Añade un argumento en tu idiomaDave Logan takes his regional Pan American airline and with vision and sometimes ruthless determination establishes pan-American and trans-Pacific routes.Dave Logan takes his regional Pan American airline and with vision and sometimes ruthless determination establishes pan-American and trans-Pacific routes.Dave Logan takes his regional Pan American airline and with vision and sometimes ruthless determination establishes pan-American and trans-Pacific routes.
- Dirección
- Guión
- Reparto principal
- Premios
- 1 premio en total
Joe King
- Mr. Pierson
- (as Joseph King)
Reseñas destacadas
This film essentially begins right after Charles Lindburgh's successful flight from New York to Paris after which an enterprising pilot by the name of "Dave Logan" (Pat O'Brien) comes up with the idea of building an airline which can deliver mail, cargo and eventually passengers from Miami to Havana. It's during this time, however, that his ambition gets the better of him and he not only alienates himself from his friends but he also loses his wife "Jean Logan" (Beverly Roberts) in the process. Yet rather than stepping back to reconsider his approach he doubles down and becomes totally obsessed with expanding his new airline even further. Now rather than reveal any more I will just say that this was an okay film for the most part but the plot relied too heavily upon creating drama between Dave Logan and everyone around him and it got rather annoying after a while. Admittedly, I thought Pat O'Brien--and to a limited extent both Humphrey Bogart (as "Hap Stuart") and the aforementioned Beverly Roberts--acquitted themselves quite well but even so the previously mentioned drama seemed a bit too contrived and for that reason I have rated this film accordingly. Average.
A no-nonsense dreamer drives his men & machines to the breaking point in an attempt to establish a transpacific route for his flying CHINA CLIPPERS.
Warner Brothers gives a rousing production to a story that is essentially, on analysis, a soap opera with wings. Based on the history of Pan American Airlines, the film is at its very best when it takes to the air, especially during the exciting prolonged climax with its race to beat the clock in the initial flight from California to Macao.
Pat O'Brien gives a typically earnest, energetic performance as the tireless & tyrannical protagonist - a man who becomes increasingly obsessed with his lofty aviation goals, no matter what the cost in personal relationships. It's difficult to like the character, but O'Brien also makes it hard not to respect him.
What is especially enjoyable in CHINA CLIPPER is to appreciate the performances of three members of the supporting cast. Henry B. Walthall, the pivotal star of silent cinema, the hero of D. W. Griffith's THE BIRTH OF A NATION (1915), plays the gentle engineer who designs the great flying ship. His haggard appearance is not a result of makeup. He was genuinely ill with influenza and he would die two months before the release of the film. He was only 58, although he looked far older. Warners rewarded him by ratcheting him down to 10th place billing.
Ross Alexander & Humphrey Bogart play two friendly, dedicated pilots who chafe under O'Brien's dictates. These young actors had very similar acting styles & screen personas and it is quite interesting to see them perform together. Their fates, however, would be very different. Alexander had the necessary talent to become a major star, but the breaks simply didn't come his way, and, his private life spiraling out of control, he would be dead less than five months after the release of CHINA CLIPPER, a suicide at 29. Bogart got the lucky breaks, and, with some good roles in the next five years, was on his way to eventually becoming a screen legend.
Pretty Marie Wilson has a comical recurring role as a ditsy blonde enamored with Alexander. Movie mavens should spot Frank Faylen in an uncredited bit part as the company's weatherman in Columbia.
Warner Brothers gives a rousing production to a story that is essentially, on analysis, a soap opera with wings. Based on the history of Pan American Airlines, the film is at its very best when it takes to the air, especially during the exciting prolonged climax with its race to beat the clock in the initial flight from California to Macao.
Pat O'Brien gives a typically earnest, energetic performance as the tireless & tyrannical protagonist - a man who becomes increasingly obsessed with his lofty aviation goals, no matter what the cost in personal relationships. It's difficult to like the character, but O'Brien also makes it hard not to respect him.
