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  • The Sigmund Romberg-Otto Harbach-Oscar Hammerstein, II operetta from the Twenties, The Desert Song is given an update and World War II worked into the plot about the Caucasian leader of the Riff tribesmen of Morocco in revolt against the French Colonial government. It's in this version that the real Riff leader from the Twenties, Abdel Krim is acknowledged as reporter Lynne Overman is phoning in a story as he tells them that the new leader of the Riffs is a mysterious masked man named El Khobar.

    In this version Dennis Morgan is a saloon entertainer in Gene Lockhart's place by day and by night, he's the mysterious El Khobar. Like Humphrey Bogart's Rick Blaine in Casablanca he's an anti-fascist, unlike Bogey he doesn't have to be coaxed back into the fight, he's fighting the good fight albeit from a secret identity. Gene Lockhart stands in quite nicely as the intriguing saloon keeper for Sydney Greenstreet. The Ingrid of the piece is Irene Manning, another entertainer who matches her soprano to Morgan's tenor. Most movie fans remember Irene best from Yankee Doodle Dandy where she played Fay Templeton.

    Which brings us to the Claude Rains part, the guy who's chasing El Khobar for the Vichy government, Bruce Cabot. This film contains the most charitable view of Vichy that I've ever seen on the screen. My guess is that this one came from the top as we were probably still in negotiation with the Vichy government in what was unoccupied France.

    The Nazis have set up a dummy corporation in Switzerland which is funding a railroad to Dakar, the western most part of Africa, then in French West Africa. Victor Francen is the duplicitous Arab sheik who's cut a deal with them. They will build a railroad using slave labor from the Riffs who are Francen's enemies. All this under the French noses. The fact that a couple of Teutonic looking gentlemen are around Francen doesn't give anyone, but Morgan and his allies a clue, is a bit much.

    Morgan and Manning sing The Desert Song score beautifully, the main songs are all retained for this film. That's the main reason to see this dated film. In fact with events moving as rapidly as they were in North Africa starting in September, 1943, this version of The Desert Song dated before it hit the screen.

    For myself, I certainly recognized some of the interior sets that were used on Casablanca. I'm not sure which came out first, but since everybody comes to Rick's, you'd best be going there unless you like operetta.
  • If you're looking for a film version of Romberg's 1920s operetta, don't look here. You'll be very disappointed.

    If you decide to watch this movie, which was released in Dec 1943, one year after *Casablanca* by the same studio, Warner Brothers, do keep that fact in mind, however. In November, 1942, while this movie was being made, we invaded North Africa (Operation Torch) as the beginning of what would lead to D-Day and the liberation of Europe. Morocco was therefore very much in the news in the U.S. Romberg's original operetta had been about a Frenchman who worked with the Riffs, a Berber group in North Africa, to drive off the occupying French. It was easy to update that to a story about an American, played by Dennis Morgan, who fights with the Riffs against the French Vichy government - the same one represented by Capt. Renault in *Casablanca* - and plans for a German-financed railway. The script is nowhere nearly as good as the one in *Casablanca*, and neither is the acting, though it's fine here. But this is very clearly a movie designed to take advantage of the recent interest in Morocco, as well as to assure at least some of the Moroccan people that the newly arrived Americans were good guys on their side.
  • The original stage operetta of THE DESERT SONG had a strong score and an intriguing premise with only a very shallow plot, and was filmed faithfully in 1929, and in 1953, the version widely shown on television today. The 1929 version had been hampered by early sound technology and was shot entirely in the studio in black and white, and during the next decade Warners had tried unsuccessfully to come up with a way to remake it while eliminating the creaky, cliché-ridden plot elements. Script after script was rejected until early in 1942, when director Robert Florey and producer Robert Buckner proposed a serious and realistic treatment centering around current events in Morocco. The Vichy regime was overseeing construction of a trans-Saharan railway, built with forced Arab labor and financed by the Third Reich. Transferring Nazi manipulation of French colonial rule to the years just prior to World War II effectively modernized the operetta's setting, and gave political significance to its depiction of a native revolt.

