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Across the Pacific

Across the Pacific is a 1942 American spy film set on the eve of the entry of the United States into World War II. It was directed first by John Huston, then by Vincent Sherman after Huston joined the United States Army Signal Corps. It stars Humphrey Bogart, Mary Astor, and Sydney Greenstreet. Despite the title, the action never progresses across the Pacific, concluding in Panama. The original script portrayed an attempt to avert a Japanese plan to invade Pearl Harbor. When the real-life attack on Pearl Harbor occurred, production was shut down for three months, resuming on March 2, 1942, with a revised script changing the target to Panama.[4][5]

Across the Pacific
Directed byJohn Huston
Vincent Sherman
Screenplay byRichard Macaulay
Based on"Aloha Means Good-bye"
(1941 The Saturday Evening Post story)
by Robert Carson
Produced byJack Saper
Jerry Wald
StarringHumphrey Bogart
Mary Astor
Sydney Greenstreet
CinematographyArthur Edeson
Edited byFrank Magee
Music byAdolph Deutsch
Production
company
Warner Bros.
Distributed byWarner Bros.
Release date
  • September 4, 1942 (1942-09-04)
Running time
97 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$576,000[1]
Box office$1.3 million (US rentals)[2][3]
$2,375,000 (worldwide)[1]

The screenplay by Richard Macauley was an adaptation of a Saturday Evening Post serial by Robert Carson, “Aloha Means Goodbye”, published June 28–July 26, 1941.[6][7]

Warner Bros. used the same title for a 1926 silent adventure film starring Monte Blue, who has a small role in this picture. However, the plots of the two films have no similarities.

Plot edit

On November 17, 1941, on Governor's Island in New York City, Captain Rick Leland is court-martialed and discharged from the United States Army Coast Artillery Corps after he is caught stealing. He tries to join the Princess Patricia's Canadian Light Infantry but is coldly rebuffed. Ostensibly on his way to China to fight for Chiang Kai-shek, he boards a Japanese ship, the Genoa Maru, sailing from Halifax, Nova Scotia to Yokohama via the Panama Canal and Hawaii.

On board, he meets Canadian Alberta Marlow who claims to be from Medicine Hat, and a lighthearted romance begins. The other passengers are Dr. Lorenz and his servant, T. Oki. Lorenz, a professor of sociology, admires the Japanese and therefore is very unpopular in the Philippines, where he resides. Leland, in turn, makes it clear that he will fight for anyone willing to pay him enough.

During a stop in New York City, Leland is revealed as a secret agent when he reports to Colonel Hart, an undercover Army Intelligence officer. Lorenz is a known enemy spy, but Hart and Leland are uncertain about Marlow. Hart also warns him to look out for a Japanese criminal named Totsuiko. Returning to the ship, Leland surprises a Filipino assassin about to shoot Lorenz. Leland gains Lorenz's confidence by remaining indifferent when Lorenz has the man killed. Joe Totsuiko embarks as a passenger, in the guise of a wise-cracking young Nisei, and a different man returns as T. Oki. Lorenz pays Leland in advance for information concerning the military installations guarding the Panama Canal.

In Panama, the captain announces that Japanese ships are being denied entry into the Canal and must detour around Cape Horn. Leland, Marlow and Lorenz wait for another vessel at Sam's hotel. Crates addressed to Dan Morton, Bountiful Plantation, are unloaded. Lorenz demands that Leland procure up-to-date schedules for the air patrol. On December 6, 1941, Leland meets with his local contact, A. V. Smith, and convinces him to provide real timetables, as Lorenz would recognize fakes. Smith adds that plantation owner Dan Morton is a rich dipsomaniac and that Marlow is a buyer for Rogers Fifth Avenue in New York City.

Leland hands over the schedules and is brutally beaten. He revives several hours later and immediately calls Smith, warning him to change the patrol schedule. Smith is killed after Leland hangs up. Lorenz and Marlow are gone. Sam sends Leland to a cinema, where a man whispers, "Go Bountiful Plantation..." and is killed. At the plantation, Leland sees a torpedo bomber being prepared. He is captured and brought to Lorenz. Also present are Totsuiko, Marlow, Dan Morton, and the second T. Oki, who turns out to be a Japanese prince and pilot. Morton, whose weakness was exploited by the enemy agents to gain a base for their activities, is Marlow's father. Her only stake in the affair is his welfare.