What is especially enjoyable in CHINA CLIPPER is to appreciate the performances of three members of the supporting cast. Henry B. Walthall, the pivotal star of silent cinema, the hero of D. W. Griffith's THE BIRTH OF A NATION (1915), plays the gentle engineer who designs the great flying ship. His haggard appearance is not a result of makeup. He was genuinely ill with influenza and he would die two months before the release of the film. He was only 58, although he looked far older. Warners rewarded him by ratcheting him down to 10th place billing.
Ross Alexander & Humphrey Bogart play two friendly, dedicated pilots who chafe under O'Brien's dictates. These young actors had very similar acting styles & screen personas and it is quite interesting to see them perform together. Their fates, however, would be very different. Alexander had the necessary talent to become a major star, but the breaks simply didn't come his way, and, his private life spiraling out of control, he would be dead less than five months after the release of CHINA CLIPPER, a suicide at 29. Bogart got the lucky breaks, and, with some good roles in the next five years, was on his way to eventually becoming a screen legend.
Pretty Marie Wilson has a comical recurring role as a ditsy blonde enamored with Alexander. Movie mavens should spot Frank Faylen in an uncredited bit part as the company's weatherman in Columbia.
Following the filming of Frank 'spig' Wead's successful Broadway play Ceiling Zero, Warner Brothers got one of the stars of that film Pat O'Brien, to star in a Wead screenplay about the creation of the famous China Clipper, the plane that made the first passenger run from San Francisco to the Orient. Back in the day it excited the American public no end.
Wead based his lead character on a World War I aviation hero who went into the commercial flying business, Eddie Rickenbacker. But he invested a lot of himself in O'Brien's character as well.
That's what struck me watching China Clipper today. The scenes with O'Brien and his estranged wife Beverly Roberts reminded me a whole lot of the plot for Wings of Eagles which is John Ford's biographical tribute to Spig Wead. It was like Wead himself through O'Brien was trying to justify his single minded attention to aviation to the neglect of wife and family.
Humphrey Bogart, Ross Alexander and Henry B. Walthall are O'Brien's associates. This was Walthall's farewell screen performance. He collapsed on set and died shortly thereafter. I'm not sure if the film was rewritten to accommodate Walthall's demise or his death was originally part of the story. Whatever it is, it is spookily coincidental.
Marie Wilson plays her usual dumb Dora with eyes for Ross Alexander, in this one she got a bit annoying I have to say.
Bogart was not especially fond of this film though it was a change from the gangster thugs he was doing then. He plays another flier at loggerheads with O'Brien.
The scenes involving the flights were well done, much better than in Ceiling Zero, though that had a better story.
China Clipper is a routine action adventure film from Warner Brothers, yet viewed together with Wings of Eagles it does kind of take on a whole new meaning.
Wead based his lead character on a World War I aviation hero who went into the commercial flying business, Eddie Rickenbacker. But he invested a lot of himself in O'Brien's character as well.
That's what struck me watching China Clipper today. The scenes with O'Brien and his estranged wife Beverly Roberts reminded me a whole lot of the plot for Wings of Eagles which is John Ford's biographical tribute to Spig Wead. It was like Wead himself through O'Brien was trying to justify his single minded attention to aviation to the neglect of wife and family.
Humphrey Bogart, Ross Alexander and Henry B. Walthall are O'Brien's associates. This was Walthall's farewell screen performance. He collapsed on set and died shortly thereafter. I'm not sure if the film was rewritten to accommodate Walthall's demise or his death was originally part of the story. Whatever it is, it is spookily coincidental.
Marie Wilson plays her usual dumb Dora with eyes for Ross Alexander, in this one she got a bit annoying I have to say.
Bogart was not especially fond of this film though it was a change from the gangster thugs he was doing then. He plays another flier at loggerheads with O'Brien.
The scenes involving the flights were well done, much better than in Ceiling Zero, though that had a better story.
China Clipper is a routine action adventure film from Warner Brothers, yet viewed together with Wings of Eagles it does kind of take on a whole new meaning.
