Langbahn Team – Weltmeisterschaft

Escape in the Desert

Escape in the Desert
Theatrical release poster
Directed byEdward A. Blatt
Screenplay byMarvin Borowsky
Thomas Job
Produced byAlex Gottlieb
StarringJean Sullivan
Philip Dorn
Irene Manning
Helmut Dantine
Alan Hale, Sr.
Samuel S. Hinds
CinematographyRobert Burks
Edited byOwen Marks
Music byAdolph Deutsch
Production
company
Distributed byWarner Bros.
Release date
  • May 1, 1945 (1945-05-01)
Running time
79 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

Escape in the Desert is a 1945 American drama film directed by Edward A. Blatt and written by Marvin Borowsky and Thomas Job. The film stars Jean Sullivan, Philip Dorn, Irene Manning, Helmut Dantine, Alan Hale, Sr. and Samuel S. Hinds. The film was released by Warner Bros. on May 1, 1945.[1][2] The opening credits say that Escape in the Desert is adapted “from a play by Robert E Sherwood” without identifying the work: The Petrified Forest. Warner Bros. had adapted Sherwood's play for the screen in 1936.

Plot

The action takes place in the southwestern United States late in World War II. Four POWs from Nazi Germany escape American custody and eventually wind up taking over a small gas station/hotel in the desert. They plan to obtain a fueled-up vehicle and flee the country. A Dutch military pilot traveling through America, on his way to fight in the Pacific, is initially mistaken by some locals as one of the Nazis. Eventually, however, he helps lead the resistance against the Germans.

Cast

Reception

In his May 12, 1945 review, New York Times critic Bosley Crowther compared the film unfavorably with its predecessor:“Aside from the Arizona locale and a few vague theatrical landmarks, there is nothing about this picture to remind you of the play or previous film. The original found dramatic conflict between a notorious gangster "on the lam" and a disillusioned intellectual who was a veteran of the first World War. The present film sets a young Dutch flier who is hitch-hiking across the United States against a band of Nazi soldiers who have escaped from a desert prison camp. And whereas the former had something of depth and perception to it, the present is just a melodrama of the sock-and-bust-'em school. Perhaps that is all the Warners ever meant that it should be… only Samuel S. Hinds as a genial "sourdough" has real attractiveness. The climax finds the Nazis shooting it out with a sheriff's posse in Western style. But that only serves to clinch the genre of the picture, which is suspected from the start.”[3]

References