Captain Blackjack (1950) Poster

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5/10
Production problems sink film
jimsimpson10 February 2006
An early production effort by the Salkind brothers (Superman) this uneasy mixture of neo-realism and and standard actioner was plagued with production problems. Location filming on Majorca dragged on for an incredible seven months. Rushes had to be sent to the mainland for processing so it was impossible to view progress on a daily basis. Some of the post-synching in outdoors scenes is muffled and doesn't seem to match the actors voices in studio sequences.The photography is also uneven, even though the cinematographer Andre Thomas was married to leading lady Patricia Roc some of her close ups are less than flattering. The climax of the film set on two boats is so badly edited that you have a job working out what is going on. George Sanders is completely miscast in an Errol Flynn role whilst poor Pat Roc struggles with an unevenly written part as a Swedish refugee, seeming constantly on the verge of hysterics for no good reason. The technical shortcomings sink a potentially enjoyable film
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5/10
Black Joke
writers_reign31 January 2007
Warning: Spoilers
Something had to have gone monumentally wrong for the great Duvivier to turn out something as uneven, not to say unintelligible as this. Six writer credits on one Screenplay is never a good sign and I for one never thought I'd live to see the day when the names of John and Michael Pertwee shared a writing credit with Charles Spaak. The film has a disconcerting habit of cutting in the middle of a scene then showing the same characters in an entirely different setting dressed in different clothes and an obvious gap in time, the Patricia Roc character segues from cold indifference to passionate love with no discernible explanation, etc. What finally emerges is a cross between To Have And Have Not - smuggling refugees by boat - and The Third Man - black-market drugs in post-war Europe. I can only assume that on paper it looked good enough to attract Duvivier and Spaak but what gets on the screen wouldn't attract flies. It seems there were almost insurmountable problems in production so I'm prepared to give it the benefit of the doubt on the grounds that Duvivier was incapable of making a bad movie, but it remains a major disappointment.
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6/10
No one is who they seem to be
howardmorley18 April 2015
This was the first time I have seen this European produced 1950 title starring George Sanders, Patricia Roc, Agnes Moorhead and Herbert Marshall.It has a lot of locational shots set in Mallorca, some spoken Spanish and throughout French sub titles apart from the aforementioned actors speaking English. so it was produced for a European audience in all those countries.This desire to be all things to all people makes it lose focus & definition and I therefore only scored it 6/10.The rather convoluted story concerns George Sanders who plays Mike Alexander who trades in drugs, guns, illegal immigrants and other contraband using his yacht "BlackJack".He meets a wartime army pal, Herbert Marshall, who is actually employed as a U.S.narcotics agent using his medical background while under the guise of setting up a tropical medicine & research unit.Agnes Moorhead is well cast playing villainesses, she had plenty of practice in her films.Here she poses as an empty brained millionairess Mrs Burg travelling the world, whereas she is just a crook who is trying to relieve Mike Alexander of his ill gotten booty despite claiming police credentials.Finally we have Pat Roc as innocent Ingrid Dekker who has been befriended by Mrs Burg and who seems to have ambivalent feelings for Mike Alexander.

There is some pleasant flamenco dancing and singing in the style of Manitas de Plata and an unscrupulous captain Nicaresco whose ship the "Chalcis" contains the illegal immigrants who are soon to be sacrificed and cheated by Nicaresco.The artificial love affair between George Sanders & Pat Roc did not convince neither did his vow to wholly renounce crime.I will not divulge the ending or provide a spoiler but the film ends with the question, will Mike Alexander be able to escape Spanish territorial waters by outrunning the shore patrol authorities in his yacht "BlackJack" and therefore be outside Spanish jurisdiction?
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6/10
Brave attempt at a post-war Eurofilm
Gilly-1320 April 2000
A Spanish-French-UK production with a cast about ready to fade into either oblivion or television. Dalio turns in the best performance as the weasel captain of a tramp steamer, but an echo of his earlier work under greats like Jean Renoir. Moorehead is also deliciously double-crossing. Saunders is caught out of his element trying to create a character similar to Harry Lime in The 3rd Man--the shady, disillusioned post-war 'businessman'. Bogart might have made this role succeed; however, none could equal the archtypal performance by Welles as Harry Lime. As it is, Saunders is not credible as a conflicted entrepreneur and completely unbelievable as a wheezing love interest for Patricia Roc, herself well past the ingenue stage. Herbert Marshall turns in the same performance he will soon do weekly in Times Square Playhouse for American television yawn. Great moments of outdoor cinematography in the all-natural sound stage of the Spanish Mediterranean by the director who gave us Pepe LeMoko.
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6/10
Smuggling from other movies
echanove19 October 2015
Both the plot and the visual appearance of this very unknown film reminds the spectator in some whiles of masterpieces of that time like 'The Third Man', 'Casablanca', 'The Lady of Shangai', 'Beat the Devil', or even 'Mr Arkadin' (an strange and marvelous co production filmed in Spain as well) but it's quality is a sidereal distance far away from them.

