WW2: US ganster-on-the-run Joe sells torpedoes to German U-boats on a remote island off South America. When shipwrecked engineer Jim is saved by Joe and arrives on the island a showdown seem... Read allWW2: US ganster-on-the-run Joe sells torpedoes to German U-boats on a remote island off South America. When shipwrecked engineer Jim is saved by Joe and arrives on the island a showdown seems inevitable.WW2: US ganster-on-the-run Joe sells torpedoes to German U-boats on a remote island off South America. When shipwrecked engineer Jim is saved by Joe and arrives on the island a showdown seems inevitable.
- Director
- Writers
- Stars
Georges Metaxa
- Anton Kroll - Nazi Agent
- (as George Metaxa)
Rafael Alcayde
- Felipo
- (as Rafael Storm)
Frederic Brunn
- Submarine Commander
- (uncredited)
Maurice Cass
- Commissioner D'Oeuf
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
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Merchant mariner John Litel has another ship blown out from under him. He's picked up by Alan Baxter. When they both lived in New York, Baxter was a mobster, and Litel a police detective trying to jail him. When things became too hot, Baxter settled for being a fisherman off the coast of South America. He drops Litel on an out-of-the-way island right on the Equator, where the eccentric locals -- including Eric Blore, Fifi D'Orsay, and Luis Alberni -- keep up a shoddy brand of normality with German spies, ineffective French governors, German U-boats off the coast, and so forth.
Three years earlier, Litel had been playing second leads and authority figures at Warner Brothers, and here he is, slumming at PRC. Whom had he offended so badly? Baxter speaks his lines like he has a head cold. The script is blah, with Litel giving a rah-rah speech at the end, which comes out of nowhere. Another PRC C movie.
Three years earlier, Litel had been playing second leads and authority figures at Warner Brothers, and here he is, slumming at PRC. Whom had he offended so badly? Baxter speaks his lines like he has a head cold. The script is blah, with Litel giving a rah-rah speech at the end, which comes out of nowhere. Another PRC C movie.
"Submarine Base" is a film by the ultra-tiny PRC Studio and in one of the 'macho' roles is Eric Blore--these alone are reasons to suspect it's a bad film! And, this is pretty much the case.
The film begins with an American gangster on an island where he is meeting with Nazi submarines to supply them with torpedoes!! Talk about a silly and impossible to believe scenario. Well, unfortunately it gets even sillier as he and his macho friend (Blore) find a sailor floating in the sea in the middle of the ocean. This guy just happens to be the same cop who had tried to capture the gangster for murder some time back. So, we are expected to believe this sort of coincidence! Talk about suspending disbelief! Well the rest of the film is pretty trivial but by the end (in a VERY jingoistic finale), the two join forces to defeat the forces of international evil! Saying this is contrived is a huge understatement. While I love a good patriotic WWII propaganda film, this one was just dumb.
The film begins with an American gangster on an island where he is meeting with Nazi submarines to supply them with torpedoes!! Talk about a silly and impossible to believe scenario. Well, unfortunately it gets even sillier as he and his macho friend (Blore) find a sailor floating in the sea in the middle of the ocean. This guy just happens to be the same cop who had tried to capture the gangster for murder some time back. So, we are expected to believe this sort of coincidence! Talk about suspending disbelief! Well the rest of the film is pretty trivial but by the end (in a VERY jingoistic finale), the two join forces to defeat the forces of international evil! Saying this is contrived is a huge understatement. While I love a good patriotic WWII propaganda film, this one was just dumb.
