Desperate Cargo (1941) Poster

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5/10
"Well, first we have men and no tickets, now we have tickets and no men."
classicsoncall8 August 2007
Warning: Spoilers
I kept picturing what an effectively done remake of this movie today might come up with, because it had all the neat elements needed for a thriller combining air travelers trapped with gangsters in a confined space with no way out. But in the 1940's it seems, and even later, there wasn't very much in the way of creativity to keep the suspense going for a sustained period of time. Can you imagine a henchman any more bumbling than Ryan (Richard Clarke) getting distracted by a pretty face, or losing a gun in his very first skirmish? And he came highly recommended!

"Desperate Cargo" actually isn't all that bad, though the print I viewed was distractingly full of annoying jump cuts and quick scene changes. Most times continuity wasn't lost, but you had conversations sometimes interrupted in mid sentence. It was amusing to hear the island town of Puerta Nueve pronounced differently by at least three characters in the story.

Ralph Byrd heads up the cast as purser Tony Bronson on a Trans-Caribbean Airways cruiser, quickly paired off with Ann Howard (Julie Duncan), one half of a singing sister act, the other half being Peggy Morton (Carol Hughes). You know, it would have been a nice touch if they actually got to do a number in the picture, I kept waiting for one. I really couldn't wrap my mind around the story's romantic angle for her and newspaper reporter Jim Halsey (Jack Mulhall), but let's give credit to Halsey for trying. It seems I. Stanford Jolley found some time in between a corral full of Westerns to appear here as the lead villain Carter; I liked the wheel chair gimmick, nice touch.

All in all, as another reviewer on this board has noted, the film is largely forgettable once it's over, but the ride to the finale is entertaining enough. I've only seen one of Ralph Byrd's 'Dick Tracy' films, but he has the distinction, through no fault of his own, in having appeared in one of the movies on my all time Top Ten Worst list - "Blake of Scotland Yard". If you're faced with a decision, go with "Desperate Cargo".
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4/10
A desperate hour of mediocre entertainment.
mark.waltz15 April 2020
Warning: Spoilers
This Producers Releasing Corporation poverty row action film starts off very slowly with half an hour leading up to where the exciting points start. The first half deals with two women (Carol Hughes and Julie Dumcan) preparing to return to New York by clipper ship and getting to know officer Ralph Byrd while criminals nearby plot to hijack the ship. The first half is nothing really but a bunch of squabbles by the girls and various men trying to get their attention and schemes, and when the action finally does hit in the last half, the audience needs to be jogged awake. It is noisy and frenetic and frustrating in parts, and that makes it difficult to be an enjoyable time filler even when the plot does set sail. The cast gives their all, but they are stuck with a meandering script that doesn't make this an easy film to really invest any thought into. This is instantly forgettable with the hour lost regrettable.
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5/10
Interesting but has its stupid moments.
DigitalRevenantX712 July 2017
Warning: Spoilers
A gang of thieves led by a former pilot named Professor Carter hijack the Trans-Caribbean Airways seaplane known as the "Caribbean Cruiser" when it is making its way to Miami. Aboard the plane, the company's purser Tony Bronson, who has been given a lifeline after getting thrown in jail for a barroom brawl after discovering that his new girlfriend is a gold digger who conned him for a plane ticket to New York, is forced to help the gang steal the safe. Carter shoots the navigator & co-pilot dead & locks the crew & passengers in their cabins. Bronson is left alone in case he might become useful. Indeed Bronson attempts to stop the crooks by stealing one of their pistols.

Desperate Cargo is an ancient crime thriller made during World War II. It is directed by William "One Shot" Beaudine, known for his work on The Green Hornet & also directing the horror-Western Billy the Kid versus Dracula. The plot is taken from a magazine serial written four years earlier.

The film is an interesting heist thriller that has some reasonable excitement but is nearly sunk by the flat dramatics & cheap comedy angle that precedes the actual hijack. The theatrics exhibited by Julie Duncan & Carol Hughes as a pair of gold diggers who con hero Ralph Byrd for a pair of airline tickets are stupid & don't serve the story too well. It is a known fact that most, if not all, thrillers during the 1930s & 1940s had comedy routines forced onto them to suit the era, something that dates them badly when seen today. In its defence, Desperate Cargo is okay when seen against this backdrop but the actual heist, when it does occur, is a bit too low-key to actually work – the robbery needed more room in order to work properly. Having said that, the film has some routine fights & the scene where Byrd sneaks out of the plane in order to open the cargo compartment & free his fellow crew while the passengers keep the criminals at bay with their captured pistol is the highlight of the film.
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The Last Part is Not Bad
Snow Leopard13 January 2006
After a slow-moving and sometimes aimless first half, the last part of this B-feature is not bad, with some good action and suspense. The likable Ralph Byrd stars in one of his better non-Dick Tracy roles, and Jack Mulhall helps out a little as a reporter. The last part also features an interesting setting on a seaplane, where a series of tense confrontations takes place.

