Outward Bound (film)

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Outward Bound
Directed by Robert Milton
Written by Sutton Vane (play)
J. Grubb Alexander
Starring Leslie Howard
Douglas Fairbanks, Jr.
Helen Chandler
Beryl Mercer
Dudley Digges
Alec B. Francis
Release date(s) November 29, 1930
Running time 83 minutes
Country Flag of the United States United States
Language English
IMDb profile

Outward Bound is a 1930 film based on the hit 1923 play of the same name by Sutton Vane. The film starred Leslie Howard, Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., Helen Chandler, Beryl Mercer, Montagu Love, Alison Skipworth, Alec B. Francis and Dudley Digges.

It was later remade, with some changes, as Between Two Worlds.

[edit] Plot

A disparate group of passengers find themselves aboard a darkened, fog-enshrouded crewless boat, sailing to an unknown destination. Their stories are revealed one by one. Tom Prior, a prodigal son, discovers that he's travelling with his ex-boss Mr. Lingley, a captain of industry; Tom's mother, Mrs. Midget, whose identity the son does not know, is curious about how her son is doing; Mrs. Cliveden-Banks, an affected socialite, chats with the steward Scrubby; Rev. William Duke, a clergyman, is keen about his missionary work in the London slums; and a young couple, Henry and Ann, who are facing an impossible love affair and find they cannot live without each other, wonder if they'll be together forever.

In time, the passengers slowly realize what's going on -- the one thing they have in common is that they are all dead, and they are on their way to either heaven or hell; during the course of the trip they will be judged. Arriving at their destination, they sit awaiting judgment by Thompson, the "examiner". He will determine what sort of punishment or reward they receive in the next world.

But Henry and Ann, who unsuccessfully committed suicide and now hover in a sort of limbo between life and death, have not quite crossed over yet. Scrubby, the ship's steward, has already been condemned to sail the ship for eternity, having successfully committed suicide. Henry is eventually saved from asphyxiation by his dog breaking a window pane; he calls to Ann, she revives, and together they are rescued by an ambulance.

[edit] Cast

[edit] External links