IMDb RATING
5.7/10
1.6K
YOUR RATING
When a plane carrying various animals makes a forced landing on a desert island, the only chance to escape is to convert the plane into a boat.When a plane carrying various animals makes a forced landing on a desert island, the only chance to escape is to convert the plane into a boat.When a plane carrying various animals makes a forced landing on a desert island, the only chance to escape is to convert the plane into a boat.
- Awards
- 4 nominations total
Geneviève Bujold
- Bernadette Lafleur
- (as Genevieve Bujold)
Peter Renaday
- Irate Pilot
- (as Pete Renaday)
Featured reviews
'The Last Flight of Noah's Ark' is average.
One of the reasons for that is the lacklustre plot, which is one we've practically already seen before from Disney in years prior - like 1960's 'Swiss Family Robinson' and 1966's 'Lt. Robin Crusoe U.S.N.'. This isn't incredibly similar to those two, but they are certainly in the same ballpark.
The premise doesn't have much about it in terms of action or heart, the ending threatens to finish with a highly meaningful moment but instead bottles it in favour of a more happier conclusion. Elsewhere, you have a forgettable cast. Elliott Gould (Dugan) and Geneviève Bujold (Bernadette) are alright, though they lack the necessary chemistry together.
Close to being a good'un, but just misses out in my books.
One of the reasons for that is the lacklustre plot, which is one we've practically already seen before from Disney in years prior - like 1960's 'Swiss Family Robinson' and 1966's 'Lt. Robin Crusoe U.S.N.'. This isn't incredibly similar to those two, but they are certainly in the same ballpark.
The premise doesn't have much about it in terms of action or heart, the ending threatens to finish with a highly meaningful moment but instead bottles it in favour of a more happier conclusion. Elsewhere, you have a forgettable cast. Elliott Gould (Dugan) and Geneviève Bujold (Bernadette) are alright, though they lack the necessary chemistry together.
Close to being a good'un, but just misses out in my books.
Unemployed pilot must pay 5G's in 24 hours to his bookmaker or else his goons will work him over; he reluctantly accepts a job flying a feisty missionary and her farm animals to an island in the South Pacific in a rickety B-29 bomber, but the plan goes awry. First, the couple is joined by two stowaway orphans who are worried about the animals, then the plane goes off-course and the pilot is forced to crash land the aircraft on the beach of an uncharted island--inhabited by two Japanese soldiers who are unaware that WWII is over. In the first half of the 1970s, Elliott Gould made film after film, mostly counterculture comedies which established him as an anti-hero; he appealed to the young people of the era who hoped to shout down the Establishment. However, by 1980, Gould had become part of the Establishment, a working stiff in Hollywood, and the industry's middle ground (Disney) was eager to turn him into a grouchy sweetiepuss, a Bogart father-figure for marriage-minded women and wet-eyed youngsters. Gould doesn't embarrass himself here--he's firm with both the kids and the missionary (a forthright but not stubborn Genevieve Bujold)--but he's coasting, his energy at half-mast. The film, adapted from Ernest K. Gann's story "The Gremlin's Castle", has elements of "Swiss Family Robinson", "The African Queen" and even (God help us) "Jaws", but director Charles Jarrott blessedly keeps it moving instead of stopping to preach. There are things Jarrott probably had no control over, such as the kids fussing and crying over the animals or Maurice Jarre's cloying music, which tugs at the tear ducts. It doesn't quite work, but there are compensations: Gould and Bujold manage to develop a faintly warm rapport, and Charles F. Wheeler's cinematography is excellent. The island location is lovely, and the Japanese men (John Fujioka and Yuki Shimoda) are handled with respect. As for the bookmaker, we are to assume he got his money, and also that the seasick bull made a speedy recovery. This is Disney, after all. **1/2 from ****
Aside all mismatches in the plot this picture is plenty enjoyable for Disney patten, Elliott Gould was in the peak of his career, however starts running down the hill in slowing process, he was not in great shape anymore, a little fat for the role, the Canadian French ancestry Genèvieve Bujold was a little bit aged, in fact both around de forty years old, the highlight certainly is the child-star Rick Schroder that had a resounding success as T. J. Flynn at "The Champ" previously one year before, also the duo-comic Japanese Soldiers stranded in the island for 35 years long.
Elliott Gould plays a single pilot Noah Dugan that was in bit of a pickle for gambling on a wrong horse, pursuit by mobster for five grants, further there no jobs at sight, in a forlorn hope he looking for his old pal Stoney (Vincent Gardenia) who needs frantically a crazy pilot for a scrapyard of a cargo plane from WWII's era, Noah needs money but tries to flight this outdated giant plane to transport to south seas a load of living animals including a huge pair of bull & cow, chickens, ducks, pigs among others specimens, the crazy idea coming for a Reverend lady Bernadette Lafleur (Bujold) who is intent settle a small missionary in a isolate pagan island to help the natives.
