1941 (film)
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1941 | |
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Directed by | Steven Spielberg |
Produced by | Buzz Feitshans |
Written by | Robert Zemeckis Bob Gale |
Starring | John Belushi Ned Beatty Dan Aykroyd John Candy Lorraine Gary Murray Hamilton Toshiro Mifune Robert Stack Warren Oates Tim Matheson Christopher Lee Treat Williams Slim Pickens |
Music by | John Williams |
Editing by | Michael Kahn |
Distributed by | Columbia Pictures (worldwide theatrical and television distribution); Universal Studios (domestic theatrical and home video distribution) |
Release date(s) | December 14, 1979 |
Running time | 118 min. (theatrical version); 146 min. (extended cut) |
Language | English |
Budget | $35,000,000 |
Allmovie profile | |
IMDb profile |
1941 is Steven Spielberg's fourth theatrical film, written by Robert Zemeckis and Bob Gale. It starred John Belushi and Dan Aykroyd and premiered in December 1979. The film is a comedy about a panic in the Los Angeles area that occurs after the 1941 attack on Pearl Harbor. The plot is loosely based on the West Coast air raid, an incident that has come to be known as the Great Los Angeles Air Raid of 1942, and the Battle of Los Angeles, as well as the shelling of the Ellwood oil refinery, near Santa Barbara, by a Japanese submarine. In the film version, the Japanese submarine crew, led by Commander Mitamuru (Toshiro Mifune in a near-parody of other, more serious roles as Japanese officers in American films) are joined by a hard-line German naval captain (Christopher Lee), and have crossed the Pacific Ocean to destroy something "honorable."
Although it was not as financially successful as Spielberg's previous (and later) films, it is widely recognized for its special-effects laden progressive action and camera sequences.[1][2]
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[edit] Plot
Susan Backlinie, who played the first victim in Spielberg's Jaws, plays a character who goes for a midnight swim, alone and naked. But instead of a shark, a Japanese submarine surfaces under her. She holds on to the periscope as it rises. A Japanese crew member looks up at the naked girl clinging to the submarine, and yells: "Hollywood! Hollywood!" At this point, the submarine crew realizes they have arrived where they intended to be, Hollywood, and the vessel submerges once again while the girl swims to safety.
Back on land, Dishwasher Wally Stephens (Bobby Di Cicco) makes plans to enter a dance contest with Betty Douglas (Dianne Kay), against her father’s wishes. Tank crew Sgt. Frank Tree (Dan Aykroyd), Private Foley (John Candy) and Corporal Sitarski (Treat Williams) are also at Wally’s restaurant.
Meanwhile, Captain Wild Bill Kelso (John Belushi) lands his Curtiss P-40 fighter to refuel but accidentally blows up the petrol station.
Just days after the attack on Pearl Harbor, in Los Angeles, Major General Joseph Stilwell (Robert Stack) attempts to bring order, but Colonel Mad Man Maddox (Warren Oates), the General's new secretary Donna Stratten (Nancy Allen) and the General's assistant Captain Loomis Birkhead (Tim Matheson) all have other ideas.
At the Douglas family home on the coast, Wally is confronted by Mr. Douglas (Ned Beatty) and his wife Joan (Lorraine Gary), still angry that he previously destroyed their car. Soon after, the tank crew arrive to deliver a large gun; Corporal Sitarski spots Betty.
The Japanese submarine becomes lost trying to find Los Angeles when the ship's compass is broken. A landing party captures a local timber merchant, Hollis Wood (Slim Pickens); on board the sub, they see he has a small Cracker Jack compass that he swallows. Wood escapes, while in Los Angeles, Major General Stilwell goes to see the feature film Dumbo. Captain Birkhead and Donna Stratten decide to go the local airfield where Colonel Madman Maddox has both aircraft and a belief the Japanese are about to attack.
At the USO dance, Sitarski and Betty are inside as Wally sneaks in with a stolen MP's uniform, steals Betty away but ignites a massive brawl involving all the servicemen. Sgt Tree arrives in his tank just as Los Angeles goes to Red Alert with an unknown aircraft in the air. Ward Douglas spots the Japanese submarine lurking near his home. As Birkhead and Stratten fly over Los Angeles in the back of a purloined aircraft, civil defense batteries blast away. Chaos continues as Wild Bill joins the fight and crashes.
Wally commanders Sgt Tree's tank, Wild Bill follows on motorbike, crashing through a paint factory and then a turpentine factory. Meanwhile Ward Douglas begins firing at the Japanese submarine, destroying his house in the process. The submarine returns fire (Mitamuru: "Fire at that industrial structure!"), hitting an amusement park Ferris wheel which careens into the ocean. The tank sinks when the pier collapses as Wild Bill drives his motorbike into the ocean and swims to the submarine, where he is captured by the Japanese, who, believing their honorable mission accomplished, now return home. The German captain is thrown overboard by the Japanese and is later captured—the only U.S. "victory" of the movie.