Lorenz reveals that Smith is dead, so the prince can destroy the Panama Canal locks without interference. Totsuiko is left to guard the prisoners. When Morton staggers to his feet, Totsuiko shoots him, but that enables Leland to overpower Totsuiko. Outside, Leland seizes a machine gun, shoots down the bomber as it is taking off, and dispatches Lorenz's henchmen. In the house, a defeated Lorenz attempts to commit seppuku, but his nerve fails him. He begs Leland to kill him. Leland refuses, telling Lorenz he "has a date with Army Intelligence." Leland and Marlow clasp hands and look up at a sky filling with American planes.

Cast edit

 
Alberta Marlow (Mary Astor) and Rick Leland (Humphrey Bogart) aboard the Genoa Maru.

Production edit

On Dec. 20, 1941, The New York Times reported the sale of Carson's story for $12,500.[8]

After the hiatus caused by the attack on Pearl Harbor, production resumed on March 2, 1942, and filming continued through May 2, 1942 (including retakes). The film opened in New York City on September 4, 1942.[9]

Colonel J. G. Taylor was technical advisor for the court-martial scene that opens the film.[5]

TCM's Bret Wood reports that John Huston created the effect of being on the ocean by having the set of the ship's deck built on a platform supported by hydraulic lifts to keep everything moving. In some of the interior shots, “The camera subtly, almost imperceptibly, edges toward and away from the actors, providing a vaguely disorienting effect that well serves the film's ever-shifting moral ground.”[10]

Music edit

Adolph Deutsch turned the Engineers Hymn[11] (as played to the tune of “The Son of a Gambolier”) into an evocative theme for the character of Richard Leland. We also hear a few poignant measures of West Point's “Alma Mater ”[12][13] after the court-martial, when Leland looks at his class ring and puts it back on his finger.

Changing directors edit

Director John Huston was called up by the Army Service Forces Signal Corps during filming. In a later interview he claimed that he deliberately left Leland tied up and held at gunpoint in a cliff-hanger set up for his replacement to solve.[5] Vincent Sherman took over on April 22, 1942,[5] and finished directing the film (minus the script that Huston had taken with him, explaining "Bogie will know how to get out"). Afterwards, Huston declared that Sherman's solution to the problem "lacked credibility“.[14] The studio's solution to the problem was to discard Huston's footage of the impossible dilemma and write a new scenario.[10]

Effect of internment edit

TCM.com reports that Mary Astor later recalled that the constantly expanding internment of Japanese Americans ordered by President Franklin D. Roosevelt on March 3, 1942, deprived Japanese actors of their jobs on the film. The file on Across the Pacific in the USC Cinema-Television Library shows that ethnically Chinese actors were cast as the Japanese characters from the beginning. Aside from Technical Advisor Dan Fujiwara and “a few bit players”, there were no ethnically Japanese participants in Across the Pacific.[5]

Reception edit

Variety commented, “Although the picture does not quite hit the edge-of-seat tension engendered by Maltese Falcon, it's a breezy and fast-paced melodrama. Huston directs deftly from thrill-packed script by Macauley.”[6]

On Sept. 5, 1942, Bosley Crowther of The New York Times had high praise for “young Mr. Huston... he has made a spy picture this time which tingles with fearful uncertainties and glints with the sheen of blue steel... (taking) his audience right into the picture by artful camera work dependent on close-ups... He never lets you know for certain just which way a character is going to jump...With these deceptive characters, with excellent dialogue and realistic mise en scéne, Mr. Huston has given the Warners a delightfully fear-jerking picture. It's like having a knife at your ribs for an hour and a half.”[15]

Radio adaptation edit

Across the Pacific was adapted as a radio play on The Screen Guild Theater's January 25, 1943, broadcast with Bogart, Astor, and Greenstreet reprising their film roles.

Real unit edit

The opening scene shows 198th Coast Artillery Command at Governors Island, New York City. In fact the 198th Coast Artillery Regiment was stationed at Wilmington, Delaware.[16]

Box office edit

According to Warner Bros records, the film earned $1,381,000 domestically and $994,000 in overseas markets.[1]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Warner Bros financial information in The William Shaefer Ledger. See Appendix 1, Historical Journal of Film, Radio and Television, (1995) 15:sup1, 1-31 p 23 DOI: 10.1080/01439689508604551
  2. ^ "101 Pix Gross in Millions" Variety 6 Jan 1943 p 58
  3. ^ Thomas Schatz, Boom and Bust: American Cinema in the 1940s Uni of California Press, 1999 p 218
  4. ^ Astor, Mary, A Life on Film, Dell Publishing 1967, New York, p. 157
  5. ^ a b c d e "Across the Pacific (1942) - Notes - TCM.com". Turner Classic Movies. Retrieved 2020-04-01.
  6. ^ a b "Across the Pacific". Variety. 1942-01-01. Retrieved 2020-04-01.
  7. ^ "Across the Pacific (1942) - Screenplay Info - TCM.com". Turner Classic Movies. Retrieved 2020-04-01.
  8. ^ "SCREEN NEWS HERE AND IN HOLLYWOOD; ' Aloha Means Goodbye' Sold to Warners for $12,500 -- Mary Astor in Picture WOLF MAN' OPENS TODAY Lon Chaney Jr. in Melodrama at Rialto -- 'No Hands on the Clock' Arrives at Globe". The New York Times. 1941-12-20. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2020-04-01.
  9. ^ "Across the Pacific (1942) - Overview - TCM.com". Turner Classic Movies. Retrieved 2020-04-01.
  10. ^ a b "Across the Pacific (1942) - Articles - TCM.com". Turner Classic Movies. Retrieved 2020-04-02.
  11. ^ Also known as “We are, we are, we are, we are, we are the Engineers”
  12. ^ "Alma Mater. The Cadet Glee Club". www.bing.com. Retrieved 2020-04-02.
  13. ^ "West Point Association of Graduates". www.westpointaog.org. Retrieved 2020-04-02.
  14. ^ Huston, John - "An Open Book", Alfred A. Knopf, Inc. 1980, New York, p88
  15. ^ Crowther, Bosley (1942-09-05). "THE SCREEN; 'Across the Pacific,' Featuring Humphrey Bogart and Sydney Greenstreet in a Tingling Thriller, Arrives at Strand". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2020-04-01.
  16. ^ 198th Signal Battalion Lineage

