Stolen diamonds spark a deadly drama involving a group of strangers in the Philippine jungle.Stolen diamonds spark a deadly drama involving a group of strangers in the Philippine jungle.Stolen diamonds spark a deadly drama involving a group of strangers in the Philippine jungle.
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Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaA bicycle and a wheelchair were used as camera dollies on this film.
- Alternate versionsOriginally released in 1964 at 62 minutes, then re-edited into current 74 minute version and re-released in 1966.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Dr. Jack and Mr. Nicholson (2019)
Featured review
A plane goes down in the jungle carrying several people who want to lay hands on some stolen diamonds that the pilot is carrying. The opening thirty minutes or so are very dull, but it improves slightly after that. Nicholson isn't bad in a major supporting role, but his writing on the film is weak. (According to director Monte Hellman, who co-wrote the story, Nicholson wrote the script on the three week cruise from San Francisco to Manila, sitting in the ship's lounge and incorporating the conversations he had with anyone who passed by into the script. It plays like that's true, with some fairly random and not very interesting dialog early in the film.) Dewey Martin makes a dull hero. The jungle locations aren't bad.
This film was made back-to-back with "Back Door To Hell," a somewhat better WWII film that also features Nicholson in a supporting role. Hellman was busy at nights editing "Back Door To Hell" at the same time that he was shooting "Flight to Fury."
This film was made back-to-back with "Back Door To Hell," a somewhat better WWII film that also features Nicholson in a supporting role. Hellman was busy at nights editing "Back Door To Hell" at the same time that he was shooting "Flight to Fury."
Details
- Runtime1 hour 20 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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