Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueCpl. Jim of the R.C.M.P. is taking his daughter Julie to school in Edmonton on the Arctic Queen. Six men hold up the boat when they stop for wood and gun down Jim in front of his daughter. T... Tout lireCpl. Jim of the R.C.M.P. is taking his daughter Julie to school in Edmonton on the Arctic Queen. Six men hold up the boat when they stop for wood and gun down Jim in front of his daughter. The new inspector sends Alan after them, but has him split his unit. This leaves Alan short... Tout lireCpl. Jim of the R.C.M.P. is taking his daughter Julie to school in Edmonton on the Arctic Queen. Six men hold up the boat when they stop for wood and gun down Jim in front of his daughter. The new inspector sends Alan after them, but has him split his unit. This leaves Alan short and they are ambushed and forced to bring back his wounded comrade. At Fort Endurance, Al... Tout lire
- Mac Drummond
- (as Joseph King)
- Constable Pedeault
- (as Bruce Caruthers)
Avis en vedette
A western story poorly transposed to a Canadian setting with only a cursory attempt at making it realistic at all. The costumes are lumberjack chic and the occasional "aboot" is laughable. The special effects are of course crude but some of the scenery is nice. It's just so bland and forgettable EXCEPT for the MOST ANNOYING CHILD in movie history. Every scene she's in is nails on chalkboard bad.
Soon after the story begins, you are introduced to a Mountie and his unnaturally adorable little girl (Janet Chapmin). Since he is NOT the star of the film, you know that soon he'll assume room temperature...especially since the girl also loves another Mountie she calls 'Uncle' (Dick Foran)! The rest of the story consists of the Mounties trying to catch up with the murderers and deliver justice...and with the help of an incredibly smart German Shepherd (something OFTEN seen in Mountie films).
As far as Chapmin goes, she is an incredibly talented actress for a 5-6 year-old. She also is so cute and perfect that you'll either love her or see her as a walking, talking sack of sugar! I do think she was better at acting than one or two of the adults in this film...but I don't want to be mean so I'll not mention who. Foran plays a typical western sort of part except he doesn't sing at all! As for the rest, there are a lot of familiar Warner character actors (such as Allen Jenkins).
In many ways, this movie is a B. The plot is full of the usual cliches and stars B actors....and the story is very similar to many other Bs I've seen. But, somehow, it was done in color and is longer than B-length. I'd consider it a B+ movie...or perhaps an A-....and about as entertaining as a B. Overall, I think it earns a 6...entertaining but not exactly a must-see film.
Unfortunately, "Heart of the North" is not nearly so attractive to listen to. The dialogue is hackneyed and the plot no more than fairly exciting, but the action spots are staged with reasonable vigor and even panache despite obvious special effects work and the use of doubles on one or two occasions.
Dick Foran comes over adequately enough as the hero, (and we're glad to say he sings a snatch of a song too). If you can accept the Hollywood convention that has every sympathetic character looking so sparklingly clean, neatly groomed and beautifully made up, despite living in a shanty town amongst the likes of Harry Cording, then the heroine (Gloria Dickson) and the hero's pals (Patric Knowles, Allen Jenkins and Arthur Gardner) are reasonably adequate too.
Fortunately, James Stephenson rates a cut above this lot as the easily-swayed Inspector Gore, whilst Gale Page seems even more convincing as the villainous Elizabeth Spaulding. Russell Simpson gives his usual rough-and ready interpretation of the heroine's pa, while Garry Owen takes out the movie's acting honors as the demented Tommy. The villains, led by Joe Sawyer and Joseph King, notch up as sufficiently pleasing.
Unfortunately, the producer didn't let well enough alone, but saddled the cast with young Janet Chapman. The whiny-voiced Miss Chapman inflicts a real pain in the neck. And would you believe it, there's also a dog. True, these misfits disappear from the action for quite long stretches. And we must admit the close-ups of the mutt are appealingly photographed.
The music score has that vigorous Warner Brothers' ring to it. While the film editor often seems to be bending over backwards to cut in all the many and various camera set-ups that director Seiler shot, production credits are agreeably polished. "Heart of the North" encompasses all the gloss we might expect of a top-budget Warner "A" production.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThe opening credits state that the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) was established in 1874. It was in fact in 1873, and it was the North West Mounted Police (NWMP), existing primarily in Western Canada. After the Métis Rebellion in the prairie provinces, the NWMP became a national federal quasi-military police force, and became the RCMP on 1 February 1920.
- Générique farfeluOpening Card: RCMP.. establish 1874. You are agents of justice. where the law is unknown make it known. when the law is broken, get your man. For more than sixty years the RCMP has been faithful to its motto. maintain the right. in the vast canadian northwest territory they have won the admiration of the entire civilized world. to this courageous group of men, this picture is respectfully dedicated.
- Bandes originalesSong of the Mounted Police
(uncredited)
Music by M.K. Jerome
Lyrics by Jack Scholl
Sung by Dick Foran and Janet Chapman
Meilleurs choix
Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Heart of the North
- Lieux de tournage
- société de production
- Consultez plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
Box-office
- Budget
- 400 000 $ US (estimation)
- Durée1 heure 23 minutes
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 1.37 : 1