Pacific Rendezvous (1942) Instructs On Spy-Trapping
Wartime de-coding from MGM ration book. This has interest as George Sidney's second directorial go at features,
so there's energy at least, but Lee Bowman wouldn't fill shoes of departing
warriors Clark Gable or Robert Taylor, yet who was left for manly Metro duty once
these two donned uniform? Enemy agents make but cursory effort to conceal
themselves; if espionage were this easy, our side was in real trouble, a surely
unintended message Pacific Rendezvous puts across. Jean Rogers is
more hindrance-than-help to Bowman, her gal Friday a grate whatever
looks of an actress playing it. She was another of those that might have made
the grade given better material, which Pacific Rendezvous isn't. Cracking of
codes is explained in simplest terms, which makes me wonder how challenging real
ones were. One messy bit has night clubbers dipping a watch band into water to reveal secret
Allied plans, a cumbersome device to risk stain of tablecloths plus alarm to wait staff. Seen on TCM.
1 Comments:
You should have written about Mona Maris, who is prominently featured in the two images posted and whose life is far more interesting than that film.
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