Flame of the Islands (1955) Poster

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6/10
Yvonne shines
tday-128 May 2005
Fairly entertaining melodrama of girl who is paid off by rich widow for supposed intrigue with her,deceased rich husband. Yvonne buys into gambling casino in the Caribbean. Naturally,she attracts the attention of the local men, including her old boyfriend,a spoiled society guy who dumped her years before. Republic was struggling to stay afloat in the fifties,still pushing out forties-style movies on a changing movie audience. Yvonne is very watchable as always and makes the most of her role. She has a good supporting cast,including a young James Arness (tv's Matt Dillon.)The photography and location work are very nice. Not a classic but pleasant time filler.
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7/10
Peyton place in Bahamas
MegaSuperstar28 July 2019
Merely it had been filmed as an A movie it would have been a great movie since it has all the elements to be a hit: beautiful scenery and sets, scandal, money, and splendid Yvonne the Carlo at her best. Sadly, Republic was not MGM and so they made a B movie instead. Dance and sing scenes do not quite fit Miss de Carlo's style, choreography especially. Still, they are nice to watch and she looks gorgeous. Doug Duryea's character would have fit much better to Zachary Scott -who is totally wasted and has little to do with his role- rather than Howard Duff. The story has some similarity with Scarlet Angel but would have much improved with a better direction and script. Nice and entertaining film anyway.
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6/10
Soap Opera Ride in the Green Surf
Dfree529 March 2013
Warning: Spoilers
I'm a big fan of '40's and '50's B movies. I go in not expecting much and have been invariably surprised.

After viewing, I thought if this film were at Warner Brothers in 1946...it'd been a Bette Davis vehicle for sure. Bette would be the seasoned woman with a trunk full of dark secrets in her past, paying for mistakes she'd made and for some she's only suspected of. The movie would have a searing high powered Max Steiner score under toning her showdowns with clinging mothers, intruding god mothers, a lustful creep,a wimpy love interest and the nearby he man...all set against the gorgeous backdrop of the Bahamas.

But it's 1956, the studio is Republic and the star is Yvonne De Carlo. And it works in a way. Another reviewer mentioned time and for lack of an added 5 or 6 minutes, the film suffers so. The ending particularly.

***SPOILER ALERT WARNING****

This is a great one to summarize. Yvonne (as Rosiland) accepts a princessly sum from a recent widow (Freida Inescort) as Mrs. Hammond and decides to venture forth with friend Wade (Zachary Scott). Wade's friend Mace (Kurt Kasznar) talks the two into checking out a Casino/Resort he's set up but can't open because he needs operating capital. Roz and Wade check it out, and throw in with Mace. Since Roz can sing and dance a little, she'll be the stage show attraction. Mace wants it to be a private club, for rich high rollers.

Mace (the Creep) introduces them to Kelly (James Arness) a boat captain/beachcomber/preacher (the He-Man). Roz charters a boat, privately...and catches not only a marlin but a pass from Kelly.

Then at the dock she meets bad penny #1 Howard Duff (Doug Duryea) an old teen aged flame. I won't even go into what's in their past...just watch the movie. Doug (the Wimp)and Roz connect and plan to marry, naturally against controlling mama Barbara O'Neil's objections. But the aqua clear waters get muddier as bad penny #2 shows up...Mrs. Hammond, best friend to mama Duryea and Doug's godmother!

Yvonne must survive a wimpy fiancé, bribing and slanderous old biddies, though the so called invalid...she uses a cane; new widow Mrs. Hammond looks pretty attractive (but no men, even the wrong type seem interested in her), a creep (Mace) who wants her, whether she wants him or not and Mace's unsavory silent business partners...who she's unaware till near the end.

Then the story becomes an adventure tale for 6 or 7 minutes, as she and He Man Arness escape the baddies and find true love as The End title card comes up. This sequence seems rushed, it would have been better if it'd been expanded on some.

Oh,yeah...Yvonne is drop dead gorgeous, be it wiggling in a tight white gown doing her floor routine, or fighting a marlin for over an hour. Notice the white short outfit she battled the marlin in and the fashionable hoop skirt cover up on the dock. No wonder Captain Kelly went all gaga!
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4/10
Disappointing all around!
JohnHowardReid27 December 2012
Warning: Spoilers
I usually edit and re-write the notes I jot down at a movie's press preview, but for some reason I kept my original material. Here it is:

Despite a credit title brag that this film was actually photographed in the Bahamas, it is obvious that a 2nd unit contributed the few bits of local color transferred to the screen (often via clumsy back projection). Except for a few brief shots of Miss De Carlo herself, and even less of Mr Duff, the entire roster of Republic's players remain fixed in the 4024 Radford Avenue, North Hollywood studio. And oh, yes, I forgot to add Miss De Carlo's double to the location roster. She's the one who takes the plunge. A really lovely girl. It's a pity she didn't carry the role itself.

