Pacific Rendezvous
Pacific Rendezvous
NR | 21 May 1942 (USA)
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A code expert working for Naval Intelligence is assigned to decode enemy messages despite his desire for active duty.

Reviews
Hellen

I like the storyline of this show,it attract me so much

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Ensofter

Overrated and overhyped

Matrixiole

Simple and well acted, it has tension enough to knot the stomach.

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Billy Ollie

Through painfully honest and emotional moments, the movie becomes irresistibly relatable

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Michael Morrison

Looking at some of the other comments, I started to wonder if they and I had seen different movies.Or maybe they were just in a bad mood while watching.Regardless, I loved this movie. I found the performers -- mostly un- or little-known actors -- very good and likable. Even the bad guys displayed a certain charm.The dialog was often clever, and often downright funny.The story itself was perhaps not edge-of-the-seat exciting -- I mean, heck, of course the good guys were gonna win; after all, it was a wartime film -- but it kept a willing viewer watching.If you've not seen this, I recommend it. Just remember: Context, context, context. Remember when it was made, and what was going on in the world.And, as always, suspend your disbelief. Relax and enjoy.

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sol1218

**SPOILERS** A bit, to put it mildly, over the top as well as heads of the audience watching the film "Pacific Rendezvous" is so overloaded with complicated sub-plots that it just lose it, in trying to simply explain itself, well before the movie is even over.Were shown right at the beginning of the movie that the Japaneses Navy, in the spring of 1942, has not only gone beyond the Hawaiian islands but within twenty miles outside off San Francisco in sinking US munition and transport ships. This has the Secretary of the Navy Edward Fielding have his intelligence department work overtime in the fact that someone is feeding the "Japs" the navy's secret code. This code tells what the rendezvous points are of every war and transport ship departing the states for the Pacific war-zone.It's then that out of nowhere pops up the smiling and comical William "Wild Bill" Gordon, Lee Bowman, who somehow gets himself in the US Navy as an officer no less. "Wild Bill" in order to prove his patriotism for his country is now itching for a chance to take on the "Japs" on the high seas in deadly naval combat engagements.It turns out that the bragging and not that all secretive "Wild Bill" in trying to impress the beautiful but scatterbrain Eline Carter, Jean Rogers, blew his cover as a code breaking expert. "Wild Bill" tells Eline, who wanted nothing to do with him at first, that he in fact is the person who, using a pseudonym, wrote what's considered to be the definitive work on code breaking. That book is now the bible in every nations intelligence department including the USA. This has Eline tell her Uncle John Carter (Russell Hicks), who assistant to the Navy Secretary, who "Wild Bill" really is! The guy who wrote the master code breaking book of all times. A shocked "Wild Bill" is soon sent to the safety of a cushy desk job at US Naval Intelligence in D.C not the Pacific war-zone that he's just dying to participate in.The movie has "Wild Bill" figurer out the Japaneses code, which was a piece of cake for him, in no time at all. Even after he almost overdosed, in Eline trying to get him to get some rest, on a bottle of sleeping pills that was slipped into his coffee.It turned out that the US Navy's biggest problem was to trick the "Japs" into thinking that their code wasn't broken. This would have the Japanese Navy attack ,and expose itself to the US navy's 16 inch guns, a phantom US troop convoy being shipped to the Pacific while the real convoy was some 300 miles in the other direction out of harms way! Of course with all these complications and mind games in the movie you have to have some comic relief and that's where Eline and "Wild Bill" come in with their screwball comedy routine.It's amazing that Eline, despite being the niece of the assistant to the Secretary of the Navy, wasn't put under lock and key for the duration of the war. The girl was nothing but trouble in her almost mindless way of doing more damage to her country then the entire Nazi, not "Jap",spy ring operating in D.C.The Nazi spy ring, helping their ally in WWII Japan, actually infiltrated the home of the head of Naval intelligence Cmdr. Brenman, Paul Cavanagh, with Nazi woman spy Olivia Kerlov, Mona Maris, becoming his secret lover. The commander not realizing until it was too late that Olivia is spying for the enemy gets himself blown away when he tried to catch Olivia in the act.****SPOILER FROM THIS POINT ON***Now with heat, as well as FBI, on her back Olivia is forced by her superiors to "out" fellow Nazi spy and foreign journalist Adre Leemouth, Carl Esmond, in order to throw them off the track. By now knowing that their, or the Japanese, code has been broken the Nazis kidnap both "Wild Bill" together with Eline, to make "Wild Bill" talk, in order to get the new US Navy rendezvous point to radio back to their Japanese allies. This leads the FBI and police straight to the Nazis hideout in that the rendezvous point that "Wild Bill" gave them was in fact the address to their secret hideout in Washington D.C!

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MartinHafer

This is almost like two films--one literate and engaging, the other stupid and clichéd. It's really a shame all the problems weren't worked out with the writing, but considering how quickly most B-movies were written and produced, this isn't too unusual. It's a real shame, though, as this could have been a very good film.First the good. The movie is original and involves WWII code-breakers. This is pretty fascinating and I liked watching the leading man (Lee Bowman) go through his paces as a master code-breaker. In fact, the first two-thirds of the film was very good. But now for the bad, the film just went on way too long and lost steam at about 50 minutes. Additionally, Jean Rogers' role as the "kooky girlfriend" must rank as one of the worst-written and distracting roles in film history!! For every smart move made by Bowman, the idiot Rogers then stepped in to screw things up as some sort of misguided "comedy relief". If her role had been intelligently written, the overall film would have improved immensely! Instead, watching her, it's hard to understand how we actually won WWII!!

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reve-2

This is a rather tame fluff piece concerning WW II codes being broken, stolen, etc. The acting is about what I expected from this cast of MGM "B" actors.One big caution. Jean Rogers, who did such a great job playing the very sexy Dale Arden in the first two Flash Gordon serials is just awful in this movie. Her character is extremely annoying. She absolutely never lets-up with her overacting. We are supposed to believe that during the height of a World War in what would obviously be a Top Secret code facility, she would be allowed to just pop in and out of any office of her choosing although she has no official function. From that standpoint I'm sorry that I ever watched this film. It has forever changed my perception of Ms. Rogers. Talentwise, she is an extreme lightweight.Lee Bowman is his usual self, meaning that he is merely adequate.

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