CHINA CLIPPER (Warner Brothers, 1936) directed by Ray Enright, stars Pat O'Brien in another typical drama in the best Pat O'Brien tradition. With screenplay credited by Frank "Spig" Wead, CHINA CLIPPER is no story about a Chinese barber but an aviation story using plenty of aerial photography and flying time for its pilot actors. Taken from opening credits as a fictional story, it plays more like a biography of an ambitious individual minus the character's childhood story for its opening and aging climax and reminiscing of the past. Overall, an interesting tribute to vision and courage in the pioneering of international airways and the achievement of the first transpacific air route.
Though the beginning doesn't specify the year of its start, the mention of the Great War having ended nine years ago and news about Charles A. Lindburg's historic flight is obvious to historians to be 1927 and beyond. Dave Logan (Pat O'Brien), an importer for the James Horn Company, returns from an unsuccessful business trip in Shanghai via steamboat due to lateness of his arrival there. Upon his return to the states, he's greeted by his wife Jean (Beverly Roberts), whom he affectionally calls "Skippy." After watching the parade celebration of Charles Lindburg's thirty-six-hour solo flight from New York to Paris, Dave feels he can accomplish more in the aviation business by quitting his routine job under James Horn (Joseph King) to pursue a career forming his very own commercial air service. Being a flyer himself in the World War, Dave hires former aviation buddies as Tom Collins (Ross Alexander) and Bill Andrews (Alexander Cross), with B. C. Hill (Addison Richards) as financial backer and "Dad" Brunn (Henry B. Walthall) the airplane designer. Determined to pursue his dream regardless of discouragements, failures and financial disappointments, with the arrival of another aviator friend, "Hap" Stuart (Humphrey Bogart) to join forces with him, Dave intends on expanding the system forming test pilots flying from Key West to Havana, and having Dad Brunn working himself ragged designing an even bigger airplane called the China Clipper to race against time across the Pacific Ocean. With Dave becoming more ruthless and unreasonable as ever, he begins to find himself at further risk by losing both his crew and wife.
Other members of the include Joseph Crehan, Ruth Robinson, Anne Nagel and Milburn Stone. Marie Wilson adds for comedy relief as Tom's (Ross Alexander) tag-along girlfriend. Look fast for Wayne Morris (a year before his 1937 breakthrough performance as KID GALAHAD) visible as one of the commercial flyers.
Aside from being known as another one of Humphrey Bogart's early film roles before his superstardom in the 1940s, CHINA CLIPPER is also noted for the final screen appearance of silent screen actor Henry B. Walthall, having died before the film's completion. In true essence, Walthall looked tired and frail in certain scenes, which may have been true to life in the process. With good production values along and impressive supporting cast of familiar stock players, CHINA CLIPPER is an interesting 89-minute story that should have ranked among one of the finest films of the year. Instead, it's a standard production of routine material made watchable during a cold rainy afternoon or past the after-midnight hours.
Never distributed to home video but available on DVD, CHINA CLIPPER can be seen occasionally on Turner Classic Movies cable channel. (**1/2)
Though the beginning doesn't specify the year of its start, the mention of the Great War having ended nine years ago and news about Charles A. Lindburg's historic flight is obvious to historians to be 1927 and beyond. Dave Logan (Pat O'Brien), an importer for the James Horn Company, returns from an unsuccessful business trip in Shanghai via steamboat due to lateness of his arrival there. Upon his return to the states, he's greeted by his wife Jean (Beverly Roberts), whom he affectionally calls "Skippy." After watching the parade celebration of Charles Lindburg's thirty-six-hour solo flight from New York to Paris, Dave feels he can accomplish more in the aviation business by quitting his routine job under James Horn (Joseph King) to pursue a career forming his very own commercial air service. Being a flyer himself in the World War, Dave hires former aviation buddies as Tom Collins (Ross Alexander) and Bill Andrews (Alexander Cross), with B. C. Hill (Addison Richards) as financial backer and "Dad" Brunn (Henry B. Walthall) the airplane designer. Determined to pursue his dream regardless of discouragements, failures and financial disappointments, with the arrival of another aviator friend, "Hap" Stuart (Humphrey Bogart) to join forces with him, Dave intends on expanding the system forming test pilots flying from Key West to Havana, and having Dad Brunn working himself ragged designing an even bigger airplane called the China Clipper to race against time across the Pacific Ocean. With Dave becoming more ruthless and unreasonable as ever, he begins to find himself at further risk by losing both his crew and wife.
