Away All Boats

Away All Boats

The battle cry of the South Pacific

Director: Joseph Pevney

Producer: Howard Christie

The story of USS 'Belinda', a U.S. naval ship, and its crew during the battle of the Pacific 1943-1945, as it prepares for action and landing troops on enemy beachheads.

114 min Rating: 5.1/10 Released

Top Cast

Jeff Chandler
Jeff Chandler
Capt. Jebediah S. Hawks
George Nader
George Nader
Lieut. Dave MacDougall
Lex Barker
Lex Barker
Commander Quigley
Julie Adams
Julie Adams
Nadine MacDougall
Keith Andes
Keith Andes
Doctor Bell
Richard Boone
Richard Boone
Lieut. Fraser

Movie Info

Director: Joseph Pevney

Producer: Howard Christie

Production Companies: Universal Pictures

Countries: United States of America

Similar Movies

Master and Commander: The Far Side of the World
Master and Commander: The Far Side of the World
2003-11-14
Appointment in Tokyo
Appointment in Tokyo
1945-12-07
Mururoa 1973
Mururoa 1973
1973-10-08
Two Breaths
Two Breaths
2024-10-07
Midway
Midway
1976-06-18
Flags of Our Fathers
Flags of Our Fathers
2006-10-19
Das Boot
Das Boot
1981-09-17
In Which We Serve
In Which We Serve
1942-09-17
Kwaidan
Kwaidan
1965-01-06
Flying Leathernecks
Flying Leathernecks
1951-08-28
Flight for Freedom
Flight for Freedom
1943-04-14
Abandoned
Abandoned
2016-03-02
Women of Valor
Women of Valor
1986-11-23
Three Wise Cousins
Three Wise Cousins
2016-01-28
Naval Combat in Greece
Naval Combat in Greece
1897-01-01
Sharks of Lost Island
Sharks of Lost Island
2017-01-14
Captain Kidd
Captain Kidd
1945-11-22

User Reviews

What Others Said

r96sk: A bit of a slog, is <em>'Away All Boats'</em>. I never quite felt the intended high stakes of the film, except right at the end when events reach the final destination - which is the only noteworthy part of the film. Aside from that, the whole plot just comes across as one whole training exercise as opposed to a war-torn trip across the Pacific Ocean. Jeff Chandler is fairly good in his role, though those behind him kinda just mesh into one character in my mind to be honest. Clint Eastwood features in the absolute definition of a blink-and-you'll-miss-it appearance - in the penultimate 'uncredited' (exc. cameos) role of his career. This 1956 picture isn't one to rush off and watch, unfortunately. I was hoping for something more along the lines, if not an improvement, of <em>'<a href="https://letterboxd.com/film/the-battle-of-the-river-plate/">The Battle of the River Plate</a>'</em> - which was, in fact, released roughly two months after this.
CinemaSerf: Jeff Chandler may have had top billing, but most of this film belonged to my peplum hero "Lex Barker" in the supporting role as "Cmdr. Quigley". Chandler, never an actor I rated in anything really, is the captain ("Hawks") of a US naval support ship. He wanted command of a cruiser, but he got this - and boy, is he determined to make sure he gets noticed. He drives his crew to breaking point with faster drills, speedier launches, target practice until, in the best tradition of Captain Bligh, they loathe him - he even maes them make him a sailing dinghy (aptly named "Albatross"). As their exercises in the Pacific start to morph from training to the real thing though, they begin to respect his visionary attitude a bit more and coupled with his experienced sidekick "MacDougall" (George Nader) this ship becomes a pretty cohesive unit. It plods. No other word for it. This film does feature some interesting seaborne photography, but the dialogue - of which there is way too much - is far too earnest and completely lacking in humour or humanity to sustain the interest for all but two hours. It's more of an all-male melodrama (save for a few reminiscences from Julie Adams' "Mrs MacDougall") that features for too little action until a brief lively spell at the end with some good aerial combat scenes that finally inject a degree of peril into this otherwise rather dull piece of cinema.