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LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaAdventurer tries to recover gold from sunken plane.Adventurer tries to recover gold from sunken plane.Adventurer tries to recover gold from sunken plane.
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"Crosswinds" is a very enjoyable adventure and mystery set in the South Pacific around what then was colonial New Guinea. It was under Australian administration following WW II. Filmed in color, with sea and maritime scenes shot on the coast of Florida, this film has a small cast but some popular leads and supporting actors of the day. It doesn't take long to realize how the title fits the story perfectly.
This is a fine mixture of intrigue, mystery, jungle action, romance and light comedy. When Steve Singleton sails his primo schooner into a New Guinea port looking for freight hauling or other business, he has no idea that he would become mixed up in a gold-theft plot with more double-crossing characters than one could shake a stick at. John Payne's Singleton soon learns that he can trust no one.
The intrigue involves plot twists, arrests, double-crosses, a missing plane with a huge gold shipment aboard, a dead pilot, hostile natives, rescue of the female lead as hostage, some jungle fighting, and romance. The latter develops with Katherine Shelley, played by Rhonda Fleming. She works for the company that transports regular shipments of gold in the region. Nick Brandon, played by Robert Lowery, is the company pilot. He had served in the war with Singleton and had double-crossed him once before.
Forrest Tucker is Jumbo Johnson, an American who knows his way around the area. He has plotted a gold hist with Brandon. But first he pulls a double-cross on Singleton that gets him jailed and his beautiful schooner put on the auction block to pay his fine. Naturally, Jumbo winds up with the boat. Things go awry in the gold theft plan, and that leads to most of the action and rest of the story. After Brandon ditches his plane in an inland lake - with plans for them to recover the gold later, he is killed by natives. Shelley had flown with him that day and was captured by the tribe.
Two Englishmen appear on the scene, having mysteriously lost the skipper of the small motor-powered craft they are on. The two are known con-men by the authorities, but not yet of anyone else. Alan Mowbray and John Abbott are hilarious in their parts as Sir Cecil Daubrey and Algernon Mousey Sykes. They are the way that Singleton is able to get transport to find his boat and eventually become part of the gold discovery plans. But after they see Brandon's body float by in a canoe with a spear in his back, they first have to rescue Shelley.
The fun ramps up with double-crosses among double-crossers, another encounter with the natives to escape the area, and sailing back to civilization. But who will make it to the end, what will happen to the gold, and what will the future be for these characters? It's a very fun film to watch.
Here are some favorite lines from this film.
Katherine Shelley, "I heard the music, so I put two and two together and said to myself... mmm, you're cooking pancakes." Steve Singleton, "You don't make sense, but you've got a pretty good sniffer."
Katherine, "See, you are running away." Steve, "From what?" Katherine, " From the world."
Sir Cedric Daubrey, "Well, let's go somewhere where the ears of the cockroaches are not so large."
Steve Singleton, "The first sign of a double-cross from you two cockroaches and I'll pin faces with Johnson against you."
Sir Cecil Daubrey, " Whereas Mousey and I were two against one, we are now distinctly in the minority. I don't think you have to doubt our love and affection."
Algernon 'Mousey' Sykes, "I never had the benefit of anyone at Oxford, but we think alike." Sir Cecil Daubrey, "That, I question. Let's say that objectively we are working toward the same end."
Sir Cecil Daubrey, "I do rather pride myself on employing a certain integrity in my skullduggery."
Sir Cecil Daubrey, "Cheating the government isn't stealing. It's a national pastime."
Singleton, "Unless a man wants to live on dried fish and coconuts, he has to run away form the world between jobs."
Jumbo Johnson, "Your partners?" Singleton, "Sure. Two of the scummiest waterfront rats that ever put a knife in a man's back You'd like 'em, Jumbo. They're just your type."
Jumbo, "Singleton, before we bring up these last two bars, I'd like to make you a proposition." Singleton, "It'll be crooked, but I'm listening."