The following morning, General Stilwell arrives at the Douglas home where Ward Douglas goes to hang a Christmas wreath, only to accidentally push his damaged home into the Pacific Ocean. The movie ends with all the characters in front of the foundations of the destroyed home.
[edit] Reception
The film, mainly a production of Columbia Pictures (with some help from Universal Studios),[3] was a moderate box office success, but not the blockbuster film the producers were hoping for. Because the film failed to match the box office numbers of Spielberg's previous films, Jaws and Close Encounters of the Third Kind, 1941 was considered a flop by comparison in regards to Spielberg's previous record on Jaws.
It did not help that some mainstream publications pre-labeled it as "Spielberg's Christmas Turkey". The film was slammed for being excessive and ham-handed. 1941, along with Francis Ford Coppola's Apocalypse Now, Martin Scorsese's New York, New York, William Friedkin's Sorcerer, and Robert Altman's Popeye, became major examples of excessive directorial control over a film and marked the beginning of the end of the New Hollywood era which closed with the historic failure of Michael Cimino's Heaven's Gate.[citation needed] While Apocalypse Now achieved critical acclaim and reasonable box office success, the other films are regarded as each of the respective director's failures.
Spielberg humorously joked at one point that he considered converting 1941 into a musical halfway into production and mused that "in retrospect, that might have helped."
However, Bob Gale notes in a DVD documentary about the film:
- It is down in the history books as a big flop, but it wasn't a flop. The movie didn't make the kind of money that Steven's other movies, Steven's most successful movies have made, obviously. But the movie was by no means a flop. And both Universal and Columbia have come out of it just fine.
[edit] Extended releases
The film was previewed at approximately 2 1/2 hours but because both Columbia Pictures and Universal Studios had major involvement with the production of the film, Spielberg was unhappy with the final 120-minute theatrical cut of 1941 which was heavily influenced by the involvement of both studios. After the success of his 1980 "Special Edition" of Close Encounters of the Third Kind, Spielberg was given permission to create his own "extended cut" of 1941 to represent his original extended cut. This was done for network television (it was only shown on ABC one time, but it was seen years later on The Disney Channel). A similar extended version (with additional footage and a few subtle changes) was released on LaserDisc, VHS, and later on DVD.
[edit] Cast
- Dan Aykroyd : Sgt. Frank Tree
- Ned Beatty : Ward Douglas
- John Belushi : Capt. "Wild" Bill Kelso
- Lorraine Gary : Joan Douglas
- Bobby Di Cicco : Wally Stephens
- Murray Hamilton : Claude Crumn
- Christopher Lee : Capt. Wolfgang von Kleinschmidt
- Tim Matheson : Capt. Loomis Birkhead
- Toshirō Mifune : Cmdr. Akiro Mitamura
- Warren Oates : Col. "Madman" Maddox
- Robert Stack : Maj. Gen. Joseph W. Stilwell
- Treat Williams : Cpl. Chuck "Stretch" Sitarski
- Nancy Allen : Donna Stratton
- Lucille Benson : Gas Mama (Eloise)
- Jordan Brian : Macey Douglas
- John Candy : Pvt. Foley
- Elisha Cook Jr. : The Patron (Dexter)
- Eddie Deezen : Herbie Kazlminsky
- Dianne Kay : Betty Douglas
- Perry Lang : Dennis DeSoto
- Patti LuPone : Lydia Hedberg
- J. Patrick McNamara : Pvt. DuBois
- Frank McRae : Pvt. Ogden Johnson Jones
- Steven Mond : Gus Douglas
- Slim Pickens : Hollis P. Wood
It is notable as one of the few American films featuring Toshiro Mifune, a popular Japanese actor.
Both John Wayne and Charlton Heston were offered the role of Major General Stilwell. Wayne phoned director Steven Spielberg, who had given him the script, and not only turned it down due to ill health but tried to get Spielberg to drop the project as he felt it unpatriotic. Susan Backlinie, the actress in the Polar Bear Club dressing gown at the beginning of the movie, was spoofing her role in a similar scene in Jaws.
[edit] Production notes
According to Steven Spielberg's appearance in the documentary Stanley Kubrick: A Life in Pictures, Kubrick suggested that 1941 should have been marketed as a drama rather than a comedy.
When Captain Wild Bill Kelso slipped off the wing of his airplane after being lifted by two soldiers, it was a real accident; it was left in the movie as it fitted his eccentric character. The filling station where Captain Wild Bill Kelso (John Belushi) landed to refuel was also used in Spielberg's Duel. Lucille Benson, the filling station attendant, had a role in Duel as the owner of the Snakerama roadside attraction.
It took so long to set up the final sequence of shots in which the house falls into the sea that cast and crew members started a betting pool on the day and time the shot would begin filming. Dan Aykroyd won the bet.
Co-writer Bob Gale stated that many of the events in the movie were based on real incidents, including the West coast air raid, the Ellwood Shelling, the Zoot Suit Riots and an incident where the army really did put an anti-aircraft gun in the yard of a homeowner on the coast (in Maine),[4] and a Japanese submarine which made it past the U.S. defences and torpedoed a line of docks in Los Angeles.[citation needed] The chaos of the events is summarized by Dan Aykroyd's character, Sgt. Tree, who states "he cannot stand Americans fighting Americans."
