The Secret of the Purple Reef (1960) Poster

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4/10
A disappointment on more than one level
dinky-414 May 2003
A brightly-colored CinemaScope movie featuring two attractive actors and dealing with the mysterious disappearance of a ship in the Caribbean? This is such an appealing set of ingredients it's hard to see where it could go wrong, but it does, it does. As is often the case, the chief fault here lies with the script which sets up an intriguing situation and then lets it slowly fade away into the kind of mundane resolution which leaves one muttering: "You mean, that's it?" In between the start and the finish the movie is filled not so much with a plot but rather with lifeless scenes of the characters simply discussing the plot, and padding these scenes is pretty but pointless footage of ships skimming over blue water.

William Witney, who directed the classic "Spy Smasher" serial back in 1942, barely goes through the motions here. Leading lady Margia Dean seems miscast, lacks charisma, and has little to do. Peter Falk wanders in and out of the film but his distinctive "persona" had not yet evolved. While they don't look like brothers, Jeff Richards and Richard Chamberlain are agreeable, easy-on-the-eyes actors who might have been able to enliven the proceedings had their modest but undeniable assets been put to use, but they're not even required to take their shirts off, despite the fact both have good-looking physiques and despite the fact they're constantly surrounded by hot skies and swim-perfect waters.

This marks Richard Chamberlain's film debut but it's also, more or less, Jeff Richards' last hurrah. He won a Golden Globe in 1954 for being "Most Promising Male Newcomer" and for several years thereafter he hovered on the outer fringes of stardom, but for some reason or other nothing quite "clicked" and by the late 1950s, his career was coming to an end. Richards' fans are advised to skip this movie and instead watch his preceding one, the silly but entertaining "Island of Lost Women." At least that movie had the good sense to squeeze him into a snug bathing suit at the earliest possible opportunity!
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5/10
1960 Low Budget Film
whpratt119 January 2009
This film deals with two brothers who want some answers dealing with a missing ship and the whereabouts of their brother who was the captain of the ship. The boys mother wants her sons to investigate how a ship could disappear on a very clear day with nothing to cause a ship wreck. The search starts around the Purple Reef with very little success along with a few other interested parties lead by bad guy Peter Falk, (Tom Walker) who is also looking for hidden treasure. There is a woman who finally appears towards the end of the film who acts very poorly. If it were not for Peter Falk appearing in this film, it would probably would never have been viewed by the public. This film is a big disappointment, but you do have to consider it was produced in 1960 and on a very very low budget.
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4/10
Made on the cheap -- and looks it!
JohnHowardReid23 June 2017
Warning: Spoilers
A Gene Corman Production, filmed entirely in the Caribbean. Copyright 1960 by 20th Century-Fox Film Corp. No New York opening. U.S. release: October 1960. U.K. release: 12 February 1961. Australian release: 19 January 1961. 81 minutes. Censored to 79 minutes in Britain and Australia.

SYNOPSIS: On the wild Purple Reef during one of the hurricanes that whip these dangerous seas, a fishing vessel belonging to the Christopher family has vanished without trace. Young Mark Christopher (Jeff Richards) and his brother Dean (Richard Chamberlain), unable to locate a single member of the crew, must collect evidence — no matter how slight — or risk losing their insurance claim.

The same storm has carried off another ship, "The Dagger", and the brothers learn that its engineer, Ashby (Terence de Marney), a man wanted for murder in the United States, is likely to know something about both wrecks. Invading the steaming jungle, they track down the fugitive, force from him clues leading to a neighboring town and a cabaret managed by his daughter, glamorous Rue Amboy (Margia Dean) and her sinister, sullen partner, Weber (Peter Falk).

VIEWERS' GUIDE: Strictly adults.

COMMENT: Disappointing. The ads look great. But despite Kay Norton's wonderfully scenic CinemaScope backgrounds, the plot moves at a sluggish pace with lots and lots of talkative and woodenly acted scenes (particularly by the young principals), interspersed with a few particularly violent action spots.

The movie is "cheap" in all three meanings of the word: Cheap to make, cheap to actually look at, and cheap to view as a "support" at some third-rate neighborhood cinema!
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1/10
CinemaScope on a low budget...
moonspinner5523 February 2009
Extremely slight non-adventure from Fox. The beauty of the Caribbean islands is no match for this waterlogged script, adapted from Dorothy Cottrell's magazine serial, about a captain who went down with his ship, and his two brothers who want answers as to why. Begins with a funeral scene so unrelievedly solemn, it sets the movie on Snooze and forgets to wake the audience up. Then-unknowns Richard Chamberlain and Peter Falk (miscast as the heavy) take a backseat to a handsome block of wood named Jeff Richards, who never varies his stern expression. Humorless B-flick with irritating faux-calypso music by Buddy Bregman and absolutely no imagination behind the camera. NO STARS from ****
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5/10
He did it for his son and the men of the "Cloud"
kapelusznik1818 July 2015
Warning: Spoilers
***SPOILERS*** Urged on by his grandma played by Gina Petrushka, who at age 50 looks at lest 30 years older, Mark Christophe, Jeff Richards, who left the family over 10 years ago is encouraged to find the reason behind his father or brother's-it's never really clarified in the film which one he is- Captain Robert Christophe's death together with his crew of eight on his fishing boat the "Cloud" that sunk off the coast of St. Kitts in the Caribbean. With his kid brother Dean, Richard Chamberlain, coming to help Mark soon finds out from native fisherman Tobias, Robert Earl Jones, that the "Cloud" was struck by the freighter "Dagger", that's now stuck on the Purple Reef outside St. Kitts, and sunk under the waves.

It soon becomes evident that the owner of the "Dagger" Tom Webber, Peter Falk, was pulling off some kind of round robin insurance fraud scheme that resulted in the "Clouds" sinking. And it's Webber and his gang of island thugs who are trying to do everything to keep the truth from coming to the surface. Going so far as trying to murder Tobias as well as drunk at sea as well as on land rummy Ashby, Terrence de Marney, who survived the sinking and knows the circumstances behind it. There's also the fact that Webber's girlfriend casino owner Rue Amboy, Margia Dean, is unknown to Webber Ashby's daughter whom he-Ashby-wants to prevent, if Webber ever found out, him from murdering her!

****SPOILERS**** With Webber and his goons trapping the Christophe brothers as well as Ashby and Tobias on the deserted island of St. Kitts the tables are turned on them in being outmaneuvered by not only Mark & Dean, who was badly wounded, but Ashby and Tobias who ended up getting killed. With Webber seeing that he's beaten now tries to make his way back to land, the island of Puerto Rico, by swimming in shark infested waters some 150 to 200 miles away. That with Mark catching up to Webber and working him over and apprehending him , after a furious struggle, Webber was lucky that he was taken into custody before the man eating sharks, in his insane attempt in trying to swim to freedom, got to him!
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