    In emphasizing the adventurous aspects of the plot, rather than leaving it as a backdrop, important changes were made to the score, with Buckner and Florey eliminating those aspects that did not assist plot development. Music highlights the action, for instance as a lone rider summons the rebel forces for the initial attack on the French railroad to free the Riff prisoners. Events progress during the musical numbers: desert shots depict the heroine's subjective imagination, while one of the French official's moral instincts surface during a patriotic dance. Buckner and Florey converted the female lead into a professional singer instead of the love-struck girl of the operetta. The humor was overhauled by adding an American reporter whose "scoops" are constantly censored by an effeminate French government official–a sly dig at the Hays office but also an unintentional foreshadowing of the film's fate at the hands of censors. Despite the collaboration on the new screenplay, the final release credits made no mention at all of the scriptwriters. The star of the new version of THE DESERT SONG had actually been selected several years earlier, after two screen tests in early 1939. The first had been under his real name, Stanley Morner, and the second under his new screen name, Dennis Morgan. No other actors were tested for the lead, and Dennis Morgan would become Warner's leading star of the 1940s.

    To add to the authenticity of the topical story, the North African desert locale was reproduced with the utmost possible realism; director Florey was familiar with the region from a 1923 trip. After surveying Palm Springs, Lone Pine, Death Valley, Victorville, Las Vegas, Utah, and Arizona, a location near Gallup, New Mexico was selected. Increasing wartime constraints convinced Warners to begin photography as soon as possible in 1942, even though this meant filming in the sweltering heat of the desert in June and July. The location shooting alone cost $107,000, nearly twice the amount budgeted, and was the last elaborate location jaunt before wartime restrictions went into effect. The stunning New Mexico scenes, photographed in bright, vivid Technicolor hues, were complemented back in the studio with sets and photography using such visual motifs as narrow city streets, framing shots through Moorish gates and windows, and composition in depth. Florey decorated the sets with many items from his own collection, such as his Toulouse-Lautrec posters on the café walls. French refugees from fascism were prominently employed on the film, including Victor Francen, who plays the Arab collaborating with the Nazis, and technical director Eugene Lourie, who had just arrived in the United States from France via Casablanca. Production lasted a total of 72 days (eight over schedule), from June to September 1942. Warner Bros. planned to have THE DESERT SONG in release by the beginning of 1943, but by then it had become enmeshed in wartime censorship. The script had been written and production was underway before all the various wartime guidelines had been fully codified. In December 1942, an analysis by the Office of War Information's Bureau of Motion Pictures condemned THE DESERT SONG for an unsympathetic depiction of the French, recommending either a complete revision or shelving for the duration of the war. Real events came to resemble the movie: November 1942 saw the Allied invasion of North Africa, and idealists were outraged by the Roosevelt administration's pragmatic decision to accept surrender from a Vichy leader. A film which so forcefully denounced the Vichy French could only fuel the controversy.

    Warner Bros. decided to wait more than a year, until December 1943, before premiering THE DESERT SONG. Even then the movie ran into political trouble as the Free French pressed Warners to eliminate certain scenes Florey had inserted that related to colonialism, such as the line "why doesn't France export some of its love of freedom." Not until August 1944 was THE DESERT SONG granted a general export license, and only with a provision precluding sale to countries with substantial Moslem or Arab populations, presumably because of the glorification of a native revolt. After all the difficulties, the effort put into THE DESERT SONG proved worthwhile. Going into general domestic release early in 1944, fifteen months after its completion, it was a box-office champion, and critical reaction was generally favorable as well. Nonetheless, general audiences have not seen it in over fifty years. A rights problem in one added song has precluded television or video release of this version of THE DESERT SONG. This is unfortunate, since despite its timely theme, this version of THE DESERT SONG hardly dates and stands the passage of years remarkably well.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    Unaware that this had been considered unavailable for many years, I had sought this out and for years only had a badly edited black and white version of this from some local TV station somewhere that looked as if it had been copied down half a dozen generations. That was horrible to try to watch even though I hung on to it just for the privilege of having. Nobody in the movie collecting business knew of any color prints available, and even the 1929 version appeared to have been locked away as well. The 1953 version did make its way to VHS, and a 20 minute short ("The Red Shadow") appeared on TCM in it's early days. Out of the blue this version from the war era came out on home video in all its colorful glory, but unfortunately, what I witnessed upon my discovery of the original print may not have been worth my search.

