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To the Ends of the Earth

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To the Ends of the Earth (1948)

February. 07,1948
|
6.8
|
NR
| Thriller
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A treasury agent becomes obsessed with exposing an international drug ring.

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Exoticalot
1948/02/07

People are voting emotionally.

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Supelice
1948/02/08

Dreadfully Boring

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Cissy Évelyne
1948/02/09

It really made me laugh, but for some moments I was tearing up because I could relate so much.

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Bob
1948/02/10

This is one of the best movies I’ve seen in a very long time. You have to go and see this on the big screen.

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MartinHafer
1948/02/11

needed special permission of production code to talk about drug smuggling made during Powell's 'tough guy' years opium trade set 1935"To The Ends Of The Earth" was a film made during the period after Dick Powell transitioned from the pretty-boy crooner in light-weight films to a more world-weary and middle aged leading man. I generally loved these films, as Powell's characters were often incredibly cynical...and he pulled it off very well. This one, while showing SOME of this new sort of Powell character, sadly, isn't up to the quality of his best performances of the era...though it is a decent time-passer.The film begins in the mid-1930s with an insanely graphic and troubling scene. Treasury Department Commissioner, Mike Barrows (Powell), is on a boat in the San Francisco area that is trailing a boat full of smugglers. In a sick and desperate act, the captain of the boat being pursued decides to have his men toss their illegal cargo overboard instead of being caught with it...and you see dozens of Chinese migrant workers chained together being tossed into the sea to their deaths! Barrows witnesses this and is horrified...and vows to see this captain apprehended. But they are now in international waters and the boat escapes.Later, there is a lead that the captain MIGHT be in China and so Barrows travels there to hunt for the scum-bag. However, it soon begins clear that these Chinese workers were not what he originally thought. They were, in fact, slave laborers used by folks in the narcotics trade to plant and harvest poppies and soon he finds himself investigating the heroin trade. While all this sounds very exciting, the film's pacing wasn't great and the story went to too many locations and had too many characters. Normally I don't see this as a problem but I found that the pacing and story were not especially well done. I think a lot of this was made more obvious because too often instead of DOING anything, the characters talked and talked and talked. Overall, not a bad film but one that was surprisingly flat at times.

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AsHimself
1948/02/12

Every time I looked to see how much time was left I'd say - dammit. Wish it could have gone on longer. Not sure why this one isn't more well known. Opens in that semi-documentary style, but after that it turns into a top-notch film. Story is complex enough without being confusing, entire cast is good. As much as I enjoyed Powell's been-there-done-that kinda attitude in "Murder, My Sweet", I like him better here, where it's more subtle, plus I like how his character is able to show a little more genuine surprise as the story unfolds. Hate reviews that give away stuff, and I don't mean just give away the important stuff, I mean give away anything. Totally stubborn about that, more than anyone I know. Sorry, not gonna say anything about this plot except that the title sums it up well enough. Much better than most 40s-50s international intrigue BS like "Beat the Devil" or "Rope of Sand". If you can slog through that crap you need to watch this. Most everything I watch these days are old crime thrillers, and as much as I enjoy them, a lot don't hold up well over time. This is an exception, no question. I hardly ever write reviews here - honestly, I don't even know if I've even done one, that's how much I care about putting them down. Felt compelled to in this case.

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sol
1948/02/13

***SPOILERS*** Very probably the very first serious movie coming out of Hollywood about illegal drugs and how their being being smuggled into the USA has Dick Powell as FBN, Federal Bureau of Narcotics, Agent Michael Borrows going as the movies title suggests to the ends of the earth to stop a boat load of opium from being smuggled into New York Harbor. It's Agent Borrows shock of seeing some 100 Chinese coolies thrown overboard off the Japanese freighter Kira Maru that sent him on his course of stopping the opium shipment that the ship was involved with from being successful even at the cost of his own life!Traveling to far off Shanghai then Cairo as well as the Middle East, Palestine Lebanon and Syria, Agent Barrow finally got some results in pre-Castro Havana Cuba where the shipment of illegal Opium was on it's last leg on its voyage to New York City. While tracking the drugs down Agent Borrows got involved with Ann Grant, Signe Hasso, and her ward of the state pretty Chinese teenager Sho Pan Wu, Maylia, who's parents were killed in China in a Japanese bombing raid on their village. It's Ann that Agent Borrows is a bit suspicious of in that she's not straight with him about what she's doing Shanghai China and the mysterious circumstances of her husbands, an irrigation engineer, death!It later comes out that Mr.Grant was involved in the planting and hiding, under a bed of roses, a field of poppies, the plant that Opium comes from, in Southern Egypt! This is later confirmed by the Egyptian owner of the "rose garden" Binda Sha, Fritz Libner, who when exposed killed himself by jumping off a cliff! The movie finally gets to the point to how the Opium was processed and hidden in the ships, docked in Havana Harbor, kitchen that's to be secretly smuggled into New York City under the cover of darkness or for a better word garbage!***SPOILERS*** It's by then that Agent Borrows gets a bead to who's the big boss of the drug smuggling operation. Not really knowing that Agent Borrors is on to him or her the drug kingpin drops his guard which gives Borrows the chance to get the jump on him and his drug smuggling, who by then were almost all dead or behind bars, colleagues! The final few tense filled minutes of the movie has Agent Borrows take a chance in letting the head of the drug smuggling operation take a shot on him just to prove that he's the one in charge! It took nerves of steel on Agent Borrows part but it worked to the shock, in finding out who the head man was, of everybody watching as well as in the cast the movie!P.S There's also in "To The Ends of the Earth" in a number of newsreel clips the head of the FBN Harry J. Anslinger who together with the assistance of his crime fighting government agency made the making of the movie possible.

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GManfred
1948/02/14

I thoroughly enjoyed this picture and I had been looking for it for a long time. It's not often a motion picture can mesh all components into a first class entertainment production. This one is so completely absorbing from start to finish that I wished it wouldn't end. It was 110 minutes well spent.It is remarkable to note the metamorphosis in Dick Powells' career, from an effeminate tenor in "42nd Street" in the early '30's to a tough-talking, gravel-voiced film noir star, beginning in the mid '40's with "Murder, My Sweet", and "Cornered", culminating in this near-masterpiece.Can't find fault anywhere here. The story moves along at breakneck speed, and, as mentioned in my summary, if you get up to get a snack you will lose the thread of the story, so intricate and complex is the plot. If this were a book I would say I couldn't put it down.Whatever happened to good film-making? Movies get worse and worse, but thank God for TCM. This picture is a little outdated, but just go with it and take into consideration that it was made 60 years ago. Truly, they don't make 'em like this anymore.

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