Other members of the include Joseph Crehan, Ruth Robinson, Anne Nagel and Milburn Stone. Marie Wilson adds for comedy relief as Tom's (Ross Alexander) tag-along girlfriend. Look fast for Wayne Morris (a year before his 1937 breakthrough performance as KID GALAHAD) visible as one of the commercial flyers.
Aside from being known as another one of Humphrey Bogart's early film roles before his superstardom in the 1940s, CHINA CLIPPER is also noted for the final screen appearance of silent screen actor Henry B. Walthall, having died before the film's completion. In true essence, Walthall looked tired and frail in certain scenes, which may have been true to life in the process. With good production values along and impressive supporting cast of familiar stock players, CHINA CLIPPER is an interesting 89-minute story that should have ranked among one of the finest films of the year. Instead, it's a standard production of routine material made watchable during a cold rainy afternoon or past the after-midnight hours.
Never distributed to home video but available on DVD, CHINA CLIPPER can be seen occasionally on Turner Classic Movies cable channel. (**1/2)
Aviation drama from Warner Brothers and director Ray Enright. Pilot Dave Logan (Pat O'Brien) starts a company with the intention of making transoceanic flight not only a reality, but a safe and reliable service. To this end he drives his engineers and test pilots to the brink, as well as pushing away his own wife Jean (Beverly Roberts). Also featuring Humphrey Bogart, Ross Alexander, Henry B. Walthall, Marie Wilson, Joseph Crehan, Joe King, Addison Richards, Anne Nagel, Milburn Stone, Frank Faylen, Pierre Watkin, and Wayne Morris.
This is a mediocre B-movie that will hold some interest for aviation buffs. The presentation of O'Brien's character is so off-putting as to make him unbearable, and you cheer when someone socks him in the jaw. Bogart shows some of his future promise as a cool-as-ice test pilot with an easy smile and no small amount of charm. Ross Alexander isn't bad either, playing a loyal friend to O'Brien. Alexander would come to a sad end, taking his own life less than six months after the release of this movie, at age 29. Silent screen legend Henry Walthall, playing an elder engineer affectionately called "Dad", would die of a heart attack in the middle of production, grimly mirroring a plot point in the film. Walthall was 58, but looked twenty years older. They lived rougher in those days.
This is a mediocre B-movie that will hold some interest for aviation buffs. The presentation of O'Brien's character is so off-putting as to make him unbearable, and you cheer when someone socks him in the jaw. Bogart shows some of his future promise as a cool-as-ice test pilot with an easy smile and no small amount of charm. Ross Alexander isn't bad either, playing a loyal friend to O'Brien. Alexander would come to a sad end, taking his own life less than six months after the release of this movie, at age 29. Silent screen legend Henry Walthall, playing an elder engineer affectionately called "Dad", would die of a heart attack in the middle of production, grimly mirroring a plot point in the film. Walthall was 58, but looked twenty years older. They lived rougher in those days.
¿Sabías que...?
- CuriosidadesHenry B. Walthall collapsed on the set while filming and died shortly thereafter. The script of the unfinished film was rewritten so that his character would die off-screen, a heart condition having already been established in a previously filmed scene.
- PifiasWhen the "China Clipper" is depicted as landing at Midway, there are mountains in the background. The atoll is actually very flat. Its highest elevation is 43 feet.
- Citas
Hap Stuart: [Offscreen] Watta yuh do when the wings fall off?
Dave Logan: [Not knowing who's talking to him] Take a train, sucker.
- ConexionesEdited into Fly Away Baby (1937)
- Banda sonoraThe Stars and Stripes Forever
(1896) (uncredited)
Written by John Philip Sousa
Played at the ceremony before the China Clipper's initial Pacific flight
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Detalles
- Duración1 hora 28 minutos
- Color
- Mezcla de sonido
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.37 : 1
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By what name was China Clipper (1936) officially released in Canada in English?
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