Some of the scenes made so much noise during filming that the crew could not hear director Steven Spielberg yell "cut". For those scenes he had to fire a prop machine gun in the air to get the action to stop. Dan Aykroyd's tank is an M3 Lee medium tank.
The Star Trek: The Next Generation starship USS Bozeman takes its hull number of NCC-1941 from the film, as modelmaker Greg Jein worked on both productions.
During the USO riot scene, when the naked MP is tossed into the window of the restaurant from the fire truck, John Belushi plays the patron eating spaghetti. He is in makeup to look like Marlon Brando in The Godfather, which he famously parodied on the sketch comedy TV series Saturday Night Live. Belushi told Spielberg he wanted to appear in another part of the movie and the idea struck Spielberg as very humorous.[4]
[edit] Deleted scenes
A deleted scene had Slim Pickens' character threatened with what looks like a torture device but turns out to be a coat hanger. Steven Spielberg hated losing the joke and swore he would try to put it in every one of his future movies until it stayed there. Luckily, this happened in his very next film, Raiders of the Lost Ark.
Another deleted scene showed John Belushi's Wild Bill crossing paths with Aykroyd's Frank Tree as Bill heads for the Japanese sub just as Tree emerges from the water submerged tank. The two look at each other as if they recognize one another, a reference to their friendship and partnership from Saturday Night Live. It was the only scene where they interacted.
[edit] Goofs
In the opening scenes, in which a Japanese submarine surfaces off the coast of California, Haystack Rock can clearly be seen. Haystack Rock is a prominent landmark off the Oregon coast.
[edit] Musical score
The musical score for 1941 was conducted and composed by John Williams. The march song from 1941 is perhaps most memorable, repeated throughout the movie and is Spielberg's favorite Williams march (for Speilberg's next film, Williams wrote the Raiders March). The score included a mixture of '40s popular music such as the Jitterbug. Music from the score (tracks listed as they appear on the soundtrack LP and CD) was based on characters and scenes from the movie:
- The March From 1941
- The Invasion
- The Sentries
- Riot At The U.S.O.
- To Hollywood And Glory
- Swing, Swing, Swing
- The Battle Of Hollywood
- The Ferris Wheel Sequence
- Finale of 1941
The LaserDisc and DVD of the film has an isolated music-only track, which includes additional cues not heard on the soundtrack album.
[edit] Popular culture
- In an episode of Animaniacs, a video copy of 1941 is used as a weapon, an exploding "bomb".[5]
[edit] Academy Awards
The film received three nominations in the 1980 Academy Awards, but it did not win any awards.
Nominated:
- William A. Fraker, A.D. Flowers and Gregory Jein for Best Effects Visual Effects
- William A. Fraker for Best Cinematography
- Robert Knudson, Robert Glass. Don MacDougall and Gene S. Cantamessa for Best Sound[6]
[edit] References
[edit] Notes
- ^ Dolan 1985, p. 98-99. Quote: "The special effects are beautifully done."
- ^ Culhane, 1981, p. 127. Quote: "... there are no tell-tale lines around any element of the composite photography. This is blue-screen work at its best." (The Oscar-winning team of L. B. Abbott and A.D. Flowers were in charge of the special effects on 1941.)
- ^ Universal Studios now owns the worldwide rights to the film, with the exception of television distribution, which is handled by Sony Pictures Television.
- ^ a b The Making of 1941, Universal home video DVD
- ^ Animaniacs: May 1996. "Animaniacs." Retrieved: February 10, 2007.
- ^ Awards listing at the Internet Movie Database
[edit] Bibliography
- Bonham, Joseph and Kay, Joe, eds.Bombs Awaayyy!!! The Official 1941 Magazine. New York: Starlog Press, 1979.
- Bonham, Joseph and Kay, Joe, eds. 1941: The Poster Book. New York: Starlog Press, 1979.
- Clarke, James. Steven Spielberg. London: Pocket Essentials, 2004. ISBN 1-90404-829-3.
- Culhane, John. Special Effects in the Movies: How They Do it. New York: Ballantine Books, 1981. ISBN 0-345-28606-5.
- Crawley, Tony. The Steven Spielberg Story. New York: William Morrow, 1983. ISBN 0-68802-510-2.
- Dolan Edward F. Jr. Hollywood Goes to War. London: Bison Books, 1985. ISBN 0-86124-229-7.
- Erickson, Glenn and Trainor, Mary Ellen. The Making of 1941. New York: Ballantine Books, 1980. ISBN 0-345-28924-2.
- Freer, Ian. The Complete Spielberg. New York: Virgin Books, 2001. ISBN 0-75350-556-8.
- 1941, the making of (DVD Commentary). 1999.
- Sinyard, Neil. The Films of Steven Spielberg. London: Bison Books, 1986. ISBN 0-86124-352-8.
- "Steven Spielberg: The Collectors Edition". Empire Magazine, 2004.
[edit] External links
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