Singleton, He wants to make a deal with me to freeze out you and Sykes." Sir Daubrey, "Understandable. Did you?" Singleton, "Well, I told him I'd like a little time to think it over. You see, I've had other offers." Daubrey, "Mousey?" Singleton, "Surprised?" Daubrey, "Not at all. I was about to make you an offer myself." Singleton, "I was rather hoping you would."
This is a fine mixture of intrigue, mystery, jungle action, romance and light comedy. When Steve Singleton sails his primo schooner into a New Guinea port looking for freight hauling or other business, he has no idea that he would become mixed up in a gold-theft plot with more double-crossing characters than one could shake a stick at. John Payne's Singleton soon learns that he can trust no one.
The intrigue involves plot twists, arrests, double-crosses, a missing plane with a huge gold shipment aboard, a dead pilot, hostile natives, rescue of the female lead as hostage, some jungle fighting, and romance. The latter develops with Katherine Shelley, played by Rhonda Fleming. She works for the company that transports regular shipments of gold in the region. Nick Brandon, played by Robert Lowery, is the company pilot. He had served in the war with Singleton and had double-crossed him once before.
Forrest Tucker is Jumbo Johnson, an American who knows his way around the area. He has plotted a gold hist with Brandon. But first he pulls a double-cross on Singleton that gets him jailed and his beautiful schooner put on the auction block to pay his fine. Naturally, Jumbo winds up with the boat. Things go awry in the gold theft plan, and that leads to most of the action and rest of the story. After Brandon ditches his plane in an inland lake - with plans for them to recover the gold later, he is killed by natives. Shelley had flown with him that day and was captured by the tribe.
Two Englishmen appear on the scene, having mysteriously lost the skipper of the small motor-powered craft they are on. The two are known con-men by the authorities, but not yet of anyone else. Alan Mowbray and John Abbott are hilarious in their parts as Sir Cecil Daubrey and Algernon Mousey Sykes. They are the way that Singleton is able to get transport to find his boat and eventually become part of the gold discovery plans. But after they see Brandon's body float by in a canoe with a spear in his back, they first have to rescue Shelley.
The fun ramps up with double-crosses among double-crossers, another encounter with the natives to escape the area, and sailing back to civilization. But who will make it to the end, what will happen to the gold, and what will the future be for these characters? It's a very fun film to watch.
Here are some favorite lines from this film.
Katherine Shelley, "I heard the music, so I put two and two together and said to myself... mmm, you're cooking pancakes." Steve Singleton, "You don't make sense, but you've got a pretty good sniffer."
Katherine, "See, you are running away." Steve, "From what?" Katherine, " From the world."
Sir Cedric Daubrey, "Well, let's go somewhere where the ears of the cockroaches are not so large."
Steve Singleton, "The first sign of a double-cross from you two cockroaches and I'll pin faces with Johnson against you."
Sir Cecil Daubrey, " Whereas Mousey and I were two against one, we are now distinctly in the minority. I don't think you have to doubt our love and affection."
Algernon 'Mousey' Sykes, "I never had the benefit of anyone at Oxford, but we think alike." Sir Cecil Daubrey, "That, I question. Let's say that objectively we are working toward the same end."
Sir Cecil Daubrey, "I do rather pride myself on employing a certain integrity in my skullduggery."
Sir Cecil Daubrey, "Cheating the government isn't stealing. It's a national pastime."
Singleton, "Unless a man wants to live on dried fish and coconuts, he has to run away form the world between jobs."
Jumbo Johnson, "Your partners?" Singleton, "Sure. Two of the scummiest waterfront rats that ever put a knife in a man's back You'd like 'em, Jumbo. They're just your type."
Jumbo, "Singleton, before we bring up these last two bars, I'd like to make you a proposition." Singleton, "It'll be crooked, but I'm listening."