    The mixture of the glorious score (greatly cut) and the setting of World War II did not mesh in my opinion, and perhaps this is an operetta best left to recordings than stagings, having failed with Broadway revivals both in 1946 and 1973. It's silly and inappropriate as war propaganda, and reminded me more of a Maria Montez/Sabu adventure with songs. Dennis Morgan was fine as a romantic lead, but his singing after a while is grating. Irene Manning was fine as a B leading lady or the other woman but fails to impress in her one A lead. Bruce Cabot is serviceable as Manning's suitor, and Lynne Overman is a notch above the annoying Dick Wesson in the 1953 remake. The new songs aren't memorable in the least, but the original score does get a good recording from the Warner Brothers sound department. War musicals work better with real entertainers putting on a show, but mixing sword and sandal with Nazis and Sigmund Romberg sadly fails.
  • firefly130019 August 2004
    My only comment is that such a wonderful film should not be placed somewhere on the shelf and forgotten thru the years. It is too great a picture to not allow the many people (like myself) who would love to purchase it and show it to their family and friends to enjoy for as many times as they wish. And besides, I think Dennis Morgan was a wonderful singer and a very handsome actor. And so, once again, I am hoping that whoever places these films on video will take all our comments into consideration and take notice of the many people who feel the same as I do about this film. The newer version with Gordon MacRae does not appeal to me at all. I want the old version. Let's just say it is the nostalgia part of me that is hoping that this can be accomplished.
  • I saw the 1943 production when I was just a young boy and fell in love with the movie. I saw it several times and always enjoyed it. The production starring Gordon McRea lacked quality acting and the music was not as good as the one starring Dennis Morgan.

    Kathryn Grayson made some good musicals. Showboat was one of them, saw it many times also and have it in my video library. Irene Manning's soprano voice is much softer to the ear and much easier to listen to. Kathryn Grayson's voice is a very high pitched, sharp sounding voice. At times too sharp to listen to.

    I'm no movie critic but I do know what I like. I do hope that eventually the 1943 production of "The Desert Song" will be available on video or DVD for old timers like me to enjoy the nostaglia of watching and listening to one of the truly great musicals from the early days of Hollywood.
  • mat00028 September 2005
    I saw this movie when I was 18 years old in the service, 62 years ago, during WW2. I was really impressed. It was a wonderful movie, and I would give anything to see it again, now. Is there anything you can do to make this movie available, either on tape, or disc? Would gladly buy it at any price. It must be the one with Dennis Morgan and Irene manning. Please respond to mat000@peoplepc.com, or write or call.

    Thank you,

    Henry M. Nuspl

    3736 Gail Dr.

    Imperial, Mo 63052

    636-282-4927
  • I have always loved this movie but couldn't remember the actress/singer, only that she was called Margot. My grandmother took me to the movie when I was 9 yrs. old. Since it has been so long ago I didn't know the plot, just loved the color and the music. We had a Music Festival in our town with Dennis Morgan as a guest and of course he sang One Alone, I'll never forget that day. I would like to hear & see him again someday so I hope the movie will be released . My daughter loves the old musicals & I would like her to see this version of The Desert Song. Is there any thing we can do to get this movie released so more people could enjoy??
  • It was in 1944, when my relatives and neighbors, all were very much concerned about the War. My mother and I went to see the Desert Song movie. I was so impressed by the scenery and Dennis Morgan as the hero. One scene were he was looking over a dune at the Nazi soldiers, is so vivid in my mind. After the movie was over and we got home, the phone rang and we were told all of our relatives in Europe were safe and our relatives in the Army were safe. So this movie was really important to us. Thanks or the opportunity to vent my thoughts.Believe it or not only one other person that I know saw the movie, and now he is dead too. Thanks for all.
  • The various commentators on the 1943 version of The Desert Song cleared up (and confirmed?) the suspicions of a 9-year old boy who thoroughly enjoyed the movie in 1944. It was only after many years and reminiscences (in addition to a fascination with the history of World War II) that I began to wonder why this movie never appeared in public again.

    MY suspicions were confirmed by briantaves of Washington, DC in his comment on The Desert Song; viz., that the politics of North Africa and Vichy French were involved. Considering the time-line of the filming and release (1943-1944), it would appear that the American invasion of Morocco in November of 1942 was involved in the original planning. Our troops were actively resisted by the French troops in Morocco (under the control of the Vichy French (collaborators with the Nazis). A tricky situation considering that the "Free French", led by Charles DeGaulle in London, were our allies.

