Overview
Release Date:
16 September 1953 (Denmark)
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Plot:
Shrimpers and oilmen clash when an ambitious wildcatter begins constructing an off-shore oilrig.
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User Comments:
Transparent Plot Devices, Thin Script, but Interesting Look Back
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Crew believed to be complete
Additional Details
Runtime:
103 min
Color:
Color (Technicolor)
Aspect Ratio:
1.37 : 1
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MOVIEmeter: 
10% since last week
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Fun Stuff
Trivia:
Although filmed in the standard 1.37-1 aspect ratio, Thunder Bay was chosen by Universal-International as its first wide screen feature, accomplishing this by cropping the top and bottom and projecting it at 1.85-1 at Loew's State Theatre in New York City, as well as other sites. Its initial presentation also marked UI's first use of directional stereophonic sound.
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Quotes:
Johnny Gambi:
Can you, uh, juggle or anything like that? We might pick up a few bucks.
Steve Martin:
I can imitate a movie star.
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The outsiders are the oil guys coming into a small fishing town off the Gulf of Mexico. Jealousies erupt, fear of the new technology is involved. Businessmen are risking everything they've got "and this time it has to work or they're finished". You know the rest.
You should decide for yourself whether it's the acting or the script that's marginal. Stewart plays it like he always does, but there's not much challenge in the role. I can't help but wonder if Senator Kerr (D - Okalahoma) helped finance this little "promo" piece for his company.
Interesting though that this really is a look at Kerr-McGee's first offshore oil platform, which struck oil at a time when the post-war (we can make cars again!!) economy was exploding. The shrimpers are still shrimping and the oil is still flowing from that day to this (with a little break for a few hurricanes).
An informally educational look back at the hot controversy that abounded at the time, 1947.