Strange Cargo (1936 film)

Strange Cargo
Directed byLawrence Huntington
Written byGerald Elliott
Produced byLawrence Huntington
Starring
CinematographyEric Cross
Production
company
Distributed byParamount British Pictures
Release date
  • March 1936 (1936-03)
Running time
68 minutes
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish

Strange Cargo (also known as Breakers Ahead [citation needed] ) is a 1936 British crime film directed by Lawrence Huntington and starring Kathleen Kelly, George Mozart and Moore Marriott.[1] It was written by Gerald Elliott. The film is notable for an early performance by George Sanders who went on to success in Hollywood. Criminal gun runners smuggle illegal arms onto a British ship at a South American port.

Plot

Cast

Production

The film was made at British and Dominions Elstree Studios for release by Paramount Pictures.[2]

Reception

The Monthly Film Bulletin wrote: "The acting, with the exception of the captain's son, is good and some of the smaller parts are very well done. The direction is competent, but the film is not very striking and the excitement is lost in the very slow development of the story."[3]

Kine Weekly wrote: "Here we have a British idea of a rollicking melodrama of gun-running in South American waters, and a pretty insignificant one it is. The story never for a moment convinces, the aboard-ship action is absurdly cramped, comedy relief feeble, and individual character-drawing far less effective than the strenuous efforts of the principals deserve. With the "A" certificate to deprive it of a juvenile patronage, the only one to which its naive schoolboy flavour is likely to appeal, its fate hangs solely on its quota ticket. ... Moore Marriott is not too bad as the fiery Captain Burch, Kathleen Kelly suggests with fair effect the plight of the maid in distress, and Georze Mozart, veteran of the music-halls, occasionally amuses as a bungling ship's cook, but George Saunders is very wooden as Roddy, and the supporting players are hopeless as South American revolutionaries."[4]

Picturegoer wrote: "This attempt to present a story of gun running in South American waters has litte punch or pep and is so cramped in its setting that it carries no conviction and is sometimes unconsciously funny. The character drawing is negligible and as a whole the picture lacks the polish of present-day productions."[5]

Picture Show wrote: "Competent acting and drirection. Fair entertainment."[6]

References

  1. ^ "Strange Cargo". British Film Institute Collections Search. Retrieved 28 January 2026.
  2. ^ Wood, Linda (1986). British Films, 1927–1939 (PDF). British Film Institute. p. 92. Archived from the original (PDF) on 16 October 2022.
  3. ^ "Strange Cargo". The Monthly Film Bulletin. 3 (25): 43. 1 January 1936. ProQuest 1305802628.
  4. ^ "Strange Cargo". Kine Weekly. 229 (1508): 27. 12 March 1936. ProQuest 2338400865.
  5. ^ "Strange Cargo". Picturegoer. 6: 34. 9 July 1936. ProQuest 1777229251.
  6. ^ "Strange Cargo". Picture Show. 35 (899): 19. 25 July 1936. ProQuest 1880315497.