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IMDbPro

Escape to Burma

  • 1955
  • TV-PG
  • 1h 27m
IMDb RATING
5.5/10
757
YOUR RATING
Barbara Stanwyck and Robert Ryan in Escape to Burma (1955)
Adventure

A fugitive in British Burma hides on a teak plantation, thanks to a mutual attraction with owner Gwen Moore.A fugitive in British Burma hides on a teak plantation, thanks to a mutual attraction with owner Gwen Moore.A fugitive in British Burma hides on a teak plantation, thanks to a mutual attraction with owner Gwen Moore.

  • Director
    • Allan Dwan
  • Writers
    • Talbot Jennings
    • Hobart Donavan
    • Kenneth Perkins
  • Stars
    • Barbara Stanwyck
    • Robert Ryan
    • David Farrar
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.5/10
    757
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Allan Dwan
    • Writers
      • Talbot Jennings
      • Hobart Donavan
      • Kenneth Perkins
    • Stars
      • Barbara Stanwyck
      • Robert Ryan
      • David Farrar
    • 23User reviews
    • 9Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos17

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    Top Cast43

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    Barbara Stanwyck
    Barbara Stanwyck
    • Gwen Moore
    Robert Ryan
    Robert Ryan
    • Jim Brecan
    David Farrar
    David Farrar
    • Cardigan
    Murvyn Vye
    Murvyn Vye
    • Makesh
    Lisa Montell
    Lisa Montell
    • Andora
    Robert Warwick
    Robert Warwick
    • The Sawbwa
    Reginald Denny
    Reginald Denny
    • Commissioner
    Robert Cabal
    Robert Cabal
    • Kumat
    Peter Coe
    Peter Coe
    • Captain of the guard
    Alex Montoya
    • Dacoit
    Anthony Numkena
    • Kasha
    John Mansfield
    • Sergeant
    Gavin Muir
    Gavin Muir
    • Astrologer
    Joe Ferrante
    Tim Nelson
    James Van Horn
      Rocky Barry
        Wag Blesing
        Wag Blesing
        • Minor Role
        • (uncredited)
        • Director
          • Allan Dwan
        • Writers
          • Talbot Jennings
          • Hobart Donavan
          • Kenneth Perkins
        • All cast & crew
        • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

        User reviews23

        5.5757
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        Featured reviews

        5pete36

        Silly jungle feature

        The BBC aired this recently and as it was directed by super veteran Allan Dwan I happened to tape it.

        Ryan plays the typical US macho hero of the fifties, a fightin',shootin'(a Luger no less!) and kissin'guy. Mrs. Stanwyck is the owner of a plantation near Rangoon and she is not to be messed with. Third character is your run-of-the mill British, slightly repressed policeman, on the hunt for Ryan who supposedly has murdered the son of the local potentate.

        If you are a fan of Dwan's work better skip this one. The only good thing about it is the crisp clear color photography, the rest is pretty embarrassing. Clichéd would be putting it mildly. The script seems to be written in an afternoon and the same can be said of the movie itself.

        It is a bit unfair to Allan Dwan, as he made countless movies and still turned out some excellent stuff near the end of his very long career, as the classic marine epic "The Sands of Iwo Jima" and the sexy "Slightly Scarlet". So do not judge him on this silly jungle epic.
        7Hotstar

        Entertaining adventure fare.

        Escape to Burma is just one of a series of adventure features starring the estimable Barbara Stanwyck. However, where this film stands out above many of her other pictures from this period is that the supporting cast can actually act.

        In fact, the male actors Robert Ryan and David Farrar, are so good in their roles as outlaw and law enforcer that they almost overshadow the matriarch Stanwyck herself. Almost.

        Escape to Burma is standard Hollywood fare, but entertaining nevertheless; ideal for a rainy day. There are much worse ways to spend 85 minutes.
        6brogmiller

        "The more I see of you two, the more I like Elephants."

        This slice of RKO hokum is Barbara Stanwyck's second outing for director Allan Dwan, following 'Cattle Queen of Montana' and could easily be entitled 'Queen of the Elephants.' To say that it is a minor entry in this artiste's canon would be something of an understatement whilst the same might equally be said of Robert Ryan with whom she is reunited from Fritz Lang's 'Clash by Night.'

        Despite their consummate professionalism and the glorious cinematography by John Alton the whole enterprise sinks beneath the weight of an over-orchestrated, intrusive score and a script which is pure Poverty Row. The images that register most strongly are those of the noble pachyderms.

