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Flight to Tangier

Flight to Tangier (1953)

1h 30m | PG-13

⭐ 6.1 / 10

At the Tangier airport, a group of people await the arrival of a mysterious plane from behind the Iron Curtain. The reception committee includes Susan, an American; Gil Walker, a free-booting pilot; Danzer, a black market operator; and Danzer's girlfriend, Nicki. The plane crashes and burns. No survivors are found, nor are any corpses. Soon the search begins for a missing courier worth $3 million.

Director: Charles Marquis Warren

Studio: Paramount Pictures

Genre: Action, Crime

Video: 720p

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Cast

Joan Fontaine

Joan Fontaine

as Susan Lane

Jack Palance

Jack Palance

as Gil Walker

Corinne Calvet

Corinne Calvet

as Nicki

Robert Douglas

Robert Douglas

as Danzer

Marcel Dalio

Marcel Dalio

as Goro, Importer / Exporter

Jeff Morrow

Jeff Morrow

as Col C.M. Wier, International Police

Reviews

By CinemaSerf

I always think Jack Palance would have made for a super "Skeletor"; his angular features just as recognisable as Robert Douglas' voice in this cold war thriller. A plane is expected to arrive at Tangiers airport carrying a lucrative cargo. When it crashes, burns out with no trace of any bodies the search begins. Who has the missing $3m? We have no shortage of suspects, nor of searchers. First amongst them is Palance "Walker", a decorated soldier who now dabbles in the black market then "Susan" (Joan Fontaine) who was the fiancée of the plane's pilot. Also on the hunt is the intended recipient - "Danzer" (Douglas) who intends to find his money and use it finance a transaction to ship warplanes back behind the Iron Curtain. "Walker" and "Susan" team up, with some idea where the treasure and the pilot are, and off they trek with both thugs and police in hot pursuit. When it is in adventure mode, this is quite well put together; the story is robust enough and the dialogue sparing (always a benefit for the usually wooden-as-planks Douglas and Palance), but all too frequently there are dreary romantic double plays involved - not least at the hands of Corrine Calvet's ("Nicole"). It can't quite make up it's mind who it is for, this film - and though the ending is quite exciting, for the most part it just seems to rumble along in second gear.