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Beyond the Blue Horizon

Beyond the Blue Horizon (1942)

June. 25,1942
|
6.6
|
NR
| Adventure Fantasy Drama Action

A young girl's parents are killed on a tropical island, and the girl is raised and protected by the jungle animals. When she is found, as a grown woman, she is taken back to the United States to claim her inheritance. There are several people, with vested interests, who stand to gain something if she is shown not to be the missing heir.

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Reviews

ChanBot
1942/06/25

i must have seen a different film!!

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Stoutor
1942/06/26

It's not great by any means, but it's a pretty good movie that didn't leave me filled with regret for investing time in it.

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MusicChat
1942/06/27

It's complicated... I really like the directing, acting and writing but, there are issues with the way it's shot that I just can't deny. As much as I love the storytelling and the fantastic performance but, there are also certain scenes that didn't need to exist.

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Hayden Kane
1942/06/28

There is, somehow, an interesting story here, as well as some good acting. There are also some good scenes

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mark.waltz
1942/06/29

The only jungle the characters in this colorful adventure come from is the jungle known as Hollywood, with scantily clad blonde hunk Richard Denning twitching the hearts of the women left without their men during World War II (and probably quite a few men too who were unable to enlist in the army for obvious reasons) and gorgeous Dorothy Lamour given some of the campiest situations and dialog that any actor ever had to say. "He fell out of a tree like a ripe coconut", Lamour says describing Denning, and later proclaims, "I don't have the tail of a fish, but I can swim!" She not only swims but sings here too, but she's definitely no threat to the yet to be discovered Esther Williams. Tigers, chimpanzees (creating havoc to the tune of "Waltz of the Flowers"), alligators (chasing Jack Haley across a stream with snapping jaws) and various other wild life of the jungle support Denning and Lamour in this delightful piece of escapism where Lamour is brought to San Francisco, believing that she might be the heir to an estate.This brings to my mind the Elaine Stritch Song "Civilization" where she sang, "Bongo, bongo, bongo, I don't want to leave the Kongo", but in Lamour's case, she was the child of American parents who happened to be killed in the jungle, leaving her to be raised by the wild animals including a huge tiger. This part of her story is seen in flashback, and of course, Lamour is quite lovely in her sarong, even if not the strongest of actresses. Of course, this is a Hollywood version of "Jungle Book" with a female heroine instead of Sabu, and it is very ironic that Lamour and Sabu were never paired, her being under contract to Paramount and he being under contract to Universal and paired with the similarly exotic Maria Montez.There's plenty of action as the jungle scenes feature Lamour re-visiting to find evidence supporting her claim and the group dealing with unfriendly natives, various unfriendly wild animals (especially a rather temperamental elephant) and of course, the presence of white men out for their own interests and no interest in the land. There's Jack Haley for comedy ("Hey, where did Gogo go?"), Elizabeth Patterson for imperious judgments, and a legion of spider moneys, exotic birds, black panthers and the visual treat of Lamour's cave which comes complete with its own swimming pool. This is one of those delightful "Oh so bad it's good" adventures that have quite a cult following, although this and many of Lamour's other similar films have not reached the same status of Maria Montez's outrageous output. The shocking ending has a battle between tiger and elephant that ends sadly, one of the few times on film where the elephant is the villain, not the jungle cat. All this and the gorgeous theme song too, although simply played as instrumental rather than sung as it had been famously done a decade before by Jeanette MacDonald.

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Doufus-3
1942/06/30

I too saw this movie as a youngster (8 or 9 years of age)and I remember the climatic scene. Dorothy Lamour's pet tiger was killed in it by the rogue elephant and I had just lost a pet cat. I cried, but I recovered in time to see the elephant beast fall to its death. I still have the theme song on an LP record. I would love to see this movie again but I have never seen a listing for it in the years I have had cable TV. This was the second Dorothy Movie in which she portrayed a jungle heroine with a pet tiger. The other being The Jungle Princess and the tiger also gets killed in that one while trying to protect her. It seems a shame that I can watch The Range Riders with Eddie Dean on cable TV but I cannot see Beyond the blue horizon.

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bobbyh214
1942/07/01

One of Miss Lamour's last "monkey flicks"...and really one of the best. Richard Denning never looked better. Great music and photography. Just plain good entertainment. It's a shame Paramount does not release this on DVD.

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kubichan
1942/07/02

Probably my rating is more sentimental than objective. I saw the movie when I was eleven years old in 1942, having developed a significant crush on Dorothy Lamour from her earlier movie, "The Fleet's In". Still, the movie was highly enjoyable and featured a lovely song entitled "A Full Moon and an Empty Heart" which I still occasionally play on the piano even now. I have never been able to get a recording of this song, nor have I been able to get a copy of the movie on videotape.

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