Okay, I'm prejudiced, I'll admit it. Like a few other Hollywood stars I could mention, De Carlo had little time for the press. She was obviously bored. She'd answer a few questions in monosyllables and then give us the brush-off with the excuse that the director needed her on the set. And when we wandered on to the set about 40 minutes later, there she'd be, talking most animatedly with one or two of her male co-stars – and the director nowhere in sight! Yes, that could happen for real occasionally, but with Miss De C., it happened all the time. Yes, I'm prejudiced. You have been warned!

It's obvious – studio publicity to the contrary – that De Carlo's "singing" has been dubbed (except for a drunken chorus). Her miming is, to say the least, inexpert; while her "dancing", to be charitable, is embarrassingly gauche.

In fact, Flame of the Islands is a sorry film all around. The screenplay is impossibly contrived, with characters so inconsistently motivated from scene to scene as to drive a halfway decent actor to despair. Of course, few of the players in this line-up probably noticed, though Zachary Scott does seem to wear an understandable air of bewilderment. We wonder what his character is supposed to be too. It seems he is just along for the ride. No such problems afflict De Carlo and Duff. In fact, Duff seems even more wooden than usual. Only Kurt Kasznar as the amorous villain has any chance to shine.

The screenplay seems to have gone through a wringer in the censor's office and has thus been robbed of what little sense it may have had originally. Laughably inept cost-cutting robs even the final (and only) spurt of action of its belated bit of drama.

With all these negatives against the movie, Ludwig's direction is understandably banal and lethargic. Admittedly, the film's editor has attempted to speed things up a bit by eliminating some tedious continuity footage. Some further jump cuts have probably been contributed by the studio's desire to chop the film down to exactly 90 minutes. Mr. Yates was not a fan of long movies – unless, of course, they starred Mrs. Yates.

The photography is likewise indifferent. (The first reel in the TV version seems to be printed through gauze).

Yes, all told, this is a very sorry film, which even rabid Republic fans (like me) will count a dead loss.
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4/10
Bahama mama
jotix10017 May 2008
Warning: Spoilers
Contrary to the two comments that were previously submitted to this forum, "Flame of the Islands" left a lot to be desired, as a feature film. The story of this woman that wants to get her revenge for what was been done to her years ago doesn't make much sense, as presented in the movie. The rich and powerful Mrs. Hammond, who knew about her husband's escapades, and after he suddenly dies, gives the conniving Rosalind Dee a hundred thousand dollars to get her out of the way. Who, in her right mind, would have parted with that large amount of cash without checking the facts? It shows she was an idiot without much intelligence!

Then there is the problem of Rosalind arriving in Nassau and becoming the main attraction of the new club. She makes a great impression with the former alcoholic expatriate, the Rev. Kelly Rand, who on the first fishing trip hits upon Rosalind, and in spite his holiness he is just as smitten as the rest of the men who are attracted by the beautiful Rosalind, who now we learn, is really Linda D'Arcy. Talking about stretching credibility, Rosalind/Linda meets the man she was in love years before, young Doug Duryea, who doesn't even recognize her at all!

Well, if one likes these soap-opera-like twists, then "Flame of the Islands" will be the thing to watch. It's fun, it's campy, and it features a larger than life performance by Yvonne DeCarlo, a screen beauty with a figure to match her talents. What is surprising is that the story by Adele Comandini, who wrote the far superior "Christmas in Connecticut", had no luck by what Bruce Manning, the adapter, did to her story, which probably made more sense in paper than in the finished product.
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5/10
Future Lily Munster on fire.
BILLYBOY-1029 December 2010
Warning: Spoilers
Ah, FotI, filmed in flaming, glowing, blinding technicholor with red doors and yellow walls and blue seas. Yvonne DeCarlo of later Lily Munster fame is a sizzling hot flame in the Bahama's where she's a partner in a posh casino catering to the upper crust.

