Rent Monsoon (1943)

2.5 of 5 from 49 ratings
1h 21min
Rent Monsoon (aka Isle of Forgotten Sins) Online DVD & Blu-ray Rental
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Synopsis:
Two treasure hunters are looking for a sunken ship that has $3 million of gold in its hold. The owner of a bar persuades them to let her in on the deal, ensuring intrigue and double crosses along the way. An impending monsoon also threatens the operation.
Actors:
, , , , , , , , , , , , , , , Ann Corio, , , ,
Directors:
Producers:
Peter R. Van Duinen
Writers:
Edgar G. Ulmer, Raymond L. Schrock
Aka:
Isle of Forgotten Sins
Studio:
Elstree Hill Entertainment
Genres:
Action & Adventure, Classics
BBFC:
Release Date:
14/07/2008
Run Time:
81 minutes
Languages:
English Dolby Digital 1.0
Subtitles:
None
DVD Regions:
Region 0 (All)
Formats:
Pal
Aspect Ratio:
Full Screen 1.37:1
Colour:
B & W

More like Monsoon

Reviews (1) of Monsoon

A Bargain-Basement Seabed - Monsoon review by CH

Spoiler Alert
04/06/2021

Strange, the way the mind works. While watching Monsoon (1943) there came to mind Robert Ballard's book about his voyage in a submersible to look at the wreck of the Titanic. He remarked of a grand piano that it was now out of tune, which is a masterclass in understatement. The cost of Ballard's journey doubtless cost a sum which would boggle Edgar Ulmer. Born in Germany, where he worked with Billy Wilder on People on Sunday (1929), necessary exile brought him to Hollywood and a by-word for low-budget acumen, displayed so well in Détour and Ruthless.

Less well known is Monsoon, sometimes called – fittingly – Isle of Forgotten Sin. How to describe it? It opens, as dawn breaks, with the female owner of some premises tapping upon slatted doors, the other side of which slumber sultry women. They have to get up, a ship has docked and business is likely to be brisk.

Naturally, one wonders what this might entail. It emerges that downstairs is a casino, although as events unfold, that first suspicion of journeys upstairs are not dissolved.

And one has to question the competence of the carpenters who built those banisters. Fights break out, and the handrails collapse at the first grasp. Even at eighty minutes, the plot is convoluted, and can sometimes slow down things. Roughly speaking, two sailors are on the track of hidden treasure, and neither can trust the other, especially with others getting wind of its seabed location. All of which entails some of the casino's scantily-dressed women joining a voyage to the island where three-million in gold languishes offshore.

Those dresses survive a midnight swim to a cave, during which the soundtrack sports something which sounds as though Wagner had scored the cheesy opening music of The Simpsons.

There are enough slugfests in all this to ruin a lettuce patch. Nobody's passions are going to be turned upside-down, but it is very entertaining, with some surreal lines, such as the one in which a man comes round from being knocked out to exclaim, “well, I'm a horned toad!” And, when one of the women learns of the money at stake, she observes, “that's not hay!”

This film throve upon a hay diet.

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