Byrd plays one of several persons waiting in a Caribbean port for the 'Caribbean Cruiser' to arrive. By the time it does, a lot of tensions and possibilities have been developed. A gang of criminals is plotting to take over the ship and rob it, while Byrd's character, the cruiser's new purser, has gone through a romantic disappointment with one of the prospective passengers and has gotten into trouble in a bar.

Unfortunately, the movie takes a long time to set up all this, and it is sometimes muddled as it does. With a more carefully written script, the first 30-35 minutes or so could easily have accomplished at least as much in half the time. But the last 20-25 minutes are much better, as the various intrigues among the characters come to a head on board the cruiser. Given the obviously low budget, the setting itself works pretty well, furnishing a simple but interesting variety of sets for the climactic series of events.

More recent film-makers have more or less established a relatively reliable formula for this kind of movie, by showing brief scenes that establish the personalities and agendas of each of the characters, and then getting into the action as soon as it is reasonably possible. Such an approach would have worked better here. It's not worth a lot of effort to seek out, but it's also probably worth a look if you like movies of its era and genre. If you do watch "Desperate Cargo", stick with it during the first half, because the last part does get better.
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7/10
A Good but Totally Disposable Thriller
dbborroughs2 June 2004
This is the film version of amnesia, or Chinese food, five minutes after you watch it you've completely forgotten what you've seen. Thats not a bad thing because the movie is entertaining while you watch it but if you're looking for something that stays with you after you've seen it I'd try something else.

The story concerns several people on a small island who are looking to get back to America. There's two show girl sisters, a reporter and a member of an airplane clipper crew. All are waiting for the plane that will take them to a new job. Into the mix add a band of crooks who are looking to hijack the plane and steal the valuables on board. Half the movie takes place on the island while the other half is on the besieged plane.

There is nothing bad about the movie, except that it is forgettable.

Then again seeing Ralph Byrd and realizing that this was one of his few starring roles outside of the Dick Tracy serials and TV show is sad. Byrd was an excellent actor with a screen presence that made you instantly like him. The trouble is that he became so identified with the Tracy role he was never really ever given the chance to star in anything other than low budget features after that. Seeing him here as a less than perfect member of the flight crew reminds one of how stupid Hollywood can be when choosing its stars.

If you've got an hour or so to kill and you run across this, give it a shot. It won't tax you in the least and will leave you enough room for something meatier later on.
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7/10
An Early Entry Into Its Genre
CatherineYronwode14 June 2007
I don't know what one calls the genre of movies about passengers trapped on an airplane with criminals and summoning the courage to break free, but there are lots of movies with this basic plot, and what we have here may be one of the earliest entries into the genre. In order for the idea to work, the plane has to be big enough for people to move about from the cabin to the flight deck, and by placing the action on a clipper plane (at the time a state of the art luxury sea-plane), PRC, a notoriously low-budget "B" company, had plenty of opportunities to set a number of interesting confrontations in motion.

After a solid set-up in the fictional Caribbean island town of Puerte Nueve, the plane finally takes off and it's all action from that moment on. Jack Mulhall is dashingly handsome when he strips down to his undershirt, and his fight scenes are convincingly brutal. Ralph Byrd, former silent lead, was in his 50s when he made this film, and thus plays a second lead, but he is great as a tough newspaper reporter with a touch of John Barrymore bravura and a hint of Adolph Menjou suaveness. The two lead women, Carol Hughs and Julie Duncan, are fun as a squabbling Broadway sister act on the skids. Extra bonuses include some great supporting cast members, including our old friend I. Stanford Jolley, the rat-faced villain of a zillion TV and theatrical westerns; burly Australian stunt/actor Frank Hagney as a two-fisted heavyweight bar bouncer; Thomas Edwards doing a comic Latino turn; silent screen star Kenneth Harlan as the airship's captain; and tiny bespectacled Harry Depp as a tiny bespectacled airplane passenger.

Also, just for the sake of weirdness, check out Richard Clarke, who plays Carter's henchman Ryan. He is no rough-and-tumble match for Mulhall or Hagney, but he does play a tough, and so it is very unexpected to notice that he has the strangest speech affliction -- every time he says more than a sentence or two, his voice begins to shake and tremble like he is frightened or has some sort of nerve-malady. It's just very odd.

