Note to self: never build a resort hotel next to a volcano.
Holden and Newman are back together again, baby!!! Hell yeah. This
time, instead of fighting a towering inferno, they're fighting, well, actually
they're just running like hell from a pissed off volcano. And that's about
it. The End.
WHEN TIME RAN OUT... is alright. I don't like the three dots at the end
of the title, but the location photography in Hawaii is beautiful and the
build-up stuff is fun. William Holden is a rich dude and very busy, so
when his hotel manager guy, James Franciscus, tells him everything is okay, he
believes him. So what if the volcano right next door to the hotel is
smoking and lava's bubbling like it's a fucking witches cauldron. That's
nature, baby!
And the volcano ain't the only thing blowing it's load around here...Holden
proposes to his secretary (Jacqueline Bisset), but she's secretly seeing local
oil man (Paul Newman); Franciscus is cheating on his wife (Holden's goddaughter)
with a hotel employee who happens to be engaged to another employee who
is secretly Franciscus' illegitimate half-brother!!! What the hell?
That's a lot to take in. It's awesome and so pointless! I love
it.
Poor looking special effects, medium pace that actually gets slower as
the film goes on, random tidal wave, Jacqueline Bisset in a low cut t-shirt,
people crowding a helicopter like it's a zombie movie, zero nudity, a
glass-bottomed elevator thing that actually lowers people down into the
volcano(!!!), lava bombs, silly story. Honestly, the best thing about WHEN
TIME RAN OUT... is the cast. The movie's not very good (it kinda feels
like an old made-for-TV movie), but it's fun watching all of these big names
running around. (Red Buttons' speed walk is goddamn hilarious!) I
have no regrets about watching it and will most likely watch it again occasionally...at least
the first two acts. The third kinda stunk.
Rumor has it WHEN TIME RAN OUT... had a budget of $20 million and brought in
less than $4 million at the box office. Ouch.
Post-review thoughts: I have absolutely nothing to back this up, but
while watching the film, I kept thinking to myself that the character of Mona
seemed like it would be perfect for Shelley Winters. The actress even
seemed to act a little bit like Shelley, at least to me. It wasn't until
later that I discovered the actress, Sheila Allen, was actually producer Irwin
Allen's wife.
Showing posts with label Ernest Borgnine. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ernest Borgnine. Show all posts
Tuesday, December 10, 2019
Wednesday, July 11, 2018
THE DIRTY DOZEN (1967)
Great Britain, 1944. A US Major (Lee Marvin) is given orders to select twelve
men from the local military prison, train them, then go on a suicide mission
behind enemy lines to kill as many German officers as possible. This will
create disruption in the chain of command right before the D-Day invasion.
The men who survive the mission will be pardoned.
Watching THE DIRTY DOZEN today, it's dated as fuck, but still entertaining. The story was definitely cool and the action scenes were reminiscent the covers the the men's adventure magazines of the 1950's, but I was mainly fascinated by the all-star cast! I mean, this thing is pack from floor to ceiling with big names. Charles Bronson, Donald Sutherland, Lee Marvin, Ernest Borgnine...pretty much every scene had somebody awesome in it.
I also found the film to be interesting from a historical perspective. I'd love to know more about it. For example: I'm curious how many films previous to TDD showed American soldiers so gleefully killing not only Nazi officers and soldiers, but also the women with them? Did the subversive feel of the film have something to do with the Vietnam War?
Younger audiences would probably find the whole thing boring, but it's definitely worth a viewing for fans of (older) WWII movies and movie nerds.
Side note: IMDb lists Dick Miller as "MP at Hanging (uncredited)", but I couldn't find him.
Part 2 - The Dirty Dozen: Next Mission
Part 3 - The Dirty Dozen: The Deadly Mission
Part 4 - The Dirty Dozen: The Fatal Mission
Watching THE DIRTY DOZEN today, it's dated as fuck, but still entertaining. The story was definitely cool and the action scenes were reminiscent the covers the the men's adventure magazines of the 1950's, but I was mainly fascinated by the all-star cast! I mean, this thing is pack from floor to ceiling with big names. Charles Bronson, Donald Sutherland, Lee Marvin, Ernest Borgnine...pretty much every scene had somebody awesome in it.
I also found the film to be interesting from a historical perspective. I'd love to know more about it. For example: I'm curious how many films previous to TDD showed American soldiers so gleefully killing not only Nazi officers and soldiers, but also the women with them? Did the subversive feel of the film have something to do with the Vietnam War?
Younger audiences would probably find the whole thing boring, but it's definitely worth a viewing for fans of (older) WWII movies and movie nerds.
Side note: IMDb lists Dick Miller as "MP at Hanging (uncredited)", but I couldn't find him.
Part 2 - The Dirty Dozen: Next Mission
Part 3 - The Dirty Dozen: The Deadly Mission
Part 4 - The Dirty Dozen: The Fatal Mission
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)