My girlfriend bought me a 16mm print of this PRC flick a few weeks ago, and we projected it last night for the first time on the big screen! Before I get into the review there was something of interest about the print. First off this print is what we used to call in film exchanges a "Cannibalized Print" That is to say they used three prints to make up this one. The first part of the print was struck on Kodak stock in 1945, and the last part of the print was Kodak 1944. However most of the body of the print was brand new, and struck on Kodak stock made in 1976. Which means they were still making and exchanging 16mm prints for television as late as 1976! It is a reduction print which means it was a print down from 35mm negatives. The picture and sound quality was very close to 35mm. I do know that in the 1970's Bonded Film Services shipped the PRC library to television stations nationwide. By the early 1980's most of the exchange prints were junked. I love owning and projecting these old pictures rather than watching them on DVDS or YouTube. The motion picture film print makes watching these old films very special. PRC which people in the 1940's would jokingly call "Pretty Rotten Cinema" (yes even then they didn't fall for most of this crap!) PRC was one of my favorite studios - and I just love every piece of crap they turned out! If I could own the ultimate 16 or 35mm film print collection it was be all of the PRC pictures! I started collecting film prints in the 1970's in high school, and I loved PRC films! "The Lady Chaser" 1946 was the first film print of a PRC ever owned, I wish I still had that print now! So when I see them on line in 16mm I buy them! Who cares if it's crap! They are still better than pictures made today in Covid-19 2021! I look forward to a second screening in the summer of 2021! Plus I love Iris Adrian she has 160 plus screen credits and when she was in her twenties she was a babe! And just because the plot was so bad, I give it ten stars! I loved it! I can't wait to get my Covid-19 vaccination so I can get sick and die! Cheers!
During World War II, gangster Alan Baxter (as Joe Morgan) fishes officer John Litel (as Jim Taggart) out of the Pacific Ocean, after his ship is torpedoed by Nazis. Mr. Baxter explains he has left the criminal world to become a simple fisherman; and, Mr. Litel reveals he has turned in his badge to join the American war cause. Litel suspects Baxter may have joined the Nazi cause. Fisherman Baxter is also adept at attracting women; Jacqueline Dalva (as Judy) and Fifi D'Orsay (as Maria), for example. "Submarine Base" is a dull, predictable attack on disbelievers in the "Four Freedoms". Eric Blore (as Spike) is mildly amusing, offering to prepare tea and crumpets on Baxter's boat.
* Submarine Base (7/20/43) Albert H. Kelly, Alan Baxter, John Litel, Eric Blore
* Submarine Base (7/20/43) Albert H. Kelly, Alan Baxter, John Litel, Eric Blore
This film takes place on a small island in the Atlantic Ocean near the equator, featuring an exiled American named "Joe Morgan" (Alan Baxter) and his British employee "Spike" (Eric Blore) secretly loading torpedoes onto a German submarine during World War II. Not long afterward, while sailing his fishing boat in the open seas, Eric notices a man clinging to a piece of wreckage from a ship that had been torpedoed two hours earlier. Upon pulling him aboard, Joe quickly recognizes him as a former police officer named "James Taggert" (John Litel), who had once investigated him for murder in New York. Although not particularly fond of him, Joe still arranges for his meals and lodging at the local hotel, but makes it known that he wants nothing to do with him from then on. What Joe doesn't realize, however, is that Taggert suspects he is hiding something and immediately begins to uncover what it is. Now, rather than reveal any more, I will just say that this movie was made right after the American involvement in World War II and, as a result, there was a great demand for films of this sort. It isn't very long (about 65 minutes) and, as one might expect, fully supports the war effort. Be that as it may, while I don't consider this to be a bad film necessarily, it clearly wasn't one of the better films made during this time, and I have rated it accordingly. Slightly below average.
Did you know
- TriviaThis film's earliest documented telecasts took place in New York City Saturday 2 October 1948 on WATV (Channel 13), in Detroit Friday 7 January 1949 on WJBK (Channel 2), and in Los Angeles Tuesday 25 July 1950 on KTLA (Channel 5).
- GoofsTaggart claimed he was not accepted in the US military. As a police detective lieutenant, he was eminently qualified to be a member of the US Army's Counterintelligence Corps and Criminal Investigation Division.
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- El submarino fantasma
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 1h 5m(65 min)
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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