La segunda guerra mundial ruge en en Pacífico, y el Teniente ComandanteDuke E. Gifford tiene una misión, rescatar a los niños de las islas ocupadas por el enemigo.La segunda guerra mundial ruge en en Pacífico, y el Teniente ComandanteDuke E. Gifford tiene una misión, rescatar a los niños de las islas ocupadas por el enemigo.La segunda guerra mundial ruge en en Pacífico, y el Teniente ComandanteDuke E. Gifford tiene una misión, rescatar a los niños de las islas ocupadas por el enemigo.
- The Talker
- (as Bill Campbell)
- Fighter Pilot
- (sin acreditar)
- Torpedo Officer
- (sin acreditar)
Argumento
¿Sabías que...?
- CuriosidadesThe movie was filmed on a low budget. As a result most of the shots of the submarines, ships and the scenes were either taken from other films or stock footage from World War II.
- PifiasMary Stuart was allowed into the ComSubPac plotting room. It is next to impossible to believe that a highly secret room like that (with location and position of the entire Pacific Fleet) would be accessible to common US Navy Personnel like nurses.
- Citas
Ens. Caldwell: [after the Chief and Junior are killed] I couldn't help it about the Chief.
Duke E. Gifford: Remembering how he took care of you?
Ens. Caldwell: Yes sir.
Duke E. Gifford: Well, before he took care of you, he took care of Larry, before Larry, he took care of me and before me he took care of Pop. Chiefs have been taking care of this man's Navy for a long time, Mister Caldwell. Don't worry about him, there's a lot of good sailors back there for him to take care of.
- Créditos adicionalesIn keeping with the submarine theme of the film: at the very start, we see a submarine periscope break the surface of the sea, then we see an officer looking into the view-port of the periscope, then we see the opening credits appear, as if being viewed through a periscope.
- Versiones alternativasRepublic Pictures released a colorized version on video.
- ConexionesFeatures Destino: Tokio (1943)
- Banda sonoraWe Watch the Skyways
(uncredited)
Music by Max Steiner
Played during the opening credits and often throughout the picture
We know this movie is going to be an eye-roller during the opening scene in which the Thunderfish is transporting two nuns, a baby and a group of orphans who go running past a ludicrously tolerant crew as they're trying to sink a Japanese ship. While the action scenes are good, nearly every human moment in this film is phony; and the few that aren't are thanks to the usual expert performance from Patricia Neal, not from writer-director George Waggner.
The special effects and production values in this submarine drama are okay, but occasionally we'll see a cable pulling a torpedo or a night-time sky that has a ceiling and a corner. Max Steiner's score underlines every banality in the script and then underlines it twice more. At one point a crew member laughs at the Hollywood hokum in the Cary Grant film, "Destination Tokyo." If only he could have been out in the audience for his own picture.
- J. Spurlin
- 17 sept 2009
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- How long is Operation Pacific?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- País de origen
- Idioma
- Títulos en diferentes países
- Operation Pacific
- Localizaciones del rodaje
- Empresa productora
- Ver más compañías en los créditos en IMDbPro
- Duración1 hora 51 minutos
- Color
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.37 : 1