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Irwin Allen Movies

Producer/director Irwin Allen carved out a unique niche for himself in Hollywood with a string of science fiction/adventure series on television in the 1960s, and as a maker of big-budget disaster movies in the 1970s. He became so successful in the latter endeavor that the press christened him "the master of disaster."
Born in New York City in 1916, Allen graduated from Columbia University's School of Journalism and worked as a newspaper and magazine editor before turning to writing and producing for radio. He later started his own advertising agency, but he always loved movies, and he entered the business at RKO. His earliest screen credit was as associate producer of the noir-ish thriller Where Danger Lives (1950), which had a screenplay by Charles Bennett, the veteran British screenwriter who would figure in many of Allen's later productions. In 1952 he was the writer, producer, and director of the Oscar-winning documentary The Sea Around Us. He followed this up with The Animal World (1956) for Disney.
From 1956 onward, Allen directed his attention to much bigger scale fiction films. His prior work in journalism and advertising allowed him to establish social relationships with many middle-level Hollywood stars, and those friendships became central to his success as a producer. His first independent feature, the whimsical fantasy film The Story of Mankind (1957), included a cast of established box office names, among them Ronald Colman and Harpo, Chico, and Groucho Marx and Hedy Lamarr. His next picture, The Big Circus (1959), included Victor Mature, Rhonda Fleming, Red Buttons, Vincent Price, Gilbert Roland, and Peter Lorre in what was basically a lower budget variant on Cecil B. DeMille's The Greatest Show on Earth. In 1960, Allen -- now working with Twentieth Century Fox -- produced a remake of the silent-era The Lost World, starring Claude Rains, Michael Rennie, and David Hedison. The movie got poor reviews, but its color and pacing overcame some poor special effects, and it was a box office hit. The following year, he struck gold again with Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea, featuring a cast of veteran stars, including Walter Pidgeon, Joan Fontaine, and Peter Lorre, and a screenplay by Bennett -- it owed a bit to Disney's Jules Verne-based 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea, as well as to the exploits of the real-life atomic submarine Nautilus. Allen returned to Verne as a source in 1962 with Five Weeks in a Balloon, a lower budget (but highly entertaining) answer to Mike Todd's Around the World in 80 Days.
In 1963, Allen began looking to television as a new medium in which to work. The following year, he debuted the series Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea, based on his own film and starring Richard Basehart and David Hedison. It was an immediate success, and in 1965 he followed it up Lost in Space (which had started life as "Space Family Robinson"), all about a family's interstellar adventures. Although Voyage ran a season longer, Lost in Space had the biggest popular culture impact. Both shows evolved over time in a more juvenile direction, especially Lost in Space, as the characters of young Will Robinson (Billy Mumy), the robot, and fey, comical villain Dr. Smith (Jonathan Harris) came to dominate the series. Those who worked for Allen say that he was, at some level, a lot like an overgrown kid in terms of his appreciation of stories and adventure. He seemed to know what younger viewers would find exciting and he loved those explosions that seemed to go off at regular intervals on both series. He also loved old Hollywood, however, and the chance to use veteran actors, such as Francis X. Bushman and Henry Daniell, in his movies and TV shows. His production company also had several veteran actors as investors, including Groucho Marx (whose sister-in-law Dee Hartford was one of the more memorable guest performers on Lost in Space) and Edgar Bergen (who gave a fine dramatic performance in an early episode of Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea).
Allen's next series, Time Tunnel -- which relied on footage from the Fox film library to facilitate its heroes' travels through time -- only ran for one season. But with two programs in production, he was still near the top of his game as he unveiled Land of the Giants in 1968. A sci-fi/adventure show about seven travelers trapped on a world where everything is 12 times larger than on Earth, it was the most expensive series ever done for television owing to the special effects, outsized sets, and other unique requirements; it was successful enough to last for two seasons and proved enormously popular all over the world.
Allen's next few series never got past the pilot stage, but in 1972 he made a triumphant return to feature films with The Poseidon Adventure. Boasting a name cast and first-rate special effects, plus top-notch direction by Ronald Neame, this picture became almost a license to print money and launched the whole disaster movie genre, which kept audiences filling theaters for most of the 1970s. Allen returned to the director's chair to co-direct his biggest production of all, The Towering Inferno (1974), with a huge cast of top stars, past and present. The latter movie represented the genre's commercial peak -- after that, casts and disaster canvases could get bigger, but the returns still diminished. Allen closed out the genre with The Swarm, a movie that, at times, seemed to be unintentionally parodying itself, though it did give late-career paydays to Fred MacMurray, Olivia de Havilland, and a brace of other Hollywood veterans. Following Beyond the Poseidon Adventure (1979), he continued producing for television, but retired in the late '80s and passed away in 1991. In the decades since, almost all of his major work for movies and, especially, television, has been given special deluxe treatment on DVD and cable, and Lost in Space even became a successful feature film in 1998. ~ Bruce Eder, Rovi
1951  
 
The unique comic talents of Groucho Marx, William Bendix and Marie Wilson are hardly exploited to their fullest in RKO's A Girl in Every Port. Groucho and Bendix play Benny Linn and Tim Dunnevan, respectively, a couple of scheming sailors who embark upon one get-rich-quick scheme after another. This time around, our heroes use a small inheritance to purchase two horses, one for racing purposes and one to be sold at a tidy profit. After a series of bizarre complications, both horses are pitted against each other in a crucial race which could spell either triumph or ruin for the two goofy gobs. Wilson co-stars as a birdbrained carhop who owns one of the horses coveted by Linn and Dunnevan. No stone is left unturned so far as wheezy comedy routines are concerned: writer-director Chester Erskine even manages to revive the old chestnut wherein the sailors sneak both horses on board their ship. The likeable supporting cast includes Don DeFore as a disgruntled stable owner, Dee Hartford (who later became Groucho Marx's sister-in-law) as DeFore's financially savvy fiancee, Gene Lockhart as a seedy horse dealer, Hanley Stafford ("Daddy" on radio's Baby Snooks) as the two protagonists' flustered commanding officer, and Teddy Hart as a Runyonesque gangster. A box-office disappointment, A Girl in Every Port ended Groucho Marx's efforts to become a solo screen star; fortunately, he still had TV's You Bet Your Life to fall back on. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

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Starring:
Groucho MarxMarie Wilson, (more)
 
1950  
 
Faith Domergue, the latest of Howard Hughes' protegees, made her film debut in 1950's Where Danger Lives. Domergue plays Margo Lannington the wife of Frederick Lannington (Claude Rains), an elderly millionaire possessed of a sadistic streak. Robert Mitchum co-stars as Jeff Cameron, a poor soul who falls in love with Margo without knowing that she's married. During a violent confrontation with the jealous Frederick, Cameron knocks the older man out and stumbles out of the room. Upon his return, he discovers that Frederick is dead. Margo had smothered her husband during Cameron's absence, but she insists that Cameron is the killer. The desperate lovers flee to Mexico, where Cameron at long last discovers that his travelling companion is more than a little unhinged. Masterfully directed by John Farrow, Where Danger Lives might have been one of the classic "film noirs," were it not for the acting deficiencies of Faith Domergue, who flounders in a role that Jane Greer could have played blindfolded. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

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Starring:
Robert MitchumFaith Domergue, (more)