    As for the copyright issues regarding one song (that keep the movie from being viewed once again), fuggedaboutit! Even as a 9-year old, I knew it was a good movie.
  • It's my understanding that this great movie was re-mastered in the mid-90s, and even shown for one week in New York City before suddenly being taken out of circulation. Apparently, there is a copyright problem over ONE SONG in the movie, which has apparently caused Warner Bros./Turner Classic Movies, or whomever has its rights, to withhold release of The Desert Song (1944 version) from theatrical circulation or home video and DVD. One would think there must be a way around this stumbling block, even if the (probably unfamiliar, non-Romberg) song had to be deleted to permit its re-release. -- Bob Elsner, Palm Sprngs, CA
  • I saw this movie in 1944 as a 7 year old and have never forgotten it after having fallen in love with the desert story line, music, and Dennis Morgan. Saw the movie several times and learned every line of every song. Of course I haven't seen it since and probably never will if there are problems in having it released.

    Five years ago, my daughter and my two youngest grandchildren moved to Muscat, Oman where I have visited them each winter since they arrived there. We always spend a few days at Al Areesh Desert Camp in the Wahiba Sands where I first began to sing The Riff Song for the kids. Although the Bedoins accompanying us think us a little daft, my 8-year-old granddaughter and I take great joy in she and I hopping on our camels, riding off in the sand singing, "Over the ground, there comes a sound.............". What great fun. She is dying to see the movie as am I. What a shame this is not possible.
  • Saw this movie (many times) as a boy living on the lower east side of New York City. Excellent escapism and a wonderful introduction to semi classical music. Dennis Morgan was a very positive actor, equally convincing in a musical or flying a fighter plane in WWII China. He had a the range of vocal and dramatic qualities to thoroughly entertain.

    The one scene with him riding the top of the dunes, calling his men to attack with a melodic battle cry (just approaching "high C") is a terrific way to start a movie. Irene Manning was a good match. Still remember their version of "One Alone" and the Riff's singing "All".

    Sorry the movie can't be released, such chemistry is rare.

    Chuck Ingraham
  • First saw this movie in 1945,when I was in the navy.Recently saw it again on video,but this was in black and white.A couple of the scenes seemed different,but my memory is not what it used to be.Maybe one of the other users could clear this up for me.
  • Warner Archive has it available! It was released less than two weeks ago, and I just ordered it! I can hardly wait! I was a small child when I saw The Desert Song with Dennis Morgan and Irene Manning. I saw it more than once at that time, and have never forgotten it. The scenery, the singing, and the story are all brought together for a delightful and memorable movie. Dennis Morgan remains my favorite movie actor, and I have VHS/DVD copies of almost all his other movies. This one should be in the mix! The fact that it hasn't been released to VHS or DVD is at tragedy and a travesty. Whatever the problems are in releasing - can someone either delete that portion or get the required permission? it has been more than fifty years. Surely whatever it is, it is now in the public domain. Is there no one at Turner who could manage to get this wonderful movie released? I have heard for a number of years that "someone is working on it," but see no evidence of it. How sad that so many unbelievably bad movies are available everywhere, but one of the best remains hidden. It may be hidden, but certainly not forgotten by so many fans of this wonderful movie.
  • Sometime in the late 70's-early 80s, Canada College, San Mateo, Calif had a showing of this movie at a restored Redwood City, Calif. theater. Irene Manning attended and took questions. She was charming. The copy they used for the showing came from Dennis Morgan's private collection. The theater was full including the balconies.

    Since I had always declared this movie my favorite of all time (I saw it when I was 10)I did not let my family come see it with me. I was afraid it would be as hokey as most of the older movies of the era, and they would laugh at me. I was amazed. The story line was relevant to the time. The dialog was not that outdated, in fact it was quite good (and they still made this a musical) Great color and photography. It was hard to believe it had been made in the 40's There must be someone who can get this picture out of the vault and onto DVD before all of us who have loved it and remembered it for over 60 years are gone.
  • I fell in love with the Desert Song movie with Dennis Morgan & Irene Manning when I was young and years later I was a hairdresser and did Irene Manning's hair. She gave two of us operators a copy of the movie on a VHS tape and I have had it ever since. I am sure it would be illegal to copy it or sell it or anything else but when I see the comments of people who would love to see it again it frustrates me. It is not as clear as modern Technicolor but still a great movie and the music is wonderful;. I have no idea as to the added song or which one it was, but the film is still exciting to see and I am 78 years old. It is pure nostalgia and I with all of you would like to see it released to the public.......... Patricia
  • Dennis Morgan and Irene Manning beautifully sing "One Alone" and "The Desert Song" together. Dennis Morgan was a fine actor. Bruce Cabot and other supporting actors played excellent roles. This movie has never been shown on television because of a copyrights dispute over one song that was added to this 1943 version. An entertaining adventure plot with excellent background music.
  • This 1944 motion picture adaptation of The Desert Song musical play is the third of four made over the years beginning in the late 1920's. Warner Bros. produced both this color version and a remake in 1953, when color musicals where at the height of there popularity.