All in all, this was a great little movie of its type. Sure, it could have been better -- a shorter set-up and more tension in the final scenes, a staccato musical score to heighten the drama, a cuter and more compliant lead actress -- but it is certainly worth a viewing.
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7/10
an athlete
Cristi_Ciopron3 June 2016
Warning: Spoilers
An action movie about a hijack, with Byrd foreboding something of Willis' outline, but in a dissimilar role, and Jolley making a sharp mastermind, though the hijackers' plans are relatively easily foiled; it's also very unlike later disaster movies, and as such it's not really more than a heralding of certain elements of a much later genre, here the plot is a bit meager, and most of the story-line is a romance, with a virtuous purser and a reluctant swindler girl. What this movie has is some sympathy for its characters, a feel for them, which is nicely mirrored and boosted by a delightful cast: Byrd, Mulhall, Julie Duncan (who deservedly got the leading lady), Jolley, Harlan, Edwards, Hagney, H. Depp. Blanca Vischer and Vallin have bit parts. For the two 3rd s of romance, the leading man was perhaps less glamorous than required, but then again the movie's style has a predilection for ordinary people, and this everyday look of the lead may serve it; I like him, but am fonder of other nowadays unjustly underrated action players of the '30s.

Young (the purser, the two girls, the racketeer) and older (the newspaperman, the dignified captain) players, and good character actors.

The few passengers are cordially nettled for their blunders.

The liveliest character is Ann, who tries to disarm a brute and is assaulted by him. And the actress' performance has a refreshing quality.

An otherwise knowledgeable reviewer contributed a goofy review; the player who takes down his coat and shirt, and 'strips down to his undershirt', is Byrd, not Mulhall. The newspaperman is played by Mulhall, not by Byrd. The cheerful Edwards is Thornton, not Thomas. And the henchman ought to be a match for Byrd, not for the mild Mulhall.

The undisclosed secret might be that this movie was aimed at an audience of women. The only convincing menace is the rape. The heist takes place on a plane that is hijacked and then set afloat, so there's no disaster impending, and no fright of the passengers because of an insecure flight; it might of been in a stagecoach or on a train, or in a railway station. Yet, there is an use of the sets, of the space, which gives this caper a modern look, more akin to '80s and '90s hostages dramas, than to '70s disaster thrillers …; the floating plane is filmed more like a building would be, with rooms, empty corridors …. But the gangsters, and with them the movie's director, seem to handle the heist clumsily, a bit loosely, a bit carelessly, like it had been an afterthought; instead of being the core, it's telegraphed, sketched, in what is mainly a romance (and I understand why this could be a woman's idea of a disaster movie, as the thing seems directed to a female audience). To viewers accustomed to 75 more yrs of heist movies, capers and hostages dramas, the heist plot seems somewhat silly. Is this all, the lead strips a bit and then swims near the floating plane? The thrust obviously was the romance, and not this reel of action. And the shocking brutality, if it may be called so, belonged to the rape attempt, not to the manly fights. The long setup isn't only a setup, but a romance.

I expected to like this movie much more than I actually did (but the more I think about this movie as a romance, the more I like it). But if you don't misinterpret it as an action movie, as the misleading title prompts you to, there is a romance, quite charming and subdued beneath the screwball.
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It's from PRC, so my hopes weren't all that high!
planktonrules2 February 2021
Back in the 1930s-40s, there sprung up an industry in Hollywood to produce B-movies. What is a B? Well, it's a short (50-70 minutes) film with low production values, lesser stars and it was intended as a second picture for a double-feature. Of course the major studios made Bs, but the need was such that some secondary studios (such as Republic and Columbia) made mostly Bs but also some A-level (feature) pictures. And, a few, such as Monogram and PRC were devoted exclusively towards making Bs and were often called 'Poverty Row Studios'...since they were making such cheap films.

Of all the Poverty Row film studios, PRC was generally among the cheapest and worst of them. While I have seen a few very good PRC films, they were definitely the exception to the rule. Most had very hastily written scripts, no-name actors and were very bad movies. As a result, my expectations for "Desperate Cargo" were very low.

The story begins on some Caribbean island. A group of criminals is planning on boarding a clipper plane in order to rob its safe (a safe on an airplane??). Unfortunately, there are other passengers whose lives might be in jeopardy. Is there any hope for the passengers? And, if the criminals are stopped...who and how will they stop them?

For a PRC film, this is pretty good stuff. The writing is only fair but the action is good and overall, it's not nearly as creaky and slow as most PRC outings.
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