Singleton, He wants to make a deal with me to freeze out you and Sykes." Sir Daubrey, "Understandable. Did you?" Singleton, "Well, I told him I'd like a little time to think it over. You see, I've had other offers." Daubrey, "Mousey?" Singleton, "Surprised?" Daubrey, "Not at all. I was about to make you an offer myself." Singleton, "I was rather hoping you would."
With the Everglades standing in for the New Guinea jungle, John Payne stars as a charter boat skipper who loses his boat to an unscrupulous Forrest Tucker. How he loses it to Tucker I won't divulge, but Payne is really played for a sucker.
But you take your allies where you find them and Payne has to team up with a couple of lowlifes played Alan Mowbray and John Abbott and they go looking for a downed plane that was piloted by Robert Lowery and had Rhonda Fleming and half a million dollars in gold bullion. Both those objects are worthy of rescue.
Crosswinds is your average action adventure drama and quite frankly I was never really convinced that we were in New Guinea, especially after seeing the Australian production of Walk Into Hell which was shot in the real New Guinea. But Rhonda Fleming photographed beautifully her red hair set against the green of the Everglades.
Crosswinds is a Pine-Thomas B film production from Paramount and it should please Rhonda's and Payne's fans.
But you take your allies where you find them and Payne has to team up with a couple of lowlifes played Alan Mowbray and John Abbott and they go looking for a downed plane that was piloted by Robert Lowery and had Rhonda Fleming and half a million dollars in gold bullion. Both those objects are worthy of rescue.
Crosswinds is your average action adventure drama and quite frankly I was never really convinced that we were in New Guinea, especially after seeing the Australian production of Walk Into Hell which was shot in the real New Guinea. But Rhonda Fleming photographed beautifully her red hair set against the green of the Everglades.
Crosswinds is a Pine-Thomas B film production from Paramount and it should please Rhonda's and Payne's fans.
B-movie from the Paramount distributed low-budget studio Pine-Thomas, shot in a Florida which exoticism accounts for the Australian Territory of Papua and New Guinea, and written from Thomson Burtis's novel New Guinea Gold. The title Crosswinds comes from a romantic song composed for the movie by the duo Jay Livingston and Ray Evans (The Man who knew too much's Que Sera Sera), about some crosswinds which may contrary love.
In Papua, Katherine (Rhonda Fleming, Adventure Island, with her beautiful red hair in Technicolor) comes by plane with Nick (Robert Lowery, Jungle Flight), the associate of the crooked trafficker Jumbo (Forrest Tucker, Hurricane Smith), who wants to retrieve a gold treasure sunk with the seaplane of a mining company in a remote lake. In his lovely sailboat the Seeker, "his home, his job and his sweetheart", comes also the captain Steve (John Payne, Captain China from the same director), an adventurer who also seeks himself, with his Asian second Bumidai (Frank Kumagai, South Sea Woman), who acts as his comic foil.
By tricking Steve in a phony pearl search, pretext to some pretty submarine action views, Jumbo manages to steal his boat from him. Steve, meeting other dubious characters, Sir Cecil (Alan Mowbray, The Lady and the Bandit), a kind of "Milord l'Arsouille", and his assistant Mousey (John Abbott, Navy Bound), decides to venture up the Fly River into New Guinea depth until Lake Murray, in order to find Jumbo and his boat, as well as a disappeared Katherine. Will Steve manage to thwart the traps of the crooked people who surround him? Shall he be able to retrieve the lost Katherine and to get back his boat?
This adventure movie is obviously very far below the Hollywood classics like King Solomon's Mines or African Queen. As during the fifties no one left could believe in African savages, the less known New Guinea still allows to perform Tarzan-like scenes with yelling tribes and ominous tom-tom. And of course dangerous wild beasts play also their part, with snakes, crocodiles and even a black panther, very exotic indeed for a New Guinea east of Wallace Line. Nevertheless, if you choose to remain indulgent, you shall follow the small adventure until its end.
