I californiani isterici si preparano per un'invasione giapponese nei giorni successivi a Pearl Harbor.I californiani isterici si preparano per un'invasione giapponese nei giorni successivi a Pearl Harbor.I californiani isterici si preparano per un'invasione giapponese nei giorni successivi a Pearl Harbor.
- Candidato a 3 Oscar
- 6 candidature totali
Toshirô Mifune
- Cmdr. Akiro Mitamura
- (as Toshiro Mifune)
Lucille Benson
- Gas Mama (Eloise)
- (as Lucille Bensen)
Jordan Cohen
- Macey Douglas
- (as Jordan Brian)
Elisha Cook Jr.
- The Patron (Dexter)
- (as Elisha Cook)
Trama
Lo sapevi?
- QuizSome scenes were so noisy during filming that the crew could not hear Steven Spielberg yell "Cut". He had to fire a prop machine gun in the air to get the action to stop.
- BlooperHerbie and Claude change position on the ferris wheel. Spielberg did that deliberately for comedic effect.
- Citazioni
Japanese soldier: [trying to squeeze a large radio into the sub] We've got to figure out how to make these things smaller!
- Curiosità sui creditiEnd credits feature scenes showing cast members screaming.
- Versioni alternativeThe version released on network television and VHS/DVD/laserdisc is Spielberg's original director's cut, running 146 minutes, fleshing out sub-plots and characterizations, including:
- Wally and Dennis getting thrown out onto the street by Mr. Malcomb after he fires them from the diner where they work.
- Miss Fitzroy lecturing a group of women, Betty and Maxine among them, about tonight's USO dance which is interupted by a group of Army service men and Sailors entering and chanting wanting the women.
- A department store scene with Wally fussing about buying an expensive new zoot suit and Dennis sounding a phoney air-raid siren which leads to panic in the store including a gun-toting Santa Claus yelling out command orders which is revealed to be a set up by Wally who walks out of the store wearing the zoot suit while Dennis meets the twin girls for the first time.
- A scene with Scioli outside his house arguing with his non-English speaking wife about converting their car into an armored car while talking with Claude about sending him and someone else atop the Santa Monica ferris wheel on a spot mission for Japanese planes.
- A extra scene with Ito and the I-19 Japanese submarine shore party disguising themselves as Christmas trees in a remote Christmas tree lot and the drunken Hollis Wood trying to "chop" them down which leads to his capture.
- Scioli arriving at the ferris wheel with Claude and Herbie and explaing to them about their mission in the ferris wheel.
- A dinner scene at the Douglas home and Ward explaining to Betty about her going to the USO dance and telling her about the pros and cons about meeting servicemen.
- A barracks scene with Odgen Johnson Jones arriving for the first time at the barracks and imediately quarling with the racist Foley about property lines within their quarters.
- A scene outside the USO club where Wally arrives and meets with Martinez and his Zoot Suit friends where they are denied access to the club where Corporal Stretch shows up and sets Wally's zoot suit afire which nearly leads to a riot between the Zoot Suiters and the Servicemen. Wally then meets Dennis dressed up as a Marine in order to gain entrance into the club with the twins as his dates.
- Additional dialoge between Captain Birkhead and Donna in their car on the way to the airstrip and being afraid of the dark.
- Another barracks scene where Sergeant Tree breaks up a fistfight between Jones and Foley by informing them about the riot on Hollywood Blvd. and showing them climing into their tank and starting it up.
- A scene of the Japanese submarine I-19 arriving for the first time outside the Douglas house and the sub's entire crew on the deck watching Joan Douglas taking a bath through the bathroom window.
- A scene of the tank traveling down a residential street and Wally shooting up Officer Miller's police car to pieces, sending the policeman and some paserby's running for their lives.
- ConnessioniFeatured in At the Movies: Special Show: The Magic of Spielberg (1984)
- Colonne sonoreDown by the Ohio
Music by Abe Olman (uncredited)
Lyrics by Jack Yellen (uncredited)
Performed by The Andrews Sisters
Courtesy of MCA Records, Inc.
Recensione in evidenza
As outlandish and hysterical as the war insanity of 1941 may seem, the plot tracks almost exactly a real incident reported the night of Feb. 24, 1942, in Los Angeles that began when Navy intelligence reported an attack by unidentified objects on their radar could be expected within the next 10 hours. Early the morning of the 25, radar tracked objects 120 miles west of Los Angeles and a blackout was ordered, triggering a flood of reports about enemy planes. Planes wre reported by the coast artillery near Long Beach (25 of them at 12,000 feet). Four batteries of anti aircraft guns at Santa Monica opened fire on a balloon with a flare and all hell broke loose, with so much ack-ack and searchlights scanning the sky that utter confusion reigned for at least three hours with reports of swarms of planes (hundreds in some cases) flying in at every altitude imaginable. Some 1,440 rounds of ammunition were fired at airplanes that never dropped a single bomb. There were reports four enemy planes had been shot down, including one that supposedly landed in flames at a Hollywood intersection. If this all sounds familiar, read on. At dawn, the only damage found was caused by stray ack-ack fire and traffic wrecks during the blackout. The Navy said the next day there were no enemy planes. The Army interviewed people and decided there were at least one to five planes over LA. The War Department then announced the planes must have come from secret air fields in California or Mexico or from Japanese submarines. The next day the Los Angeles Times criticized the "considerable public excitement and confusion" caused by the alert that scared 2 million people. One California politician wanted to know if it was a calculated prank to move California's defense industries inland to other states. The Washington Post followed on Feb. 27 with condemnation of the military's stubborn silence on the issue and the New York Times jumped in on Feb. 28 by calling the entire episode "incredible" and a display of "expensive incompetence." The movie is a wonderful glimpse of this real hysteria, a real incident and with quotes pulled right out of newspaper articles. When Robert Stack wants to know "where are the bombs?" that is the same question the Air Force and Navy asked when reports came in about the thousands of planes attacking LA. All this information is available from government files on Air Force history from the Government Printing Office in Washington, D.C. The Japanese, by the way never flew planes over LA, but did fly over Seattle, they said after the war. I LOVE 1941. It got everything absolutely right. Right down to Belushi's plane crashing into the street and crazies going off searching for hidden airfields near Bakersfield or Barstow or where ever. This was NOT a comedy. It was just about comical people. It should have won an Oscar for BEST DOCUMENTARY.
- Cardinal-3
- 22 feb 1999
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Dettagli
- Data di uscita
- Paese di origine
- Lingue
- Celebre anche come
- 1941
- Luoghi delle riprese
- Gold Beach, Oregon, Stati Uniti(opening scene with sub)
- Aziende produttrici
- Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro
Botteghino
- Budget
- 35.000.000 USD (previsto)
- Lordo Stati Uniti e Canada
- 31.755.742 USD
- Fine settimana di apertura Stati Uniti e Canada
- 2.701.898 USD
- 16 dic 1979
- Lordo in tutto il mondo
- 92.455.742 USD
- Tempo di esecuzione1 ora 58 minuti
- Colore
- Proporzioni
- 2.39 : 1
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What is the Hindi language plot outline for 1941 - Allarme a Hollywood (1979)?
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