Plot is a little complicated, characters are not completely credible and Sanders is a little miscast in this story settled in Mallorca about an smuggler and his ethical doubts. As in many co productions you feel that the result is composed of glued parts and so the whole thing doesn't work as properly as it should.

Anyway, has moments that deserve the watching: A funny José Nieto telling Agnes Morehead she is as beautiful as a fruit in season (though may be you have to be Spanish to enjoy it). And some other beautiful: the cave sequence, the opening with the mills (with remembrances from Orson Welles), besides some glimmer of magic in the acting of Sanders, Morehead and Roc. All the outdoor footage in black and white at the Mallorca seaside is also remarkable.

And of course, the musical sequence (magistrally shot) with Lola Flores and Manolo Caracol making some flamenco sketches at the top of their art is something all spaniards should be proud of
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3/10
Jackstraw
dbdumonteil28 July 2007
Released at a time when Duvivier was going again from strength to strength ."Black Jack" which was sandwiched between the overlooked extraordinary "Au Royaume des Cieux" and the dazzling stunning "Sous Le Ciel de Paris" , is a jumble,which Duvivier himself hated,which is not surprising.There's almost nothing to write about this dud.We can notice that:

1.Orson Welles used to admire Duvivier .That may explain why Wellesian actors were featured in Duvivier's movies :Joseph Cotten in "Lydia" (1941) ,and here a totally wasted Agnes Moorehead .It's the first time

I have not enjoyed Moorehead's performance!On the other hand,Welles borrowed his Desdemona (Suzanne Cloutier) from Duvivier's "Au Royaume des Cieux" for his "Othello".

2.In any Duvivier's movie,there's one or two worthwhile sequences and this one is no exception: the search in the caves where Duvivier's sense of mystery works wonders (for a short while);then the chase when Dalio gets caught up in the fishnets.Duvivier's touch can be felt in the unhappy end too.

As for the rest ,as my dear pen pal writer's reign writes,it's a black joke.
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6/10
More than meets the eye in this curio
gridoon20247 December 2021
This movie has a peculiar pedigree: shot in Mallorca, Spain, by a French director, with an English-speaking cast in the main roles. Also it has never been remastered for a DVD release and the current prints are not in such a hot shape. Nevertheless, if you hold on for a rough start, it becomes more involving in its 2nd half as it springs a couple of genuine surprises on the viewer. Agnes Moorehead steals the show. Unfortunately, the ending conforms to censorship rules. **1/2 out of 4.
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4/10
And you say he's not so bad...
mark.waltz2 November 2023
Warning: Spoilers
Nobody tosses off a throwaway line with as much venom as delightfully as Agnes Moorehead does in one of the most obscure (deservedly so) of her films as this one. When she shares scenes with both George Sanders and Herbert Marshall, it's as if she's with Maurice Evans on Broadway replacing Judith Anderson in "MacBeth". In fact, Anderson is probably the only other actress who could do the role she plays here, a fabulous character part where she completely takes charge even though it's not the lead.

It's a shame that this is such a pretentious film that thinks it's being smart yet completely throws away important revelations as if the character was simply planning a dinner menu. Moorehead does that in a key scene, and her whole demeanor changes from a narcissistic bubble-headed socialite to completely no nonsense dark lady. Too bad that she's revealing all to Patricia Roc as a rather young and neurotic character who is extremely irritating to watch.

