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Hurricane Adventure from 1979 by Jan Troell with Mia Farrow and Max von Sydow . Jan Troell's lavish disaster movie of 1979, produced by Dino de Laurentiis with music by Nino Rota In 1920 arrives Charlotte Bruckner to pacific island Pago Pago and quickly falls for the handsome chief Matangi. But her powerful father does not avoid some ugly methods to stop their love, not even trying to throw him in jail. Hunted like dogs fleeing couple. Meanwhile, a hurricane roars across the island with such force that it threatens to destroy everything in its path .... Hurricane is one of the most lavish disaster movies made and unites everyone involved Swedes with giants like producer Dino de Laurentiis (King Kong), screenwriter Lorenzo Semple Jr.. (Papillon), Oscar-winning composer Nino Rota (The Godfather) and special effects genius Glen Robinson, rewarded with six Academy Awards.
N**T
70s Disaster movie flop not that bad.
This was a huge critical and commercial "disaster"on its release in 1979.The disaster movie boom was over and most other movies of its kind released at the same period bombed aswell.Think of "Beyond the Poseidon Adventure","Meteor","When Time Ran Out" and of course "The Swarm".Massive casts and minimal box office each and every one.I like them all and had not seen "Hurricane" in years and then only on a full screen, ropey,blurry old video tape.WoW.To see it in a beautiful print like this was a whole new experience.The cinematography was stunning in places and added to the sweet romance between Mia Farrow and Dayton Kane (what happened to him).If you like a story that makes you care about the characters leading upto the big effects laden finale then this is for you.The climactic hurricane of the title is an amazing feat of old school SFX .In other words no CGI.Its all done on huge sets with real water destroying everything.Who lives?Who dies? Purchase it at a really cheap price(as I did,great bargain) and enjoy classic disaster movie clichés and effects.
M**.
Disaster island
Not often seen disaster movie good specialEffects for the time
R**Y
Five Stars
Delighted - this was to replace my VHS copy now and was at a great price.
T**R
"You see one palm tree, you've seen `em all."
"You've been playing the fool, Matangi, making cow eyes with the governor's daughter. But don't despair, there's hope for you. If foolishness was a mortal sin, Hell would have been full up years ago from overcrowding."A one-time Roman Polanski project until his, er, legal problems intervened, 1979's Hurricane may boast some arthouse talents on the credits but it's got a Mills and Boon mentality. A big budget reworking of John Ford's classic but rarely revived 30s forbidden love story cum disaster movie, it's the kind of film where the budget rarely seems to translate on screen, with $22m buying a rather second rate star cast - Mia Farrow, Jason Robards, Max Von Sydow, Timothy Bottoms and Trevor Howard, still playing the priest from Ryan's Daughter in all but name - and one of the least exciting natural disasters ever filmed. This time round rather than Jon Hall's unjustly imprisoned native sailor fighting the elements to return to wife Dorothy Lamour, it's Mia Farrow, daughter of Jason Robard's stern governor, failing to take Von Sydow's advice "In the tropics, take passion lightly and always with a grain of salt" and defying convention to fall for local chief Dayton Ka'ne. At times it's hard to tell whether Robards objects because he rather fancies his daughter himself or because their love scenes are so corny ("Marry me at once or leave my island!" "Do you hear that, gods? The high chief has spoken!"), but pretty soon he and racist Marine James Keach are sending him to certain death in prison and nature, clearly abhorring the vacuum the film exists in, gets bored and throws in a hurricane in the last half hour to try to liven things up. Nature loses.Jan Troell's unenthusiastic direction takes a tortoise and the hare approach to storytelling and a clinical, almost ant farm approach to the love story. You can almost imagine a scientist with a clipboard making notes. So disastrously short of passion it's like watching two tortoises mate, his detached style is almost heroically at odds with Lorenzo Semple's often inane, wilfully tongue-in-cheek direlogue like "It's astounding that I would ever accept love as an excuse for criminal conduct!" or "You see one palm tree, you've seen `em all." Amazingly, even a scene where a ship crashes into a church doesn't kick much life in to the picture.It's easy to see what might have appealed to Polanski - a defloration ceremony that goes violently wrong ("Don't go there, Charlotte, you wouldn't like it") and a scene where Farrow hints to her father that she'll sleep with him if he frees her lover - but the result is the kind of movie where a TV network could cut 29 minutes and nobody would complain. There are a few unintentional laughs and it's fun to catch composer Nino Rota taking his revenge on producer Dino De Laurentiis for costing him his Godfather Oscar by creeping its theme into his Hawaiian theme bar score from time to time, but it's all too easy to see why this massive money loser was so quickly forgotten - it's just dull. Even Paramount wanted nothing to do with the DVD release, sublicensing it to Legend Films, who offer a reasonable 2.35:1 transfer with only the original trailer as an extra. It's all too revealing about the film that even that can't summon up much enthusiasm until it stops showing scenes from the film and resorts to a montage of still photos to up the tempo!
N**2
Hurricane
Charlotte (Mia Farrow) travels to a Samoan island to visit her father, the governor (Jason Robards). Before long she falls in love with the beautiful native chief Matangi (gorgeous Dayton Ka'ne). Their romance is not popular. The story moves slowly and there's not much more I can tell without giving away plot points that occur more than halfway into the movie. And this is the movie's main problem. The adventure part of the movie doesn't start after well over an hour. Director Jan Troell has never been known to make fast paced movies, and this time the script is working against him. It takes a very long time before the story really takes off and by then many viewers will already have lost their interest. The location shots are beautiful and the hurricane scenes are spectacular. These help it up to a very weak three star rating.The DVD is presented in 1:78 widescreen (from 2:20 original). The 2 hour movie is divided into only 10 chapters. There are no special features except a trailer.
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