        The careers of even the most successful film actors are a mix of the rough and the smooth and there are no prizes for guessing into which category this opus falls.
        6ksf-2

        stanwyck and ryan in color, exotic-locale movie

        it must have been quite impressive for it's time - Color film, old-time film noir star B. Stanwyck and film military hero Robert Ryan were the big attractions in this far-away-location B movie; one of the 2-movie pack in the discount bin from TCM. it DOES have crystal-clear color photography andexcellent sound. Lots of messing about with elephants and tigers, and actors reciting monotone lines; the script needed some more zing or something - not much of a plot in the first half, but it gets better as it goes along. This was made about 10 years before Stanwyck's starring role in "Big Valley". Robert Ryan redeemed himself by doing "Longest Day" and "Battle of the Bulge" after this. Directed by Allan Dwan, who had started in 1911 in silents, and had worked his way up in every occupation in the film industry.
        8the red duchess

        A strange, refreshing film from undervalued maestro Dwan.

        It is one of the cliches of mainstream Hollywood cinema that the desire of the hero is limited to two options - a good girl (marriage, security, family, society), and a bad girl (lust, transgression). In this scenario, women are barely people at all, more embodiments of Law and Desire, the socially acceptable and unacceptable.

        Not the least of this brilliant film's achievements is the way it transfers this cliche to the heroine, making it new and strange. It is the two male characters who represent the two options open to the woman - Robert Ryan is the outlaw, suspected murderer and jewel thief, sexually direct; David Farrer is the policeman, punctiliously obeisant to the law, sexually repressed.

        Ryan hasn't stepped foot in Barbara Stanwyk's elephant ranch before he's made himself at home, made her frankly voracious and got her talking about 'marriage', which we suspect has little to do with religious ceremonies. Farrer no sooner arrives then he wants to take a man home with him. The film's most striking scene occurs near the climax, in the symbolic space of an abandoned, monkey infested Buddhist temple, the two men grappling like Lawrentian blood brothers, and Stanwyk gaping hungrily on, absolutely thrilled.

        This central twist is part of the film's wider iconoclasm. Like more renowned peers (Minnelli, Sirk etc.), Dwan takes reactionary material and dismantles it. Firstly, the film offers an odd mish-mash of genres. The film is supposedly set in Burma and its environs, but this is an Orient in the tradition of Powell and Pressburger, the hero of whose 'Black Narcissus' stars here (Farrer).

        Whereas 'Narcissus' was a work of complete, defiant artifice, 'Escape' offers a disturbing clash between real location footage and cramped studio sets, often within the one scene which, especially in action sequences, has a jarring, alienating effect. The most notable example occurs early on, when Ryan and Stanwyk hunt a marauding tiger - the effect takes us out of the 'realistic' adventure and alerts us to a more symbolic plane.

        Although the film is set in the east, the three genres it evokes originate much further away. Even though the film is an action adventure - and a very exciting one, full of chases, gun-fights and dangerous animals - it is also a melodrama, about a lonely woman stranded in the middle of nowhere, powerful but so starved of 'companionship' she'll attach herself to the first man who comes along. Some of the lighting effects and careful compositions recall the contemporary melodramas of Sirk. The film also belongs to the jungle sub-genre, full of thick forests and animals being cute.

        Most important, however, the film is a transposed Western, with Ryan as the outlaw hiding out in Stanwyk's ranch, and Farrer the sherriff sent to being him back. Except, like Ray's 'Johnny Guitar', the colour, the mise-en-scene, the extravagant sexual rituals tend to undermine macho Western self-importance; a female 'Eastern' reflecting back the male Western.

        As the scene I mentioned earlier suggests - the brawl in the temple - the idea of play figures throughout, with narrative action turned into ritual or theatre, with extras, ceremonial gestures, and, most importantly, an audience. The most alarming of these is Ryan's torture, but throughout there is an emphasis on people watching, usually obscurely, through gaps and grills, or being framed in proscenium arches within the narrative frame.

        Another motif alerting us to mistrust appearances is the mirror- so often a symbol of metamorphosis or revelation; actual mirrors co-exist with mirroring scenes, for example the symmetrical skulking of Stanwyk and the tiger watched by Ryan (doubly mirrored and reversed in the temple scene)

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        Related interests

        Still frame
        Adventure

        Storyline

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        Did you know

        Edit
        • Trivia
          Sharon Lee's debut.
        • Goofs
          In the Burmese jungle temple, some of the apes are chimpanzees, which only live in Africa.
        • Quotes

          Gwen Moore: You may mount.

        • Connections
          Referenced in The Exiles (1961)
        • Soundtracks
          Song of Burma
          (uncredited)

          Written by Hal Borne and Louis Forbes

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        FAQ14

        • How long is Escape to Burma?Powered by Alexa

        Details

        Edit
        • Release date
          • April 9, 1955 (United States)
        • Country of origin
          • United States
        • Language
          • English
        • Also known as
          • Bow Tamely to Me
        • Filming locations
          • World Animal Jungle Compound, Thousands Oaks, California, USA(tiger hunt scene)
        • Production companies
          • Benedict Bogeaus Production
          • Filmcrest Productions
        • See more company credits at IMDbPro

        Tech specs

        Edit
        • Runtime
          • 1h 27m(87 min)
        • Aspect ratio
          • 2.00 : 1

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