    The film stars a handsome, youthful, Dennis Morgan who is in fine voice delivering both the cavalier and romantic musical numbers that delightfully highlight the screenplay.

    Supporting Mr. Morgan is Bruce Cabot who delivers, well, Bruce Cabot. Gene Lockhart gives a good workman like performance. They are joined by a lovely Faye Emerson.

    The color cinematogrophy takes full advantage of the beautiful Arizona and New Mexico locations where many of the outdoor scenes were shot.

    What is unique about this film is that, unlike the other three adaptations, it was set against the then contemporary backdrop of World War II Africa. It also had the distinction of being nominated for an Academy Award for color art direction and interior design.

    Sadly, it also has another distinction. To my knowledge, this 1944 Warner Bros. production has never come to American television. This writer has not been able to determine why this is so. Can anyone out there in IMDb movieland supply a definitive answer?

    An ri
  • As to why this film is not available, my sister who formerly lived in California thought this movie was privately owned by Irene Manning's and/or her husband and that is why it has not been released to the general public. I was very young when I saw this but remember the beautiful technicolor and music. When video came to be, I looked and looked but never saw anything about the movie and not even about the main stars Dennis Morgan and Irene Manning. I assumed that the decision not to put it on video and TV might have been a commercial one.
  • artzau11 February 2007
    The original operetta by Romberg hit the boards in 1927, the same year that Valentino died. Romantic to the max with unforgettable music and great energy, the play has been revived again and again on theaters throughout the land. There were at least three film versions and in my opinion, this one with Dennis Morgan was the best. There was also a TV special with Nelson Eddy singing the Red Shadow but no film version of that exists either to my knowledge. I saw this as a kid in 1944 during the second world war and didn't understand the political implications of Vichy France, colonialism and the Nazi influence. All I can remember is the great singing of Dennis Morgan and Irene Manning and the action packed story. I've watched for this film on TV for years and have never seen it. In fact, I once drove 70 miles to get home because it was listed to be shown only to see the Gordon MacRae and Kathy Grayson version. Kathy's singing was always worth the price of a ticket but it wasn't what I wanted. No video, no DVD and that's a bummer because the thrill of this old film still haunts my aging memory.
  • I saw The Desert Song when it first came in and begged my parents to take me back, again and again. I think I saw it about 3 times, which was probably all they could manage. Over the years, and they are many, I have wished to see this movie once again. Perhaps I would be disappointed seeing it as a senior opposed to the the memories of a child. But, I would like to be able to make that choice. There must be many out there like me, who has such special memories of this movie. The adventure, the singing, the romance, the patriotism! All winners. I would hope that what ever is keeping it from being played-and who really knows- that someone in power would consider the value of showing this movie once again.
  • I have never read a set of comments as intelligent about any other film. I too saw it in 1944 or thereabouts, when I was 8, and I've never forgotten it. I am sorry to have to observe, though, that it is almost certain that that this stirring and beautiful old movie will not be telecast or made easily available to the public in any form for the foreseeable future. The reasons have nothing to do with copyright or ownership. They are political, as is indicated by the otherwise puzzling changes that were made in the 1953 version. Quite a book could in fact be written about this film and a few others of the era in connection with the vision of liberty and heroism they display against background of WWII and the politics since.
  • The 1943 and 1929 version of the film have been shown on television - though only in black and white, and not for many years. In the 1950's when studios started to see television as a source of revenue - and a cheap one, at that, where they could make some coins by releasing what ever films they had not yet managed to destroy to this new "boob tube". The result was any number of films that should not have seen the light of day, were broadcast regularly - though in the case of many 3 strip tech prints - one of the strips was used to make a b&w 16mm neg - and the prints hat are available are from that source. The 1929 & 1943 versions of the desert song have been circulating for years and if you look hard enough - you'll find them - the quality varies, and they are always in B&W, but its better than nothing (there's even a B&W DVD on the market of the Nelson Eddy version). BTW another film that was release to TV, that should not have been was Richard Dix's Ghost Ship - though recently the rights to that have been sorted out.
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