "paradise" and terms the spot the "devil's back yard." Then there is Sanders who is given to reading and quoting the Bible. Eventually it is revealed that he is mentally unhinged.
Granting that the members of this patrol are terribly fatigued, it is scarcely convincing when Arabs sneak up on them in the middle of the night, kill a sentry and steal all the horses. The desert natives never seem to miss. A rifle crack is heard and a British soldier crumples up, and so it goes until the last survivors are the mad soldier Sanders, acted by Boris Karloff; Morelli, a trooper, and the sergeant. They hear an airplane overhead and it looks as though it would pass them by, but the pilot returns and lands. The pilot gets out of the cockpit, and as he takes a step forward a bullet from an Arab strikes him through the heart.
In the end the only one of thirteen left to tell the tale is the sergeant, who does succeed in using a machine-gun taken from the airplane to advantage on the natives.
It is a pity that the dialogue is too forced and often far from natural in the circumstances, even granted that several of the men desired to set an example by showing their coolness.
Mr. McLaglen gives a praiseworthy account of himself. Joseph M. Kerrigan is splendid as Quincannon. Brandon Hurst is believable as a corporal, a man of many years' army service. Sammy Stein is impressive as a gallant Jew. Wallace Ford as Morelli is called upon to harp too much on the idea of his being a Jonah. Reginald Denny does expert work as a gentleman soldier, who found the death he wished for.
old rip:
file details:
File Size (in bytes) ..........: 1,045,716,992 bytes
Runtime ....................: 01:11:38
Video Codec .....................: XviD
Frame Size ....................: 640x480 (AR: 1.333)
FPS .......................: 23.976
Video Bitrate .................: 1845 kb/s
Bits per Pixel ...............: 0.250 bpp
B-VOP, N-VOP, QPel, GMC.............: [B-VOP], [], [], []
Audio Codec .....................: 0x0055(MP3, ISO) MPEG-1 Layer 3
Sample Rate .....................: 48000 Hz
Audio Bitrate .................: 91 kb/s [1 channel(s)] VBR
No. of audio streams ...............: 1
The Lost Patrol (1934) DVD.avi
Spanish subs
English subs
Saludos
Florentino, fíchame.
Por 6.000 € netos mensuales te convierto en el mejor presidente de la historia.
Por 6.000 € netos mensuales te convierto en el mejor presidente de la historia.
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Re: La Patrulla Perdida (J. Ford, 1934) DVDRip VOSE + AE
No quiero ser pesao pero esta peli fue emitida con el doblaje original en 1988 y 1991, así que no debería ser algo tan extraño que alguien tuviese una grabación en VHS de aquellas emisiones.
Como siempre dejo el comentario por si alguien que tenga ese doblaje pueda compartirlo. Se han recuperado doblajes más difíciles.
Por supuesto, estoy suponiendo que el doblaje que viene en este post es el de 1992, y a lo mejor no es así.
Como siempre dejo el comentario por si alguien que tenga ese doblaje pueda compartirlo. Se han recuperado doblajes más difíciles.
Por supuesto, estoy suponiendo que el doblaje que viene en este post es el de 1992, y a lo mejor no es así.