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South Pacific (Mitzi Gaynor)

Directed by
   Joshua Logan

Writing credits
   Oscar Hammerstein II (play)
   Joshua Logan (play)
 

 
Genre: Musical / Romance

Tagline: There is nothing you can name that is anything like... [South Pacific]

Plot Summary: It is 1943 and the United States Navy has established several bases in the Solomon Islands, in preparation for an invasion towards New Guinea and the Central Pacific. On one such island lives a French planter named Emile de Becque, whom the Navy wishes to employ as a scout to nearby Japanese held islands. To accomplish this task, de Becque is approached by a US Navy nurse named Nellie Forbush. Amidst an outstanding musical score, and breathtaking scenery, the drama of "South Pacific" unfolds.

User Comments: Josh Logan's colour-filter paradise

User Rating:  6.6/10 (1,395 votes) 

 
Cast overview, first billed only:
Rossano Brazzi .... Emile de Becque
Mitzi Gaynor .... Ens. Nellie Forbush
John Kerr .... Lt. Joseph Cable
Ray Walston .... Luther Billis
Juanita Hall .... Bloody Mary
France Nuyen .... Liat
Russ Brown .... Capt. George Brackett
Jack Mullaney .... The Professor
Ken Clark .... Stewpot
Floyd Simmons .... Cmdr. Bill Harbison
Candace Lee .... Ngana
Warren Hsieh .... Jerome
Tom Laughlin .... Lt. Buzz Adams
Giorgio Tozzi .... Emile de Becque (singing voice)
Francis Kahele .... Henry - Emile's Servant
  

Runtime: 151 min / 171 min (roadshow version)
Country: USA
Language: English
Color: Color (Technicolor)
Sound Mix: 4-Track Stereo (35 mm mag-optical prints) / 70 mm 6-Track (70 mm prints) / Mono (35 mm optical prints)
Certification: Canada:G / Finland:K-8 / Sweden:Btl / UK:U

Trivia: Joshua Logan hoped to soften the effect by filming several scenes through colored filters.

User Comments:    
     I first saw South Pacific when it was released in 1958 at the age of 10, and remember being totally overwhelmed by the orchestrations, performances and photography. Over the years I have regularly heard the film trashed by critics and many members of the public, so I was curious to see how I would respond to it now when I recently bought the video. Well, maybe it's just me, but I found the film as thrilling and beautiful as I did forty years ago. I agree with everyone else that it was a mistake to use those colored filters in many of the sequences, but the film still packs a heck of an emotional whallop, and I think along with The King and I stands out as the most successful of the Rogers and Hammerstein shows put on film. The weakest of the cast is John Kerr, who is somewhat wooden; however, Juanita Hall is magnificent as Bloody Mary (she will never be surpassed in the role she created on Broadway), Rossano Brazzi is thoroghly convincing as Emille DeBeque (even if he was dubbed by Giorgio Tozzi), and Mitzi Gaynor gives an unforgettable performance as Nelly Forbrush. Of all of the criticism one hears of South Pacific, to me the most puzzling is the bashing of Mitzi Gaynor, who to me is not only excellent but perfection in the role. I realize a lot of this probably stems from anger that Mary Martin didn't get the role and is basically sour grapes, but the fact is Ms. Martin was too old to be convincing in 1958. The scenes in which Ms. Gaynor struggles with her small-town prejudices are moving and very real, and when Bloody Mary brings Liat to her to find Lieutenant Cable, who has been killed, it breaks one's heart. Anyway, the movie still knocks me out, even if that makes me, as Nelly Forbrush calls herself, a "knucklehead." The incredible photography, gorgeous music, and theme of the need to triumph over bigotry which is still so relevant even today, makes this film a 5-star winner in my book. As trite as it sounds, "They don't make 'em like that anymore!"

UPC 086162108648