External links edit

across, pacific, 1926, film, 1926, film, 1942, american, film, entry, united, states, into, world, directed, first, john, huston, then, vincent, sherman, after, huston, joined, united, states, army, signal, corps, stars, humphrey, bogart, mary, astor, sydney, . For the 1926 film see Across the Pacific 1926 film Across the Pacific is a 1942 American spy film set on the eve of the entry of the United States into World War II It was directed first by John Huston then by Vincent Sherman after Huston joined the United States Army Signal Corps It stars Humphrey Bogart Mary Astor and Sydney Greenstreet Despite the title the action never progresses across the Pacific concluding in Panama The original script portrayed an attempt to avert a Japanese plan to invade Pearl Harbor When the real life attack on Pearl Harbor occurred production was shut down for three months resuming on March 2 1942 with a revised script changing the target to Panama 4 5 Across the PacificDirected byJohn HustonVincent ShermanScreenplay byRichard MacaulayBased on Aloha Means Good bye 1941 The Saturday Evening Post story by Robert CarsonProduced byJack SaperJerry WaldStarringHumphrey BogartMary AstorSydney GreenstreetCinematographyArthur EdesonEdited byFrank MageeMusic byAdolph DeutschProductioncompanyWarner Bros Distributed byWarner Bros Release dateSeptember 4 1942 1942 09 04 Running time97 minutesCountryUnited StatesLanguageEnglishBudget 576 000 1 Box office 1 3 million US rentals 2 3 2 375 000 worldwide 1 The screenplay by Richard Macauley was an adaptation of a Saturday Evening Post serial by Robert Carson Aloha Means Goodbye published June 28 July 26 1941 6 7 Warner Bros used the same title for a 1926 silent adventure film starring Monte Blue who has a small role in this picture However the plots of the two films have no similarities Contents 1 Plot 2 Cast 3 Production 3 1 Music 3 2 Changing directors 3 3 Effect of internment 4 Reception 5 Radio adaptation 6 Real unit 7 Box office 8 References 9 External linksPlot editOn November 17 1941 on Governor s Island in New York City Captain Rick Leland is court martialed and discharged from the United States Army Coast Artillery Corps after he is caught stealing He tries to join the Princess Patricia s Canadian Light Infantry but is coldly rebuffed Ostensibly on his way to China to fight for Chiang Kai shek he boards a Japanese ship the Genoa Maru sailing from Halifax Nova Scotia to Yokohama via the Panama Canal and Hawaii On board he meets Canadian Alberta Marlow who claims to be from Medicine Hat and a lighthearted romance begins The other passengers are Dr Lorenz and his servant T Oki Lorenz a professor of sociology admires the Japanese and therefore is very unpopular in the Philippines where he resides Leland in turn makes it clear that he will fight for anyone willing to pay him enough During a stop in New York City Leland is revealed as a secret agent when he reports to Colonel Hart an undercover Army Intelligence officer Lorenz is a known enemy spy but Hart and Leland are uncertain about Marlow Hart also warns him to look out for a Japanese criminal named Totsuiko Returning to the ship Leland surprises a Filipino assassin about to shoot Lorenz Leland gains Lorenz s confidence by remaining indifferent when Lorenz has the man killed Joe Totsuiko embarks as a passenger in the guise of a wise cracking young Nisei and a different man returns as T Oki Lorenz pays Leland in advance for information concerning the military installations guarding the Panama Canal In Panama the captain announces that Japanese ships are being denied entry into the Canal and must detour around Cape Horn Leland Marlow and Lorenz wait for another vessel at Sam s hotel Crates addressed to Dan Morton Bountiful Plantation are unloaded Lorenz demands that Leland procure up to date schedules for the air patrol On December 6 1941 Leland meets with his local contact A V Smith and convinces him to provide real timetables as Lorenz would recognize fakes Smith adds that plantation owner Dan Morton is a rich dipsomaniac and that Marlow is a buyer for Rogers Fifth Avenue in New York City Leland hands over the schedules and is brutally beaten He revives several hours later and immediately calls Smith warning him to change the patrol schedule Smith is killed after Leland hangs up Lorenz and Marlow are gone Sam sends Leland to a cinema where a man whispers Go Bountiful Plantation and is killed At the plantation Leland sees a torpedo bomber being prepared He is captured and brought to Lorenz Also present are Totsuiko Marlow Dan Morton and the second T Oki who turns out to be a Japanese prince and pilot Morton whose weakness was exploited by the enemy agents to gain a base for their activities is Marlow s father Her only stake in the affair is his welfare Lorenz reveals that Smith is dead so the prince can destroy the Panama Canal locks without interference Totsuiko is left to guard the prisoners When Morton staggers to his feet Totsuiko shoots him but that enables Leland to overpower Totsuiko Outside Leland seizes a machine gun shoots down the bomber as it is taking off and dispatches Lorenz s henchmen In the house a defeated Lorenz attempts to commit seppuku but his nerve fails him He begs Leland to kill him Leland refuses telling Lorenz he has a date with Army Intelligence Leland and Marlow clasp hands and look up at a sky filling with American planes Cast edit nbsp Alberta Marlow Mary Astor and Rick Leland Humphrey Bogart aboard the Genoa Maru Humphrey Bogart as Rick Leland Mary Astor as Alberta Marlow Sydney Greenstreet as Dr Lorenz Kam Tong as T Oki Lorenz s Servant Charles Halton as A V Smith Victor Sen Yung as Joe Totsuiko Roland Got as Sugi Lee Tung Foo as Hotel Owner Sam Wing On Rick s friend Frank Wilcox as Captain Morrison Paul Stanton as Colonel Hart Lester Matthews as Canadian Major John Hamilton as Court Martial President Roland Drew as Captain Harkness Monte Blue as Dan Morton Chester Gan as Captain Higoto Richard Loo as First Officer Miyuma Keye Luke as Steamship Office Clerk Rudy Robles as A Filipino Assassin Spencer Chan as Chief Engineer Mitsuko Frank Mayo as Trial Judge Advocate Philip Ahn as Man in Theatre uncredited Anthony Caruso as Taxi driver uncredited William Hopper as Orderly uncredited Jack Mower as Major uncredited Production editOn Dec 20 1941 The New York Times reported the sale of Carson s story for 12 500 8 After the hiatus caused by the attack on Pearl Harbor production resumed on March 2 1942 and filming continued through May 2 1942 including retakes The film opened in New York City on September 4 1942 9 Colonel J G Taylor was technical advisor for the court martial scene that opens the film 5 TCM s Bret Wood reports that John Huston created the effect of being on the ocean by having the set of the ship s deck built on a platform supported by hydraulic lifts to keep everything moving In some of the interior shots The camera subtly almost imperceptibly edges toward and away from the actors providing a vaguely disorienting effect that well serves the film s ever shifting moral ground 10 Music edit Adolph Deutsch turned the Engineers Hymn 11 as played to the tune of The Son of a Gambolier into an evocative theme for the character of Richard Leland We also hear a few poignant measures of West Point s Alma Mater 12 13 after the court martial when Leland looks at his class ring and puts it back on his finger Changing directors edit Director John Huston was called up by the Army Service Forces Signal Corps during filming In a later interview he claimed that he deliberately left Leland tied up and held at gunpoint in a cliff hanger set up for his replacement to solve 5 Vincent Sherman took over on April 22 1942 5 and finished directing the film minus the script that Huston had taken with him explaining Bogie will know how to get out Afterwards Huston declared that Sherman s solution to the problem lacked credibility 14 The studio s solution to the problem was to discard Huston s footage of the impossible dilemma and write a new scenario 10 Effect of internment edit TCM com reports that Mary Astor later recalled that the constantly expanding internment of Japanese Americans ordered by President Franklin D Roosevelt on March 3 1942 deprived Japanese actors of their jobs on the film The file on Across the Pacific in the USC Cinema Television Library shows that ethnically Chinese actors were cast as the Japanese characters from the beginning Aside from Technical Advisor Dan Fujiwara and a few bit players there were no ethnically Japanese participants in Across the Pacific 5 Reception editVariety commented Although the picture does not quite hit the edge of seat tension engendered by Maltese Falcon it s a breezy and fast paced melodrama Huston directs deftly from thrill packed script by Macauley 6 On Sept 5 1942 Bosley Crowther of The New York Times had high praise for young Mr Huston he has made a spy picture this time which tingles with fearful uncertainties and glints with the sheen of blue steel taking his audience right into the picture by artful camera work dependent on close ups He never lets you know for certain just which way a character is going to jump With these deceptive characters with excellent dialogue and realistic mise en scene Mr Huston has given the Warners a delightfully fear jerking picture It s like having a knife at your ribs for an hour and a half 15 Radio adaptation editAcross the Pacific was adapted as a radio play on The Screen Guild Theater s January 25 1943 broadcast with Bogart Astor and Greenstreet reprising their film roles Real unit editThe opening scene shows 198th Coast Artillery Command at Governors Island New York City In fact the 198th Coast Artillery Regiment was stationed at Wilmington Delaware 16 Box office editAccording to Warner Bros records the film earned 1 381 000 domestically and 994 000 in overseas markets 1 References edit a b c Warner Bros financial information in The William Shaefer Ledger See Appendix 1 Historical Journal of Film Radio and Television 1995 15 sup1 1 31 p 23 DOI 10 1080 01439689508604551 101 Pix Gross in Millions Variety 6 Jan 1943 p 58 Thomas Schatz Boom and Bust American Cinema in the 1940s Uni of California Press 1999 p 218 Astor Mary A Life on Film Dell Publishing 1967 New York p 157 a b c d e Across the Pacific 1942 Notes TCM com Turner Classic Movies Retrieved 2020 04 01 a b Across the Pacific Variety 1942 01 01 Retrieved 2020 04 01 Across the Pacific 1942 Screenplay Info TCM com Turner Classic Movies Retrieved 2020 04 01 SCREEN NEWS HERE AND IN HOLLYWOOD Aloha Means Goodbye Sold to Warners for 12 500 Mary Astor in Picture WOLF MAN OPENS TODAY Lon Chaney Jr in Melodrama at Rialto No Hands on the Clock Arrives at Globe The New York Times 1941 12 20 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2020 04 01 Across the Pacific 1942 Overview TCM com Turner Classic Movies Retrieved 2020 04 01 a b Across the Pacific 1942 Articles TCM com Turner Classic Movies Retrieved 2020 04 02 Also known as We are we are we are we are we are the Engineers Alma Mater The Cadet Glee Club www bing com Retrieved 2020 04 02 West Point Association of Graduates www westpointaog org Retrieved 2020 04 02 Huston John An Open Book Alfred A Knopf Inc 1980 New York p88 Crowther Bosley 1942 09 05 THE SCREEN Across the Pacific Featuring Humphrey Bogart and Sydney Greenstreet in a Tingling Thriller Arrives at Strand The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2020 04 01 198th Signal Battalion LineageExternal links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Across the Pacific Across the Pacific at the TCM Movie Database Across the Pacific at the American Film Institute Catalog Across the Pacific at AllMovie Across the Pacific at IMDb nbsp Across the Pacific on Screen Guild Theater January 25 1943 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Across the Pacific amp oldid 1181352972, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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