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  • planktonrules25 February 2013
    While "Jamaica Run" has got a few problems, on balance, it's a very good picture and one worth your time. Currently, it's available streaming from Netflix, though the copy isn't great due to film degradation. I'd love to see the film after some sort of color restoration.

    The film begins with a guy (Patric Knowles) approaching the Dacey family in Jamaica to buy their plantation. However, it's been in the family for generations and they aren't interested in selling. A bit later, he returns and here is where the plot gets weird. He brings along two distant relatives of the Dacey's and a diver (Ray Milland). Why? Because more than a hundred years earlier, relatives were in the process of buying the plantation and no one was sure if the deal was completed or not. This is because the two branches of the family (those buying and those selling) had met on a ship that subsequently sank--and no one survived to tell whether money had changed hands or the contract signed. Now, Knowles' character proposes to have his diver explore a ship wreck to see if proof can be obtained. Not surprisingly, with so much at stake, it's not surprisingly when a murder occurs. But who is responsible? And, what happens when a treasure chest IS found? The film has some decent acting but in particular, I liked the script. This is because although the plot WAS complicated and strange, it had lots of twists and surprises. I particularly liked the ending--now THAT was a big shock. Apart from one or two minor quibbles (such as the romance involving Wendell Corey's character--it just happened too fast to be realistic as well as WHY would a servant be called 'Human'--what sort of name is that?!), the film is a dandy adventure that is well worth seeing.
  • bkoganbing16 December 2012
    Jamaica Run has come down to us as the film where Errol Flynn's estate was used as a location. From the looks of it, Errol lived pretty well, but he was getting money from Paramount to film there because the IRS was on his case pretty bad. It's the closest Flynn ever got to doing a film at the white mountain studio.

    Not that a lot of his films were doing good at this time, but Flynn missed nothing real special with Jamaica Run. Ray Milland stars as a charter boat captain who once tried to marry into the Dacey clan who own a large plantation that is going to wrack and ruin. Mother Carroll McComas sits and drinks and reminisces about the good old days when her husband was alive. Her son Wendell Corey just takes after mother and has become a true wastrel. Only Arlene Dahl who literally and figuratively wear's the pants in the family keeps the place earning some kind of income. She and Milland were once and item, but mother and brother helped kill that.

    Now Milland is bringing Patric Knowles who is a developer and wants the Dacey property for a resort. They won't sell, but Knowles digs up some cousins who say they are the real owners of the place and the proof is in an old wreck at the bottom of their harbor. Milland who is also a diver goes to find it. In the meantime Corey starts wooing Laura Elliot who is a kissing cousin in case the claims decision goes bad for the family. The other cousin, Michael Moore, is killed and the body found when Milland makes one of his dives.

    Some truly abrupt changes in character during the story renders it almost incoherent toward the end. And the end is truly melodramatic and over the top.

    Not a terrible film, Jamaica Run is never going to be in the top ten for any of the principal players.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    This is a pretty picture, the Technicolor adds to the scenery and helps move a rather ordinary tale along. The story of hidden treasure under the sea is been done a few times, and successfully. I do like this movie if only for the two beautiful stars, Ray Milland and Arlene Dahl. She is beautiful here and Milland is still so handsome, that even if it is a sort of dry story we want to go along for the ride. Carol McComas as the out of touch, and nutty mother is very good. When Milland is good he is good. He always steps up to any part, regardless of the material. He always said he wanted to work, so he made the best of some not too great parts. Take the time to see this movie, it is actually a nice 50's adventure.
  • This film was not favored with a notably munificent budget but cinematographer Lionel Lindon's work, using the Technicolor process that may still have been three-strip (around the time the transition was being made to a single strip negative), camouflaged that fact quite well, principally aided by the ravishing red-headed beauty of Miss Arlene Dahl. The whole enterprise looked very studio-bound - no location work in the Caribbean here - and the pulpy plot didn't give the cast of professionals, including leading man Ray Milland, much to work with. But, oh my!, Miss Dahl is such a lovely camera subject. It does not appear to be available on video and I can't recall seeing it scheduled on a TV broadcast after I caught it as a supporting feature at the neighborhood Bay Theater in Pacific Palisades, California, after its initial run.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    It seems that wherever there's a tropical paradise, some screenwriter is going to create an atmosphere that makes it romantic and safe and exotic, just the place for wealthy Caucasians to settle in and run with an iron hand. I could easily refer to this in soap opera terms as "Jamaica Quest" with its widowed matriarch, two children, assorted distant relatives, and a claim from an outsider that threatens to take it all away from them. Carroll McComas is no Miss Ellie or Angela Channing, content to let her children worry about the business end of the estate, sort of like Big Mama from "Cat on a Hot Tin Roof".

    Son Wendell Corey has no ambition and is morally ambiguous while daughter Arlene Dahl is the strength that could save the family. Her former beau Ray Milland had been hired by claimant to search for proof that he rightfully owns the estate, and this requires diving into the deep dark sea to locate long lost documents to prove it. There's a murder. rivalry between old enemies Milland and Corey, and Corey's attempts to woo Kasey Rogers ("Bewitched") who may be entitled to part of the estate.

    As usual, gorgeous scenery (mostly studio bound) is the attraction, and outside of Dahl, Milland and McComas (reminding me of Lillian Fish) have any spark. Stereotypical characterizations for black actors fill out the native roles (including the family servants), and some of these actors appear to be wearing makeup to appear darker. I thought there'd be some excitement for the diving scenes, but surprisingly, this lacks any real action. At the pacing it has, this should have been titled "Jamaican Trot".
  • Action scenes in this movie WERE done on location in Jamaica. I know because I was the stand-in for Arlene Dahl and drove Patricia Wymore's Red Singer automobile and for boat scenes Boston Beach which was owned by Errol Flynn was used. Yoou won't see the little pig running around the beach getting in the way while the movie was being made. They also made me up as a jockey for some horse riding scenes. I was the driver racing down the hill during the fire at the mansion. I recall some scenes in the sugar cane fields, too. The movie stars were not in Jamaica for the scene shot there. All were done by stand-ins. Errol Flynn and his Dad and sister hung around occasionally to watch since their property was being used.

    Scenes in Jamaica in this movie are authentic .The boat used was owned by a local and name tag was changed for the movie. I wish there was some way I could get copy of this movie, Jamaica Run for my memoirs. I would appreciate any help in that area.