He just accepts the job because have two mobster (Dana Elcar & John P. Ryan) at your neck, stealtily a couple of children come on board (Schroder & Tamin Laurie), Noah takes off the hunk of junk cargo, nonetheless Mrs. Lafleur tries help fly the airplane, unwittingly she puts a radio near the compass, through the radio's magnetism the route is change for a unknown south area, Noah got landing in a deserted island for lack of fuel, there they face two older Japanese soldiers from WWII, they stay there without known that the war is over, aided by the skillful craftsmen Japanese soldiers they made a raft using the old cargo upside-down trying reach somewhere or cross path with some ship around.
As I said early the premise is silly driven to family audience, let it see so easily, nostalgic picture for any age, I'd never watched this one before the DVD's advent, whereby I bought my original copy.
Thanks for reading.
Resume:
First watch: 2010 / Source: DVD / How many: 2 / Rating: 7.
Elliott Gould plays a single pilot Noah Dugan that was in bit of a pickle for gambling on a wrong horse, pursuit by mobster for five grants, further there no jobs at sight, in a forlorn hope he looking for his old pal Stoney (Vincent Gardenia) who needs frantically a crazy pilot for a scrapyard of a cargo plane from WWII's era, Noah needs money but tries to flight this outdated giant plane to transport to south seas a load of living animals including a huge pair of bull & cow, chickens, ducks, pigs among others specimens, the crazy idea coming for a Reverend lady Bernadette Lafleur (Bujold) who is intent settle a small missionary in a isolate pagan island to help the natives.
He just accepts the job because have two mobster (Dana Elcar & John P. Ryan) at your neck, stealtily a couple of children come on board (Schroder & Tamin Laurie), Noah takes off the hunk of junk cargo, nonetheless Mrs. Lafleur tries help fly the airplane, unwittingly she puts a radio near the compass, through the radio's magnetism the route is change for a unknown south area, Noah got landing in a deserted island for lack of fuel, there they face two older Japanese soldiers from WWII, they stay there without known that the war is over, aided by the skillful craftsmen Japanese soldiers they made a raft using the old cargo upside-down trying reach somewhere or cross path with some ship around.
As I said early the premise is silly driven to family audience, let it see so easily, nostalgic picture for any age, I'd never watched this one before the DVD's advent, whereby I bought my original copy.
Thanks for reading.
Resume:
First watch: 2010 / Source: DVD / How many: 2 / Rating: 7.
First off, I'd like to say that I haven't seen this movie since I was a kid. I just finished watching for the first time in 16 years, with mixed opinions. First, the story is good. The dialogue is decent (swearing in a Disney kids movie? Right on!). The cinematography is ok. The directing is pretty good. The acting is okay. The music is HORRIBLE. I've noticed, not only with this picture, but almost every Disney movie from the late 60s on into the mid 80s, if you turn the music off, it's actually more enjoyable to watch. Being a music theory major in college, I have come to really appreciate good scoring for movies. There are several scenes where the music is entirely inappropriate (such as after the crash, when they're rounding up all the equipment and animals and the music is straight from Yee Haw). Still, after all these years, it was good to watch it again. So if you can cringe your way through the sappy music, you're good to go with this edgy Disney movie.
While Vincent Gardenia and J.P. Ryan only appear in the film's beginning, they are pretty much in character. Gardenia wise cracking and Ryan playing a really small part as a "heavy" after Elliott Gould for money owed to his bookie. The story is rather "formula driven". Plane carrying animals goes down on an island. Japanese Soldiers appear, eventually making friends with Gould and Genieve Bujold. Two kids who were stowaways are the only reason this is a family film. I found them to be more annoying than anything, but obviously they were not going to go away. Once the plane is turned into a raft, we get the expected crisis of the minute, including a shark attack, and a storm. All ends well, and the movie is far from memorable, especially for adults. - MERK
Did you know
- TriviaThe Boeing B-29 Superfortress featured in the flying sequences was Fertile Myrtle, Air Force 45-21787, Navy BuNo 84029, Civil Registration N91329. From 1951 to 1956 it was used by the Navy and NACA to launch the Douglas D-558-II Skyrocket at Edwards Air Force Base, California. It is currently in the collection of the International Sport Aviation Museum in Lakeland, Florida. Four other partial B-29 Superfortresses were acquired from the China Lake Naval Weapons Center, California. One was used for interior shots at the Walt Disney Studios. Another was used for night sequences afloat in MGM's outdoor tank. The third was used for the crash site on the island and the fourth was made into the floating Noah's Ark. They were returned to the Navy after filming concluded.
- Quotes
Noah Dugan: We nearly get killed and you wanna open a Sunday school for the enemy?
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Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official site
- Languages
- Also known as
- Bruchlandung im Paradies
- Filming locations
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- $6,000,000 (estimated)
- Gross US & Canada
- $11,000,000
- Gross worldwide
- $11,000,000
- Runtime
- 1h 37m(97 min)
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1
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