The plotline surrounds smuggler Sanders who's involved in drug trafficking in Majorca, romancing Roc who was abandoned on a ship that Sanders was apparently responsible for running aground on a remote island, leaving everybody dead. Sanders, who would score mightily the same year with an Oscar win for "All About Eve", gets to be highly complex, but unfortunately Marshall is totally wasted. Moorehead has one of her largest parts, playing another character named Emily (as in "The Magnificent Ambersons"), and hops, skips and jumps with this part, totally wiping out dull Roc's footprints. One of the great acting performances in a sadly not very good movie.
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4/10
Worst Duvivier Movie I've Ever Seen
boblipton16 January 2023
George Sanders has a ship, and smuggles. He also offers suggestions to Marcel Dalio on transporting refugees if they can afford it. One refugee he's willing to take for free is Patricia Roc, who develops a wary relationship with him. Sanders is looking to make up for lost time, lost money, the lost girl, all gone in the War. He's got a big deal coming along. After that, he plans to be honest once again. But Herbert Marshall seems to be involved in government affairs, and Agnes Moorhead seems to be looking out for herself.

It's watchable until the very poor ending, but it's the worst movie directed by Duvivier I've ever seen. There are flaws in character, in story logic, and the fight sequence with Dalio, which should have been delightful, is stupid. Clearly the intention was to make a Bogey and Bacall movie, but this one not only lacks the star couple, it lacks sense, particularly at the end.
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10/10
A tragedy in the after war years, played out on the Mediterranean
niathal25 October 2005
I saw this film when it was released to the minor cinemas in the UK some 50 years ago; and the memory remains of a great musical score, and the tragedy of the storyline. I saw it again on video recently. The sound track was poor and the picture grainy; but it is one of two films that I saw again the next day, the other being Gladiator. The music theme is intensely tragic, and from the outset one knows that it heralds failure or death. Certainly one of George Sanders best performances; as a man working the black market to get pay back for what he lost in the war, but nemesis waits; Patricia Roc plays a refugee from Eastern Europe eaten with despair. He is attracted to her, selflessly wants to help her, and then falls in love with her, but she is too proud and hurt to accept help. Their love destroys him, and inevetably the girl and the doctor (Herbert Marshall), who brought the nemesis. The storyline is of complex intertwining destinies, where subsidiary characters are not who they appear to be. This is as a film, which diappointed the critics and struggled at the box office; but for the adolescent who saw it, and the retired gentleman who saw it again it is one of the greatest films (taking into account its age)whose story is more akin to an opera.
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5/10
kind of exotic action in a kind of adventure story
ksf-226 November 2021
Known as Blackjack and Captain Blackjack, this stars george sanders as mike, skipper of a boat which is helping political refugees get to shore. The picture quality is just awful, and sometimes its hard to tell what's going on. This seems to be a collection of americans, here in spain for various reasons.... everyone out for themselves. Filmed off the spanish island of palma, which is currently having great seismic activity. When one of the ships is reported to have burned up, mike goes to investigate. Herb marshall is doctor curtis, who seems to be involved in all this. Along with the always devious agnes moorehead, as emily birk. Inspector carnero is standing by, waiting to arrest those guilty of smuggling and other crimes. Part of the excitement is clearly the exotic location. Similar to the film algiers. Based on a story by robert gaillard. Directed by julien duvivier, who had directed a TON of great films, including tales of manhattan, anna karenina. Fun note: herb marshall was a pretty big star... was in BOTH versions of The Letter. And lost a leg in world war one.
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9/10
A Minor Masterpiece from Duvivier
JohnHowardReid9 July 2008
Warning: Spoilers
Unfortunately, I've never seen the full version of this movie. I did see the 87-minute version twice, back in the 1950s. Even more floridly directed than is the norm with Julien Duvivier, this is a wonderfully out-of-the-ordinary piece, replete with sweeping tracking shots through, over and into Andrejew's magnificently atmospheric sets. Beautifully lit too by photographer André Thomas, Black Jack is nothing if not a connoisseur's delight. Reinforcing this imaginative visual style, is a script that allows a roster of our favorite actors, including Agnes Moorehead and Marcel Dalio, some brilliantly bizarre, full-blooded characterizations. George Sanders gives a polished performance, whilst an eccentric millionairess (who turns out to be a rival racketeer) is admirably played by Agnes Moorehead. Also realizing the most from her role, Patricia Roc. The film was made, on locations in Spain, in 1949.
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