Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


AFI CATALOG OF FEATURE FILMS

THE FIRST 100 YEARS 1893–1993

Movie Title
Full page view
HISTORY

The working titles of this film wereForeign Sabotage andQ Planes. According to theVar review, it was released in England asQ Planes. The film also marked producerIrving Asher's first English production for Columbia. Modern sources credit Alexander Korda as executive producer and add Reginald Purdell, John Laurie and Pat Aherne to the cast. ...

MoreLess

The working titles of this film wereForeign Sabotage andQ Planes. According to theVar review, it was released in England asQ Planes. The film also marked producerIrving Asher's first English production for Columbia. Modern sources credit Alexander Korda as executive producer and add Reginald Purdell, John Laurie and Pat Aherne to the cast.

Less

SOURCE CITATIONS
SOURCE
DATE
PAGE
Daily Variety
30 Jun 1939
p. 3
Film Daily
19 Jun 1939
p. 11
Motion Picture Herald
29 Jul 1939
p. 67
New York Times
16 Jun 1939
p. 27
Variety
15 Mar 1939
p. 18
Variety
21 Jun 1939
p. 16
CAST
PRODUCTION CREDITS
NAME
PARENT COMPANY
NAME
CREDITED AS
CREDIT
DIRECTOR
PRODUCER
PHOTOGRAPHY
ART DIRECTORS
Asst art dir
FILM EDITORS
Supv film ed
MUSIC
SOUND
DETAILS
Alternate Titles:
Foreign Sabotage
Q Planes
Release Date:
20 June 1939
Production Date:

Copyright Info
Claimant
Date
Copyright Number
Columbia Pictures of California, Ltd.
6 June 1939
LP8890
Physical Properties:
Sound
Black and White
Duration(in mins):
78
Length(in reels):
9
Countries:
United Kingdom, United States
Language:
English
PCA No:
5391
SYNOPSIS

Major Charles Hammond of the British secret service suspects that the disappearance of a number of test planes carrying secret war department apparati is more than merely coincidence, but his suspicions are met with skepticism on the part of the aircraft manufacturers and the secret service. Meanwhile, at the Barrett and Ward aviation factory, another flight is scheduled for takeoff, despite the warnings of test pilot Tommy McVane, who also suspects sabotage. As the flight takes off and soars over the sea, a radio beam from the salvage ship Viking disables the craft's engines and sends it crashing into the water. The German agents aboard the Viking then seize the plane, only to find that the secret apparatus is not on board, having been removed by Hammond before takeoff. McVane, outraged at the disappearance of the plane, blames Barrett for failing to conduct a thorough investigation, while Hammond's sister Kay, a newspaper reporter, follows the story by going undercover as a waitress at the plant. Back at the Viking, the Baron, the ringleader of the spies, is enraged because they have failed to obtain the secret device, and orders the elimination of Jenkins, the traitor at the Barrett plant who had been selling them information. Jenkin's death brings together Hammond and McVane, who both suspect sabotage, but their investigation is cut short by the clever Baron, who instructs his men to let the test craft wash ashore, thus making the disappearance look like an accident. The Baron's plan works, and as Hammond is removed from the case, McVane is ordered to pilot the next flight. Hammond ...

MoreLess

Major Charles Hammond of the British secret service suspects that the disappearance of a number of test planes carrying secret war department apparati is more than merely coincidence, but his suspicions are met with skepticism on the part of the aircraft manufacturers and the secret service. Meanwhile, at the Barrett and Ward aviation factory, another flight is scheduled for takeoff, despite the warnings of test pilot Tommy McVane, who also suspects sabotage. As the flight takes off and soars over the sea, a radio beam from the salvage ship Viking disables the craft's engines and sends it crashing into the water. The German agents aboard the Viking then seize the plane, only to find that the secret apparatus is not on board, having been removed by Hammond before takeoff. McVane, outraged at the disappearance of the plane, blames Barrett for failing to conduct a thorough investigation, while Hammond's sister Kay, a newspaper reporter, follows the story by going undercover as a waitress at the plant. Back at the Viking, the Baron, the ringleader of the spies, is enraged because they have failed to obtain the secret device, and orders the elimination of Jenkins, the traitor at the Barrett plant who had been selling them information. Jenkin's death brings together Hammond and McVane, who both suspect sabotage, but their investigation is cut short by the clever Baron, who instructs his men to let the test craft wash ashore, thus making the disappearance look like an accident. The Baron's plan works, and as Hammond is removed from the case, McVane is ordered to pilot the next flight. Hammond refuses to quit however, and traces all the disappearances to the Viking, just as the ship has McVane's plane in its sights. After he is captured and imprisoned with the fliers from previous flights, McVane incites the pilots to break out of the hold and battle the crew of the Viking. Meanwhile, Hammond commandeers a destroyer and sails to the Viking just in time to insure a British victory.

Less

Legend
Viewed by AFI
Partially Viewed
Offscreen Credit
Name Occurs Before Title
AFI Life Achievement Award

TOP SEARCHES

High Noon

NYT articles from spring 1949 indicate that producer Stanley Kramer's company Screen Plays Corp. was to produce the film and that Mark Robson, who had directed earlier ...>>

Dancing Pirate

Onscreen credits state that this film was the first color "dancing musical," and was "filmed 100% in new Technicolor." It was Pioneer Pictures' second and last three-strip Technicolor ...>>

Becky Sharp

Although the three-strip Technicolor technique had been used previously in short and animated films and in sequences in feature films, Becky Sharp was the first complete feature-length ...>>

Winchester '73

The film opens with the following written foreword: "This is a story of the Winchester Rifle Model 1873 'The gun that won the West.' To cowman, ...>>

The Fleet's In

Monte Brice and J. Walter Ruben, who are given a story credit onscreen, actually wrote the story and scenario for the 1928 Paramount release The Fleet's In, ...>>

The American Film Institute is grateful to Sir Paul Getty KBE and the Sir Paul Getty KBE Estate for their dedication to the art of the moving image and their support for theAFI Catalog of Feature Films and without whose support AFI would not have been able to achieve this historical landmark in this epic scholarly endeavor.

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp