Arctic Flight

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Arctic Flight
Arctic-flight-movie-poster-1952.jpg
Directed by Lew Landers
Produced by Lindsley Parsons
Written by Robert Hill
George Bricker
Based on Shadow of the Curtain
by Ewing Scott
Starring Wayne Morris
Alan Hale Jr.
Lola Albright
Music by Edward J. Kay
Cinematography Jack Russell
Edited by Ace Herman
Production
company
Distributed by Monogram Pictures Corp.
Release dates
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  • October 19, 1952 (1952-10-19)
Running time
78 minutes
Country United States
Language English

Arctic Flight is a 78-minute 1952 drama film , directed by Lew Landers and produced by Monogram Pictures. The film stars Wayne Morris, Alan Hale Jr. and Lola Albright. Arctic Flight depicts bush pilot flying in the Arctic on the edge of the International Date Line, involving Soviet intrigue.[Note 1]

Plot

In Kotzebue, Alaska, bush pilot Mike Wein (Wayne Morris) receives a government contract to fly schoolteacher and nurse Martha Raymond (Lola Albright) to Little Diomede Island, an island two miles from the Soviet-owned Big Diomede Island. Worried that the trigger-happy guards may shoot at them, Mike lands his aircraft short of the Inuit village of Little Diomede, and transports Martha by dog sled, over the short distance remaining on the frozen Bering Strait. A romance between the two is kindled.

When Martha arrives, she is welcomed by local Catholic priest Father François (Kenneth MacDonald) and local resident Miksook (Anthony Garson). She is replacing the teacher who had wandered too close to the International Date Line that separates the two islands and was shot and killed. Flying to Nome, Mike learns he has another job, flying businessman John W. Wetherby (Alan Hale Jr.) on a polar bear hunt. Bad weather delays the hunt and Wetherby expresses an interest in visiting Little Diomede. A native girl Saranna (Carol Thurston) tells Mike that his friend Dave Karluck (Thomas Richards Sr.), has been mauled in a bear attack. Mike and Wetherby find the polar bear and Wetherby kills the animal, and proceeds to skin him. About to leave, Wetherby's wallet drops out and Mike sees that a pass to go to Soviet territory is inside the wallet. Knicked by a skinning knife wielded by Wetherby, the wounded pilot is flown back by the businessman to Little Diomede where Martha treats the wound.

Mike confides in Martha that his client did not stab him by accident, and is not who he is claiming. Martha is afraid that Mike is delirious but finding Wetherby's identification card, leads to a confrontation where Mike, coming to her rescue, is knocked out. In his haste to head out over the ice to the Soviet base on Big Diomede, Wetherby loses a packet of papers, including microfilms of defense installations in the United States and his identification card. When he tries to enter the base without an entry card, he is shot and killed by the sentries. Martha and Mike realize that Wetherby was a spy and their efforts have stopped his plan to deliver military secrets to an enemy power.

Cast

Production

File:Cessna2.JPG
The Cessna 170B was a bush plane workhorse used in Arctic Flight.

Principal photography for Arctic Flight took place from late February to early April 1952 at Little Diomede Island in Alaska and at KTTV Studios in Los Angeles. Writer Ewing Scott directed most of the Alaskan footage, but was replaced by Lew Landers after a flare-up of an old leg injury.[2] A Cessna 170B (N1470D) appeared as the bush plane the lead character flew.[3]

Reception

Arctic Flight, was primarily a B film. Aviation Film Historian Stephen Pendo characterized the Monogram films as unpretentious but with Lew Landers directing, the experienced specialist in low-cost filmmaking, there was always a good product turned out.[4] Noted Hollywood cinematographer Richard H. Kline considered Landers "... the most prolific of all directors", adept in many genres.[5]

References

Notes

  1. The area in Alaska became famous when Vice-presidential candidate Sarah Palin told ABC news "...you can actually see Russia from land here in Alaska, from an island in Alaska."[1]

Citations

  1. Cooper, Anderson. "You CAN see Russia from here!" CNN, September 30, 2008. Retrieved: November 12, 2014.
  2. "Notes: Arctic Flight (1952)." Turner Classic Movies. Retrieved: November 12, 2014.
  3. "US aircraft (Aeronca to Culver)." Aeromovies.fr. Retrieved: November 12, 2014.
  4. Pendo 1985, p. 122.
  5. Weaver 2010, p. 113.

Bibliography

  • Pendo, Stephen. Aviation in the Cinema. Lanham, Maryland: Scarecrow Press, 1985. ISBN 0-8-1081-746-2.
  • Weaver, Tom. A Sci-Fi Swarm and Horror Horde: Interviews with 62 Filmmakers. Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland & Company, 2010. ISBN 978-0-78644-658-2.

External links