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Run Silent, Run Deep
on DVD (1958)
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| Starring: |
Clark Gable, Burt Lancaster, Jack Warden, Brad Dexter, Don Rickles, Rudy Bond, Nick Cravat, Mary LaRoche |
| Director: |
Robert Wise |
| Studio: |
MGM ENTERTAINMENT |
| Run time: |
89 mins |
| Certificate: |
 |
| Genres: |
Action/Adventure, Drama |
| Languages: |
English |
| Dubbed: |
French, German, Italian, Spanish |
| Hearing-impaired: |
English, German |
| Subtitles: |
Danish, Dutch, English, Finnish, French, German, Italian, Norwegian, Polish, Portuguese, Spanish, Swedish |
| Released: |
13/11/2000
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Brief synopsis of Run Silent, Run Deep
Run silent, run deep is a term that accurately describes the mission of the submarine in this tense World War II drama. Commander Richardson (Clark Gable) is the only survivor when his sub is hit by a notorious Japanese destroyer dubbed Bongo Pete in the Bongo Straits of Japan. Back at Pearl Harbor, Richardson obsessively plays out strategies that would have saved his crew. When he is reassigned a new ship in the Pacific, he must face old demons as well as the sub's younger executive officer who was slated for captain, Lt. Bledsoe (Burt Lancaster). Bledsoe has the support of his crew and locks horns easily with Richardson, but when the captain disobeys navy orders to stay clear of the Bongo Straits, taking the crew right in to go after Bongo Pete, there is very nearly a mutiny. RUN SILENT, RUN DEEP is marked by strong performances, particularly by Gable, and a taut script. The scenes of the rigorous sub drills the captain puts his crew through are intensive and exceptional.
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Related
Critics Reviews
Radio Times
This terse, brilliantly directed study in revenge is one of the best submarine movies ever made — Quentin Tarantino even referred to it as such in his additions to the screenplay of Crimson Tide. Clark Gable stars as the commander who returns to the dreaded Bongo Straits where he had previously lost a sub and his men. Of course, second-in-command Burt Lancaster isn't happy, feeling that he should be in charge, and his reticence and the resentfulness of the crew make for fine drama in a confined space. Former editor Robert Wise — who numbers Citizen Kane among his early work — proves that there's much more to his directorial career than the musicals he tends to be remembered for today, and the opening, pre-title sequence of this film is a classic example of movie storytelling. Even if you don't like the genre, this film merits watching for its star power alone.
Halliwell's Film Guide
Competent, unsurprising war actioner trading on its stars.
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