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Encyclopedia > Lifeboat (movie)

Lifeboat is a 1944 World War II movie, directed by Alfred Hitchcock from a story written by John Steinbeck. The whole movie takes place in a lifeboat. 1944 was a leap year starting on Saturday (link will take you to calendar). ... Mushroom cloud from the nuclear explosion over Nagasaki rising 18 km (over 11 miles) into the air. ... Alfred Hitchcock Sir Alfred Joseph Hitchcock, (13 August 1899 – 29 April 1980) was a British film director closely associated with the suspense genre. ... John Earnest Steinbeck (February 27, 1902 – December 20, 1968) was one of the most famous American novelists of the 20th century. ... For the 1944 movie, see Lifeboat (movie). ...


A group of American and British citizens are stuck in a lifeboat after their ship is sunk by a Nazi U-boat. The German captain of the U-boat is in the lifeboat as well. The Nazi party used a right-facing swastika as their symbol and the red and black colors were said to represent Blut und Boden (blood and soil). ... U-boat is also a nickname for some diesel locomotives built by GE; see List of GE locomotives October 1939. ...


The movie starred Tallulah Bankhead, William Bendix, Walter Slezak, Mary Anderson, John Hodiak, Henry Hull, Heather Angel, Hume Cronyn and Canada Lee. Tallulah Bankhead, photographed by Carl Van Vechten, 1934 Tallulah Brockman Bankhead (January 31, 1902 - December 12, 1968) was a United States actress, talk-show host, and bon vivant, born in Huntsville, Alabama. ... William Bendix (January 14, 1906 - December 14, 1964) was an American film actor. ... Walter Slezak (May 3, 1902 - April 21, 1983) was an Austrian actor. ... Mary Anderson (July 28, 1859 - May 29, 1940) was an American stage actress. ... Actor John Hodiak was born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania in 1914. ... Heather Grace Angel (February 9, 1909 - December 13, 1986) was a British film actress. ... Hume Blake Cronyn (July 18, 1911 - June 15, 2003) was a stage and film actor. ...


Of all Hitchcock's films, this is perhaps the one in which we would least expect to see a Hitchcock cameo since the action takes place entirely on a lifeboat. However, in one scene, one of the characters can be seen reading a newspaper. In the newspaper, an advertisement for Reduco Obesity Slayer is visible which features before and after pictures of Hitchcock's world-famous profile. Hitchcock later said that he received letters shortly after the film was released asking where they could obtain this miraculous, though fictitious, dieting aid. Many of Hitchcocks films contain a cameo appearance by Hitchcock himself: the director would be seen for a brief moment boarding a bus, crossing in front of a building, standing in an apartment across the courtyard, or appearing in a photograph. ...


In 1993 the movie was remade as a science fiction TV movie titled Lifepod. Moving the action from a lifeboat to a spaceship's escape capsule, the remake starred Ron Silver, Robert Loggia and CCH Pounder. Silver also directed. The Remade are people (perhaps better described as individuals) in the series of books written by China Miéville that are centered around the world of Bas-Lag. ... Science fiction is a form of speculative fiction principally dealing with the impact of imagined science and technology, or both, upon society and persons as individuals. ... A television movie (also TV movie, TV-movie, made-for-TV movie, etc. ... Ron Silver (born July 2, 1946, New York) is an American movie and television actor. ... Robert Loggia (born January 3, 1930) is an American character actor. ... Carol Christine Hilaria Pounder (born on 25 December 622 in Guyana) is a film and television actor. ...


External links


The Internet Movie Database (IMDb), owned by Amazon. ...

Alfred Hitchcock's films
The Pleasure Garden | The Mountain Eagle | The Lodger: A Story of the London Fog | Downhill | Easy Virtue | The Ring | The Farmer's Wife | Champagne | The Manxman | Blackmail | Juno and the Paycock | Murder! | The Skin Game | Number Seventeen | Rich and Strange | Waltzes from Vienna | The Man Who Knew Too Much | The 39 Steps | Secret Agent | Sabotage | Young and Innocent | The Lady Vanishes | Jamaica Inn | Rebecca | Foreign Correspondent | Mr. & Mrs. Smith | Suspicion | Saboteur | Shadow of a Doubt | Lifeboat | Spellbound | Notorious | The Paradine Case | Rope | Under Capricorn | Stage Fright | Strangers on a Train | I Confess | Dial M for Murder | Rear Window | To Catch a Thief | The Trouble With Harry | The Man Who Knew Too Much | The Wrong Man | Vertigo | North by Northwest | Psycho | The Birds | Marnie | Torn Curtain | Topaz | Frenzy | Family Plot

  Results from FactBites:
 
Lifeboat - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (1206 words)
Lifeboats are kept in harbour or near a harbour, in a special building, at an offshore platform or on board a ship or aircraft.
Lifeboats for the North Sea include an electric heater for the engine oil, which is left on in cold weather.
When the Apollo 13 command module was damaged by an explosion in the service module, the lunar module was used as a lifeboat as it had separate life support, propulsion and guidance systems that remained functional (though it was not a lifeboat in the sense that it was detached from the main vehicle).
Lifeboat (film) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (428 words)
Lifeboat is a 1944 World War II movie, directed by Alfred Hitchcock from a story written by John Steinbeck.
A group of American and British citizens are stuck in a lifeboat after their ship is sunk by a Nazi U-boat.
Moving the action from a lifeboat to a spaceship's escape capsule, the remake starred Ron Silver, Robert Loggia and CCH Pounder.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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