Advertisement
Guest User

South Sea Woman Hd Mp4 Download

a guest
Sep 18th, 2018
62
0
Never
Not a member of Pastebin yet? Sign Up, it unlocks many cool features!
text 5.99 KB | None | 0 0
  1.  
  2.  
  3. ********************
  4. South Sea Woman Hd Mp4 Download
  5. http://urllio.com/r0iek
  6. (Copy & Paste link)
  7. ********************
  8.  
  9.  
  10.  
  11.  
  12.  
  13.  
  14.  
  15.  
  16.  
  17.  
  18.  
  19.  
  20.  
  21.  
  22.  
  23.  
  24.  
  25.  
  26.  
  27.  
  28.  
  29.  
  30.  
  31.  
  32.  
  33.  
  34.  
  35.  
  36.  
  37.  
  38.  
  39.  
  40.  
  41.  
  42.  
  43.  
  44.  
  45.  
  46.  
  47.  
  48.  
  49.  
  50.  
  51.  
  52.  
  53.  
  54.  
  55. AWOL marine Sgt. Jim O'Hearn is court-martialed for a variety of offenses that carry 143 years in the stockade or the death penalty but refuses to aid in his own defense.
  56. Marine Sergeant James O'Hearn is being tried at the San Diego Marine base for desertion, theft, scandalous conduct and destruction of property in time of war. He refuses to testify or plead guilty or not guilty to the charges. Showgirl Ginger Martin takes the stand against his protest. She testifies O'Hearn won't talk because he is protecting the name of his pal, Marine Private Davey White. Ginger tells how she, broke and stranded, met the two marines in Shanghai two weeks before Pearl Harbor. White proposes marriage so that Ginger can be evacuated from China as his wife. Before the ceremony, the two Marines get into a fight with the natives and escape with Ginger aboard a small motor boat. They wind up in Namou, a Vichy French island, and are quartered in a run-down hotel. O'Hearn discovers a Nazi yacht delivering radar supplies to the island, and plans to seize it with the help of the Free French. White refuses to join and says he is deserting and intends to remain on the island with Ginger, who calls him a coward. O'Hearn forces White on board the commandeered vessel bound for Guadalcanal.
  57. In 1944 U.S. Marine Master Gunnery Sergeant James O&#39;Hearn is facing a court martial for desertion, theft, scandalous conduct and destruction of property, charges which in time of war carry the death penalty. (&quot;Scandalous conduct&quot; in this context means sex outside marriage; if that were to be regarded as a capital offence under military law I suspect that the fighting strength of most of the world&#39;s armies would be drastically reduced overnight). <br/><br/>The above might suggest that this is a serious courtroom drama along the lines of &quot;The Caine Mutiny&quot;. Admittedly, the film starts off in serious vein, but as soon as Ginger Martin (she with whom O&#39;Hearn allegedly conducted himself scandalously) takes the stand seriousness goes out of the window and it descends into ridiculous comedy.<br/><br/>Ginger is presumably the &quot;South Sea Woman&quot; of the title, but she is actually a white American rather than a Polynesian and only finds herself in the South Seas by chance. When O&#39;Hearn first meets her she is working as a showgirl at a nightclub in Shanghai, where his regiment is stationed, and is the girlfriend of his friend Private Davy White. An attempt by White to slip away to marry Ginger leads to the three finding themselves adrift at sea on a small motor boat. In a series of increasingly farcical misadventures, in the course of which they inadvertently commit the acts which will form the basis of the charges against O&#39;Hearn, they are rescued by a Chinese junk and eventually cast away on the French-ruled island of Namou. As the Governor of Namou is pro-Vichy, and as the attack on Pearl Harbor has now brought America into the war, the two Marines have to pretend to be deserters in order to avoid being interned. White and Ginger attempt to marry several times, but are always frustrated. <br/><br/>It is at this point that the film changes direction again, largely abandoning comedy and turning into a patriotic wartime adventure as O&#39;Hearn and White discover a fiendish Nazi plot and decide to take action to thwart it, to seize a boat and to rejoin the Marines who are fighting the Japanese at Guadalcanal. <br/><br/>Mixing genres in this way is often a risky business, the risk being that the resulting film can end up as neither fish nor flesh nor fowl nor good red herring, or in this case neither drama nor comedy nor action. I don&#39;t think there was ever any possibility of this film being a sort of &quot;Caine Mutiny Court Martial&quot;, but it could certainly have been made either as a comedy about the adventures of a pair of bungling Marines and a girl or as a standard gung-ho action war film about two heroic Marines with a sub-plot about their love-interest. <br/><br/>The attempt to make the film as a combination of these two approaches simply results in a misbegotten dog&#39;s breakfast, a film which is not very amusing when it tries to be a comedy and not very exciting when it tries to be a wartime adventure. About all one can say for it is that Virginia Mayo looks lovely, as she normally did. <br/><br/>This is not quite Burt Lancaster&#39;s worst movie; he normally saved his worst for those occasions, mostly in the sixties and seventies, when he allowed his political judgement to overcome his artistic judgement and ended up playing a villainous right-wing fanatic in turgid, paranoid left-wing thrillers like &quot;Executive Action&quot; or &quot;The Cassandra Crossing&quot;. It is not, however, one of his better ones, and is one that is probably best forgotten by all but the most obsessive Lancaster fans. 4/10
  58. The Marines have landed! &quot;Rhubarb&quot; director Arthur Lubin&#39;s wartime comic escapade &quot;South Sea Woman&quot; with Burt Lancaster and Chuck Connors unfolds ostensibly as a military court-martial melodrama interspersed with flashbacks as two agile Jarheads vye for the affections of beautiful Virginia Mayo. This 1953, black &amp; white, 99-minute, Warner Brothers&#39; theatrical release teems with action galore in those flashback sequences as our heroes tangle with the Japanese Navy during the Guadalcanal campaign in the South Pacific. Lubin doesn&#39;t waste a second of those 99-minutes and &quot;Stalag 17&quot; scenarist Edwin Blum doesn&#39;t like the exposition get in the way of the action in Earl Baldwin and Stanley Shapiro&#39;s adaptation of William Rankin&#39;s stage play. Actually, it appears as if this patriotic World War II actioneer was lensed by three-time Oscar nominee Ted McCord of &quot;The Treasure of the Sierra Madre&quot; fame.
  59.  
  60. a5c7b9f00b
Advertisement
Add Comment
Please, Sign In to add comment
Advertisement