1941

    1941
    1979

    Synopsis

    In the days after the attack on Pearl Harbor, panic grips California, where a military officer leads a mob chasing a Japanese sub.

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    Cast

    • Dan AykroydSgt. Frank Tree
    • Ned BeattyWard Douglas
    • John BelushiCapt. Wild Bill Kelso
    • Lorraine GaryJoan Douglas
    • Murray HamiltonClaude Crumn
    • Christopher LeeCapt. Wolfgang von Kleinschmidt
    • Tim MathesonCapt. Loomis Birkhead
    • Toshirō MifuneCmdr. Akiro Mitamura
    • Warren OatesCol. 'Madman' Maddox
    • Robert StackMaj. Gen. Joseph W. Stilwell

    Recommendations

    • 70

      Variety

      Billed as a comedy spectacle, Steven Spielberg’s 1941 is long on spectacle, but short on comedy. The Universal-Columbia Pictures co-production is an exceedingly entertaining, fast-moving revision of 1940s war hysteria in Los Angeles spawned by the bombing of Pearl Harbor, and boasts Hollywood’s finest miniature and special effects work seen to date.
    • 50

      TV Guide Magazine

      1941 is loaded with slam-bang sight gags and action, but comedy isn't director Steven Spielberg's forte and the movie isn't nearly as funny as it might have been.
    • 40

      The New York Times

      1941 is less comic than cumbersome, as much fun as a 40-pound wrist-watch.
    • 40

      Newsweek

      Spielberg has brought forth a farce that is both relentlessly spectacular and spectacularly unfunny. [17 Dec 1979, p.111]
    • 38

      Chicago Sun-Times

      It's not fair to say Steven Spielberg's 1941 lacks "pacing." It's got it, all right, but all at the same pace: The movie relentlessly throws gags at us until we're dizzy. It's an attempt at that most tricky of genres, the blockbuster comedy, and it tries so hard to dazzle us that we want a break.
    • 30

      Washington Post

      1941 represents an appalling waste of filmmaking and performing resources. As one would expect, Spielberg, who directed "Jaws" and "Close Encounters of the Third Kind," sustains a high energy level. But the energy is expended on material that is pointless at best and occasionally hateful. [15 Dec 1979, p.C1]
    • 25

      The Globe and Mail (Toronto)

      Not only is it mindless, it is also racist. Not only is it racist, it is also incompetent. Not only is it incompetent, it is also unfunny. [17 Dec 1979]

    Seen by

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