Emmeline Foster
Jean Simmons
Emmeline Foster

“No one to see them... No one to tell them... No one to stand in their way!”
In the Victorian period, two British children survive a shipwreck in the South Pacific. After days afloat, they are marooned on a lush tropical island in the company of kindly old sailor. Together they survive solely on their resourcefulness and the bounty of their remote paradise.
Emmeline Foster
Jean Simmons
Emmeline Foster
Michael Reynolds
Donald Houston
Michael Reynolds
Paddy Button
Noel Purcell
Paddy Button
Dr Murdock
James Hayter
Dr Murdock
James Carter
Cyril Cusack
James Carter
Captain
Maurice Denham
Captain
Mr. Ansty
Philip Stainton
Mr. Ansty
Mr Bruce
Patrick Barr
Mr Bruce
Craggs
Russell Waters
Craggs
Michael-child
Peter Jones
Michael-child
Emmeline--As A Child
Susan Stranks
Emmeline--As A Child
Michael, as child (as Peter Jones)
Peter Rudolph Jones
Michael, as child (as Peter Jones)
Though still infinitely better than the syrupy 1980 remake, this is still a film that time has been pretty brutal to. The premiss is amongst the most natural we can imagine: a young girl and boy are shipwrecked on a tropical island and as they mature, so does their relationship. Partly out of necessity and partly out of choice, the two - "Emmeline" (Jean Simmons) and "Michael" (Donald Houston) effectively become a couple. Aside from Stewart Granger (and maybe Kirk Douglas), I never really saw a man who could match Simmons on screen. She seemed to be able turn her hand to anything, creating a characterisation effortlessly with those piercing eyes and that almost silent movie star demeanour. Here she portrays the epitome of curiosity and naivety, with a soupçon of vulnerability really quite well. Houston, on the other hand, has a charm-free wooden-ness about him that probably made even he realise that he only got the girl because, well, there was nobody else! Their story evolves along fairly predictable lines, with some fun interjections from the always reliable Noel Purcell ("Paddy"), James Hayter ("Murdoch") and Cyril Cusack ("Carter"), with some beautiful Fijian cinematography, and Frank Launder does manage to combine a certain sense of the idyllic and the dangerous well enough too. Sadly, though, a better leading man was needed to balance this narrative and the older it gets the less attractive it becomes to watch.
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