In Papua, Katherine (Rhonda Fleming, Adventure Island, with her beautiful red hair in Technicolor) comes by plane with Nick (Robert Lowery, Jungle Flight), the associate of the crooked trafficker Jumbo (Forrest Tucker, Hurricane Smith), who wants to retrieve a gold treasure sunk with the seaplane of a mining company in a remote lake. In his lovely sailboat the Seeker, "his home, his job and his sweetheart", comes also the captain Steve (John Payne, Captain China from the same director), an adventurer who also seeks himself, with his Asian second Bumidai (Frank Kumagai, South Sea Woman), who acts as his comic foil.
By tricking Steve in a phony pearl search, pretext to some pretty submarine action views, Jumbo manages to steal his boat from him. Steve, meeting other dubious characters, Sir Cecil (Alan Mowbray, The Lady and the Bandit), a kind of "Milord l'Arsouille", and his assistant Mousey (John Abbott, Navy Bound), decides to venture up the Fly River into New Guinea depth until Lake Murray, in order to find Jumbo and his boat, as well as a disappeared Katherine. Will Steve manage to thwart the traps of the crooked people who surround him? Shall he be able to retrieve the lost Katherine and to get back his boat?
This adventure movie is obviously very far below the Hollywood classics like King Solomon's Mines or African Queen. As during the fifties no one left could believe in African savages, the less known New Guinea still allows to perform Tarzan-like scenes with yelling tribes and ominous tom-tom. And of course dangerous wild beasts play also their part, with snakes, crocodiles and even a black panther, very exotic indeed for a New Guinea east of Wallace Line. Nevertheless, if you choose to remain indulgent, you shall follow the small adventure until its end.
Crosswinds will not disappoint adventure fans...it has 6 characters in search of an illegal treasure each wants to steal...sunken government gold. All these characters are desperate and find themselves in more and more dangerous circumstances as they double cross each other to jockey for survival. John Payne fans will be happy to see him strutting his prime beef, spending half the picture in swimming trunks as he dives for gold, fights off cannibals, and gets involved with lovely Rhonda. And there's plenty of action fighting off his competitors as well by making a devil's bargain with the scoundrel(Forest Tucker) who stole his yacht.
This adventure is set in New Guinea, where schooner skipper Steve Singleton embarks on a treacherous quest to retrieve sunken gold bullion and reclaim his vessel after getting duped by schemers Nick Brandon and "Jumbo" Johnson.
John Payne and Rhonda Fleming get involved in seeking gold bullion from a sunken plane in New Guinea. Devious passengers, including Forest Tucker are some of things John Payne has to contend with. Though they are the least he has to deal with - There's local headhunter natives that put up a fight, which garners some rousing action sequences. Crosswinds is a very engaging and rousing 1950's jungle/diving adventure with some good characterisations and diving sequences, which are quite dreamy.
John Payne and Rhonda Fleming get involved in seeking gold bullion from a sunken plane in New Guinea. Devious passengers, including Forest Tucker are some of things John Payne has to contend with. Though they are the least he has to deal with - There's local headhunter natives that put up a fight, which garners some rousing action sequences. Crosswinds is a very engaging and rousing 1950's jungle/diving adventure with some good characterisations and diving sequences, which are quite dreamy.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizOne of four films that John Payne and Rhonda Fleming co-starred in, the others being L'aquila e il falco (1950), La jungla dei temerari (1955), and Veneri rosse (1956).
- BlooperAlthough the story takes place is several locations, every time the characters are seen underwater, they are swimming in exactly the same place, with the same underwater growth, rocks, and sea shells.
- Citazioni
Katherine Shelley: See, you are running away.
Steve Singleton: From what?
Katherine Shelley: From the world.
- ConnessioniReferenced in Going Commando: The Influence of Radar Men from the Moon (2024)
- Colonne sonoreCrosswinds
Written by Jay Livingston and Ray Evans
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- Crosswinds
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- Tempo di esecuzione1 ora 35 minuti
- Proporzioni
- 1.37 : 1
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By what name was Il tesoro del fiume sacro (1951) officially released in India in English?
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