Forced Landing (1941 film) explained

Forced Landing
Director:Gordon Wiles
Producer:William H. Pine
Starring:Richard Arlen
Eva Gabor
J. Carrol Naish
Nils Asther
Evelyn Brent
Music:Dimitri Tiomkin
Cinematography:John Alton
Editing:Robert O. Crandall
Studio:Picture Corporation of America
Distributor:Paramount Pictures
Runtime:67 minutes
Country:United States
Language:English
Budget:$80,000[1] [2]
Gross:over $540,000

Forced Landing is a 1941 American action film directed by Gordon Wiles and distributed by Paramount Pictures. The film recounts the exploits of a pilot in Mosaque, an imaginary country in the midst of turmoil.[3] Forced Landing stars Richard Arlen, Eva Gabor, J. Carrol Naish, Nils Asther and Evelyn Brent.[4]

Plot

In faraway tropical Mosaque, as soon as American pilot Dan Kendall (Richard Arlen) joins the country's Air Corps, he is in trouble. Along with his mechanic Christmas (Mikhail Rasumny), he is thrown into the military prison. His troubles start at a cantina after buying exotic beauty Johanna Van Deuren (Eva Gabor) a drink, not realizing he has antagonized her fiancé, Colonel Jan Golas (Nils Asther). A fight breaks out, leading to the pilot's arrest.

Colonel Golas releases Dan from prison when he learns that his fiancée had nearly been run down by a car and Dan had come to her rescue. The bargain he makes with Dan is that the stranger has to resign from the military and take a job with the Mosaque Civil Airline. Golas has an ulterior motive for helping Dan, as he has been responsible for the airline being sabotaged on its last flights to bring payrolls to workers at the local fort. Unknown to him, Dan's pilot friend Petchnikoff (Harold Goodwin) lost his life in a crash engineered by Golas. Johanna, accompanied by Dan, flies to the fort to visit her sick father (Victor Varconi), only to find the disgruntled and penniless workers there are set to revolt.

Dan promises to have their pay flown to the workers within three days. When he spots his friend's aircraft on the ground, after landing and searching for Petchnikoff, Dan and Johanna are captured by Andros Banshek (J. Carrol Naish), a bandit who has been working against the government in Mosaque. Banshek is sure the two would reveal his hideout unless they are silenced. When Banshek's son Nando (Bobby Dillon) is shot during their attempt to escape, Banshek implores Dan to fly his son to a doctor. While Nando is saved, Banshek is captured in Mosaque and killed by the police.

Workers at the fort finally revolt, forcing Golas to react. Dan will fly with the payroll while Golas will fly as an escort. Johanna, afraid her father is in danger, stows away on Dan's aircraft. She is alarmed that the box containing the payroll is smoking. Dan dumps the box out of the aircraft just as it explodes. Golas then tries to shoot down Dan's aircraft but is himself downed by a box of metal parts that Dan throws out. When Golas crashes to his death, Dan brings the workers their pay and is able to quell the rebellion. The general (John Miljan) in charge of the military, absolves Banshek of his crimes and declares that he was a true patriot. Dan marries Johanna, with the newlyweds leaving Mosaque to go to the United States.

Cast

Production

Forced Landing was the second from Pine-Thomas Productions, whose first three films were all aviation dramas starring Richard Arlen. The film was shot over 12 days but involved 10 weeks of planning and three weeks of rehearsal to enable specially designed sets and a speedy shoot.[2]

Principal photography for Forced Landing took place from April 18 to early May 1941 at the Fine Arts Studios in California.[5] [6]

The aerial scenes in Forced Landing were a mix of studio footage and live action, including the opening scene that incorporated the fiery crash of a Ford Trimotor from Only Angels Have Wings (1939).[7] New aerial sequences were flown by Garland Lincoln, a pilot and supplier of aircraft for motion picture work, along with pilots Herb White, Richard Probert and Joel Thorne.[8] [9] The climactic air duel is fought between an armed Culver Dart G and a Pilgrim 100 airliner.[10]

The film "...was the first in a series of three Pine-Thomas war adventures ('Forced Landing', 'Flying Blind' and 'Submarine Alert') featuring Asther as a villainous European trying to steal American military secrets, only to be thwarted by a heroic Richard Arlen."[11]

Reception

Forced Landing earned over six times its cost.[1] The Los Angeles Times called it an "effective melodrama".[12]

References

Bibliography

External links

Notes and References

  1. https://archive.org/stream/variety151-1943-07#page/n1/mode/1up/search/%22power+dive%22 "Those two bills, Pine and Thomas, turn short-coin pix into bonanzas."
  2. Scheuer, Philip K. "Town called Hollywood." Los Angeles Times, June 1, 1941, p. C3.
  3. http://www.tcm.com/tcmdb/title/75390/Forced-Landing/notes.html "Notes: 'Forced Landing' (1941)."
  4. Chapman, John. "Looking at Hollywood." Chicago Daily Tribune, February 19, 1941, p. 18.
  5. http://www.tcm.com/tcmdb/title/75390/Forced-Landing/original-print-info.html "Original print information: 'Forced Landing' (1941)."
  6. https://archive.org/stream/variety142-1941-04#page/n222/mode/1up/search/%22pine-thomas%22 "In the clouds."
  7. Wynne 1987, p. 173.
  8. http://www.tcm.com/tcmdb/title/75390/Forced-Landing/full-credits.html "Full Credits: 'Forced Landing' (1941)."
  9. Popular Aviation, June 1937.
  10. Simpson 2001, p. 170.
  11. http://nilsasther.blogspot.ca/p/films-1941-1963.html "Later films 1941–1963."
  12. E. S. "Review: 'Forced Landing'; Spirited melodrama of aviation." Los Angeles Times July 1, 1941, p. 16.