From "The Rock" Against
The Nazi-Night Takers-Director Edward Dmytryk’s “Seven Miles From Alcatraz”
(1942)-A Film Review
DVD Review
By Sandy Salmon
Seven Miles From
Alcatraz, starring James Craig, Bonita Granville, directed by Edward Dmytryk,
1942
Who was it, Uncle Joe,
Stalin, I think who said paper will take anything written on it. Well
apparently the same thing is true for film as the film under review, a
slightly-veiled World War II propaganda piece by Edward Dmytryk in the days
when the Soviet Union was an American ally and all hands, American and Soviet
among others, were needed in the titanic struggle to smash the
Nazi-night-takers who were subjecting Europe to a thrashing. (Of course a few
years later Dmytryk when the tide turned against the Soviets in the early Cold
War days and all hands were needed against them
wound up being jailed as one of
the Hollywood Ten who were honorably sentenced for contempt for not snitching
on their fellow leftists-although he did “sing” later, sang loud to save his two
bit career). The film under review was an effort in that direction although it
was spiced up a bit as a third-rate thriller.
When the deal went down
that mention of “all hands against the Nazis” was no hyperbole as the two main
characters of this film were escapees from “the Rock,” Alcatraz, the supposedly
inescapable federal prison out in Frisco bay. Champ, played by James Craig, and
Jimbo hightailed it one foggy night and wound up seeking refuge at a lighthouse
out in the Japan currents. They take the residents of that lighthouse hostage,
including the lighthouse keeper’s fetching wholesome daughter Ann, played by
Bonita Granville, and plan their next moves (and Champ plays his hand trying to
get with Ann to keep himself occupied until shipping out time).
What the fugitives did
not know, nor did the residents, was that one of their number was a Nazi agent
using the place to work on his nefarious plans to help blow up half of Frisco
town if the opportunity presented itself. Jimbo wound up wasting that agent
without knowing what his purposes had been. Those became clear when a
threesome, two men and a woman, claimed they were stranded and sought refuge at
the lighthouse. Their real purpose was to rendezvous with a German sub in order
to get detailed plans of the layout of the city to the proper military
authorities. For most of the film Champ and Jimbo could have cared less about
what the Nazis were up to, it wasn’t their fight. After all they were
prisoners, escaped prisoners, who were looking for a getaway. They would bargain
with the devil if he could get them out. But once they became aware that the
plans would have blown the Rock and them with it they began to see the light,
began to see that they had to defend American right against the vermin.
Jimbo said it best, “they
were gangster’s but they were American gangsters” and they formed that vaunted
united front with the lighthouse residents to do the Nazi scum in. Got the information
to the right people to blow that damn Nazi sub out of the water too. See even
fugitives, low lives could contribute to the war effort. Ouch.
No comments:
Post a Comment