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Ferry to Hong Kong

  • 1959
  • Approved
  • 1h 52m
IMDb RATING
5.5/10
548
YOUR RATING
Orson Welles, Curd Jürgens, and Sylvia Syms in Ferry to Hong Kong (1959)
ActionAdventureDrama

Mark Conrad, a habitual drunk and troublemaker with a shady past, is expelled by Hong Kong police after one too many bar fights. He's sent to Macao on the Fa Tsan, a ferry owned by Captain H... Read allMark Conrad, a habitual drunk and troublemaker with a shady past, is expelled by Hong Kong police after one too many bar fights. He's sent to Macao on the Fa Tsan, a ferry owned by Captain Hart. Conrad's papers are out of order and Macao refuses him entry. Unable to go ashore, Co... Read allMark Conrad, a habitual drunk and troublemaker with a shady past, is expelled by Hong Kong police after one too many bar fights. He's sent to Macao on the Fa Tsan, a ferry owned by Captain Hart. Conrad's papers are out of order and Macao refuses him entry. Unable to go ashore, Conrad is a permanent passenger on the ferry with Hart, who detests him. It's all one long, ... Read all

  • Director
    • Lewis Gilbert
  • Writers
    • Vernon Harris
    • Lewis Gilbert
    • Max Catto
  • Stars
    • Curd Jürgens
    • Orson Welles
    • Sylvia Syms
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.5/10
    548
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Lewis Gilbert
    • Writers
      • Vernon Harris
      • Lewis Gilbert
      • Max Catto
    • Stars
      • Curd Jürgens
      • Orson Welles
      • Sylvia Syms
    • 15User reviews
    • 8Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos25

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    Top cast16

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    Curd Jürgens
    Curd Jürgens
    • Mark Conrad
    • (as Curt Jurgens)
    Orson Welles
    Orson Welles
    • Captain Hart
    Sylvia Syms
    Sylvia Syms
    • Liz Ferrers
    Jeremy Spenser
    Jeremy Spenser
    • Miguel Henriques
    Noel Purcell
    Noel Purcell
    • Joe Skinner
    Margaret Withers
    Margaret Withers
    • Miss Carter
    John Wallace
    • Police Inspector
    Roy Chiao
    Roy Chiao
    • Johnny Sing-Up
    Shelley Shen
    • Foo Soo
    Louis Seto
    • Tommy Cheng
    Milton Reid
    Milton Reid
    • Yen
    Ronald Decent
    • Portuguese Major
    Don Carlos
    • Archdeacon
    Nick Kendall
    • 2nd Police Inspector
    Kwan-San Lam
    • 1st Guardian
    • (as Kwan Shan Lam)
    Lucille Soong
    Lucille Soong
    • The Bride
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Lewis Gilbert
    • Writers
      • Vernon Harris
      • Lewis Gilbert
      • Max Catto
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews15

    5.5548
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    Featured reviews

    2eddie-83

    Truly Tragic

    After boy-genius Orson Welles gave us his debut masterpiece `Citizen Kane', followed it up with the wonderful `Magnificent Ambersons'(and who could forget his charismatic Harry Lime in Carol Reed's `Third Man'?) he really had nowhere to go except down.

    But I never expected to see him as he is in `Ferry to Hong Kong' mugging and pulling faces to try to produce cheap laughs in an awful English accent. He even waddles around at one stage with a board strapped to his back, all dignity gone. To paraphrase a well-known script-writer from Stratford `When great Orson fell, what a fall was there!'

    Otherwise this is a pretty poor attempt at a comedy with perhaps some interest for those who want to see ever-changing Hong Kong as it was in the late Fifties.

    I wish I hadn't seen `Ferry to Hong Kong'
    Oct

    Two hijacks

    Orson Welles bulked up to play Hank Quinlan in 'Touch of Evil'. Soon afterwards he pitched up in this British effort to crack foreign markets with a multinational cast and exotic location shooting- and it became clear that he had surrendered in the battle of avoirdupois.

    A shame, because he thereby condemned himself to playing 'larger than life' characters in historical romps or fantasies to finance his gargantuan appetites and bootlace productions. Trying to get closer to normality, as he had been in 'Tomorrow is Forever' or his own 'Lady from Shanghai', might have stretched him more than Genghis Khan, Louis XVIII or Long John Silver.

    As Captain Cecil Hart, apparently a pompous British owner-captain of the titular old tub, Welles starts out as a relatively normal if annoying fellow, redeemed by his love of flowers and pet birds. But he soon devolves into spluttering, grimacing and waddling, like Charles Laughton slumming it with Abbott and Costello. And inevitably the skipper is unmasked as yet another flimflam artist: Welles gave dissenters from the martyred-genius myth ammo by playing so many.

    He has his cigar, his card-deck prestidigitation and matchlessly modulated voice to remind us of the real Orson. His accent hovers between Brandoesque British and Father Mapple, with brief reminders of 'Black Irish, notorious waterfront agitator'. It is a ham's attempt to hijack the film, on a par with the Chinese pirates' attempt on the 'Fat Annie', and it is a disservice to his co-stars. As usual, Welles tried to rewrite his dialogue and take over direction, resisted by Lewis Gilbert. Curt Jurgens objected and the result was an unhappy shoot.

    Gilbert hated the result, but it has its pleasures. He reconciles a largely confined setting and small star cast well with CinemaScope, while the shore footage of an amazingly undeveloped Hong Kong and Macau looks gorgeous in the brief heyday of Eastmancolor, which outdid monopack Technicolor. The cinematography comes up pin-sharp and lustrous; really there has been no progress in that department in sixty years. A former boy actor, Gilbert coaxes nice cameos from Sylvia Syms's schoolgirl flock.

    Jurgens, replacing Peter Finch, has to wear one soiled suit all through. He seemed a strange choice but his hard edges as an Anglo-Austrian drifter, brawler and drunk are not planed down for a family film; his charm and courage emerge persuasively, and his blue eyes shine more brightly as he shapes up.

    Syms was at the height of her beauty as an English rose with a steel core, following 'Ice Cold in Alex'. Noel Purcell contrives to take the nasty taste out of being an Irish engineer with a Chinese wife and big family in each port, though neither spouse speaks.

    This is a very colonial flick, in which the only natives are hoodlums. And its structural problem is the tacked-on second climax of the pirate raid. Jurgens superseding the drunk Captain during a typhoon was enough to exonerate him. But we then have to sit through twenty minutes of menace from a bald thug, including a very discordant moment of violence involving the ever-wimpish Jeremy Spenser as the Captain's cowardly underling.

    Welles is sidelined by then. For some reason he spends the last two reels dead drunk or with a board strapped to his back, as if the production were punishing him for insubordination.

    Whatever his regrets, Gilbert went back to the Far East for my favourite Bond film, 'You Only Live Twice', and used Jurgens as the villain in 'The Spy Who Loved Me'.
    5adrianovasconcelos

    Orson Welles in fisticuffs and blows over the head?

    Lewis Gilbert, who directed three passable James Bond vehicles (YOU ONLY LIVE TWICE, MOONRAKER, and THE SPY WHO LOVED ME) must have been wet behind the ears when he directed FERRY TO HONG KONG... and with Orson Welles as captain of the good ship Fat Annie in the cast!

    Curt Jurgens, a German-born thespian of some quality and fame in the 1950s and 1960s, plays the dashing drunk and disheveled hero who wants to beat the dragon, encouraged to that end by exceedingly beautiful Sylvia Sims.

    With some fisticuffs, fights, and blows over the head delivered by a fast fattening Welles, ably aided by fast aging Jurgens with pirates and criminals as targets, you see poor Fat Annie bubble down and sink in Kowloon Bay off then British colony Hong Kong, with some memorable sunset shots (could it be symbolic of the sun setting on the British Empire?)

    If this crit makes no sense to you, the plot made no sense to me either, and it drags on for an interminable 111 minutes. I will NOT watch it again.
    5Prismark10

    Beating the dragon

    Ferry to Hong Kong is a mildly amusing film due to an obese Orson Welles treating the film as a farcical comedy. He plays Captain Hart, who despite the prissy exterior is a bit of a blackguard. He runs an old ferry between Hong Kong to Macau.

    Hart is stuck with Mark Conrad (Curd Jürgens) a drunken, troublemaker, expelled from Hong Kong and denied entry to Macau. He is destined to remain a passenger on the ferry much to Hart's anger, he even sets up a rigged bet to get rid off this unwanted passenger. Despite looking dishevelled Conrad earns the sympathy of Liz (Sylvia Syms) who is a teacher to some children regularly on board.

    Conrad and Captain Hart have to set aside their mutual loathing when the ship encounters a typhoon and later seized by pirates with Conrad having to take responsibility and control of the situation the ship's passengers find themselves in.

    The film benefits from the Hong Kong location shooting which provides a colourful backdrop, the script is pedestrian and at times hammy as Welles performance.
    2dray45

    Lacking drama or conflict

    I was in my teens when I saw Ferry to Hong Kong in 1959, after it went on general release in the UK. My memory is that it was an enjoyable, colourful adventure film. I loved seeing any film in the cinema, especially if it was in colour and widescreen (CinemaScope in this case) Curt (sometimes credited as Curd) Jurgens was a familiar face, having seen him in The Inn of the Sixth Happiness the previous year. I recall thinking that he again gave a very favourable impression with a likeable performance.

    I've often thought I'd like to see it again to see how it stands up to my memory of the film but it's been neglected on home video and is only available in the UK on a poor-quality DVD but at least is in anamorphic 2.35:1 widescreen. On watching the DVD, it turns out to be a major disappointment compared with my fond memory of the film. I won't repeat the problems which have been well documented about the making of the film but one has to wonder what persuaded the Rank Organisation to approve what was a high budget film based on such an extremely slight story line. For three quarters of the film, the main plot involves Curt Jurgens as a down-and-out being stuck on a ferry, running backward and forward between Hong Kong and Macau; unable to disembark due to documentation irregularities. This becomes tedious because there is no drama or conflict involving his predicament Much screen time consists of arguments with the captain, played by Orson Welles giving his worst ever hammy performance in a ludicrous English accent, obviously dubbed (badly) in post-production.

    It's one of those films where the main actors seem to be working at odds against each other with no sense of common purpose. Sylvia Syms does her best in a thankless role, as does Jeremy Spencer. The final 20 minutes features a half-hearted action sequence when the ship is boarded by thieves and there is some much need action and conflict but it comes too late. The film needed a tighter script and a clearer idea as to whether it was meant to be a comedy, a drama or an adventure. One thing that almost makes the film worth seeing are the wide-screen colour location scenes of Hong Kong in the 1950s.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      This was the first Rank Organisation film in CinemaScope. It was filmed entirely on location in Hong Kong and Macao and at sea between the two ports, and it cost £500,000, making it the most expensive Rank film ever, to that time. It was a box-office and critical flop.
    • Connections
      Featured in The Man Who Ruined the British Film Industry (1996)
    • Soundtracks
      The Four Seasons
      Traditional

      Arranged by Fu-Ling Wang (as Fook Ling Wong)

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • October 29, 1959 (Denmark)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Fähre nach Hongkong
    • Filming locations
      • Macao, Portuguese Colony
    • Production companies
      • The Rank Organisation
      • Pinewood Films
      • George Maynard Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 52 minutes
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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