SOS Pacific explained

SOS Pacific
Director:Guy Green
Producer:Patrick Filmer Sankey
John G. Nasht
(as John Nasht)
Screenplay:Robert Westerby
Based On:Gilbert Thomas
(as Gilbert Travers Thomas)
(based on a story by)
Starring:Richard Attenborough
Pier Angeli
John Gregson
Eva Bartok
Eddie Constantine
Music:Georges Auric
Cinematography:Wilkie Cooper
Editing:Arthur Stevens
Color Process:Black and white
Studio:Sydney Box Associates
Remfield
Distributor:Rank Film Distributors
Runtime:91 minutes
Country:United Kingdom
Language:English

SOS Pacific is a 1959 British adventure drama film directed by Guy Green and starring Richard Attenborough, Pier Angeli, John Gregson, Eva Bartok and Eddie Constantine.[1] [2] The film was shot in black and white, but later underwent colourisation.

Plot synopsis

A flying boat is forced to ditch in the Pacific during a thunderstorm. Aboard are the owner-pilot Jack Bennett (John Gregson), the navigator Willy (Cec Linder), the flight attendant Teresa (Pier Angeli) and six passengers: a policeman, Petersen (Clifford Evans); his prisoner Mark (Eddie Constantine); Whitey Mullen (Richard Attenborough), a witness against Mark; Dr Strauss, a German scientist (Gunnar Möller); Miss Shaw, a middle-aged Englishwoman (Jean Anderson) and Maria, a young European woman (Eva Bartok).

The plane comes down near an island. The navigator has been killed by toxic gas produced when the wrong kind of extinguisher is used on an electrical fire aboard the plane but the others make it to land in two rubber dinghies. Just offshore a fleet of derelict ships is anchored. On the island are two concrete bunkers. In one, a number of goats are tethered. The other, which is lead-lined, contains cameras and measuring instruments. The cameras are trained on a device standing on a smaller island some distance away.

The castaways realise that they are in the middle of an H-Bomb testing range and that a bomb is to be detonated in a few hours.

Cast

Production

The script was originally developed by Joseph Losey and Ben Barzman which Losey called a "melodrama... intended as a warning about the dangers of the bomb and the moral consequences of exploding it." Sydney Box was to produce and Columbia agreed to finance subject to a star agreeing to play the lead. Box sent Losey to meet with Hardy Krüger who was making a film at Cambridge University called Bachelor of Hearts. Kruger agreed to make the film[3] but Box said Columbia would not approve Losey as a director because of the Hollywood blacklist. However Box had a lower budgeted film he could finance, Blind Date, and Losey made that with Kruger instead.[4]

Filming took place at Pinewood Studios with location work over five weeks shot on the Canary Islands.[5]

Richard Attenborough called it "a pretty indifferent picture" but he enjoyed working with Pier Angeli so much he invited her to co star in his and Green's next film, The Angry Silence.[6] According to Jean Anderson, Attenborough almost died filming an action sequence which rendered him unsconscious.[7]

Green later said there was "nothing remarkable" about the film.[8]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: S O S Pacific (1959). https://web.archive.org/web/20170620184550/http://www.bfi.org.uk/films-tv-people/4ce2b6b6846ae. dead. 20 June 2017. BFI.
  2. Web site: S.O.S. Pacific (1959) - Guy Green | Synopsis, Characteristics, Moods, Themes and Related. AllMovie.
  3. News: A BACHELOR OF HEARTS . . 26 . 34 . Australia, Australia . 28 January 1959 . 22 March 2023 . 48 . National Library of Australia.
  4. Book: Losey, Joseph. 169=170. Conversations with Losey. Methuen. 1985.
  5. Sevilla Crawls with Crews. 11. 6 May 1959. Variety.
  6. Book: McFarlane, Brian. An autobiography of British cinema : as told by the filmmakers and actors who made it. 235–236. 1997 .
  7. Book: 4. Sixty voices : celebrities recall the golden age of British cinema. BFI. 1992 .
  8. Web site: Interview with Guy Green side 3. British Entertainment History Project. 19 November 1991. Arnold. Schwartzman.