Suddenly, one day, after landing a twelve foot swordfish she dramatically stumbles upon Howard Duff whom she used to hanky panky with when she was a mere fifteen year old and he was 35. She recognizes Duff immediately, he sort of remembers her but it's now 14 years later and has turned from teen to voluptuous flame. After all the heartache he put her thru back then, she still loves the lug and wants him to love her. So, she sins and gyrates her to a hot rumba island song, he falls for her again and everything seems peachy until Mother Duff appears (casting here is a tad incredible since Duffs mom is actually only 9 years older in than Duff so she seem more like his slightly older girl friend and not his mom, oh well) and tells Yvonne to back off 'cause she wants sonny boy to herself. Yvonne is not terribly threatened and sings and gyrates another flaming island song and then Duff's God Mother appears and means to put an end to this romance. She has all the dirt and intends to use it. First of all Duff impregnated Yvonne but she didn't tell him before he split back when she was 15. The baby was born dead. Then GodMaMa tells MaMa Duff that Yvonne was having an affair with her(Godmama's) husband around the same time as the Duff affair, so she is gonna ruin Yvonne.

Well, MaMa Duff confesses to Yvonne it was she who was having the affair with Godmama's hubby obviously not Yvonne. MaMa Duff makes Yvonne she won't not tell sonny boy Duff and then mama kicks the bucket on her sofa. Duff asks her who it was, Yvonne doesn't tell and the engagement is off. Yvonne gets soused on brandy, sings a sloshed song on the easy chair and hooks up with James Arness of Gunsmoke who has always had the hots for her, so they kiss and then get kidnapped and the coast guard blows up a ship but they escape and presumably live happily ever after. Other characters are thrown in who also have the hots for Yvonne, so actually she was quite the island flame. To watch Yvonne gyrate, bump, grind, shimmy, shake and wiggle to her songs is worth the price of admission alone. The setting in the blue Bahamas is just the perfect venue for this color extravaganza and it's a real juicy soap opera as well. I especially liked the mostly short, abrupt scenes and economical direction, lush sets yet sometimes downright production cost cuts. It's an amusing waste of time.
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8/10
A superior screenplay, filmed cheaply on location in the Bahamas.
abner357 October 2006
Flame of the Islands is usually described as a story of a woman and the men in her life, but the heart of the story is about three women: Rosalind Dee, (Yvonne de Carlo); the woman of whose husband she was supposedly mistress, (Frieda Inescort), and the mother of the boy she had loved as a teenager, (Barbara O'Neil). Rosalind is a good woman corrupted by a desire for revenge over the woman who had destroyed her chance for happiness by separating her from the boy she loved as a teenager, but her revenge, small as it is, redounds on people she has every wish not to hurt. That part of the story is fascinating, and one could wish that the story were used in a more substantial production. Unfortunately, the movie ends with a bit of cheap melodrama not related to that storyline. James Arness plays a lay preacher, and one can't help loving a movie with the line: "OK, boys, stand up. Sing "Jesus Loves Me."

The film has a fine score by Nelson Riddle, incorporating two songs sung by Yvonne de Carlo which are wry commentary on the plot.
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2/10
Awful
dxmpnxn18 March 2022
The acting is absolutely appalling. The script is awful. The only saving grace is the location. Shall I keep repeating myself until I get to one hundred and fifty characters.
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4/10
Duff did her wrong
bkoganbing28 July 2014
I'm sure the cast and crew of Flame Of The Islands was grateful to Herbert J. Yates and Republic Pictures for a nice vacation in the Bahamas which were still a British colony when the film was released. The scenic cinematography of the Bahamas is the best thing that this film has going for it next to Yvonne DeCarlo's beauty. A pair of natural wonders.

As to the film itself it's a muddled cross between an action adventure film and a Back Street soap opera which I had trouble figuring out. Career woman DeCarlo is summoned by the widow Frieda Inescourt and given $100,000.00 in hush money as DeCarlo was Inescourt's late husband's Katharine Hepburn to his Spencer Tracy.

She takes the money and goes to the Bahamas to invest it in a new gambling club with Kurt Kaszner and on general principles one does not go into business with Kaszner and the characters he plays. Along for the ride is Zachary Scott. While in the Bahamas she meets up with both preacher/beachcomber James Arness and society lion Howard Duff and his Barbara O'Neil. Back when she was a teen Duff did her wrong.

One thing that you can rely on is that every male member in this cast was panting hot and heavy for Yvonne. Even the gangsters that Kaszner brought in as silent partners were giving her the once over. Who in this soap opera will Yvonne wind up with. That's for you to find out by watching.

A most subpar soap opera helped by Yvonne DeCarlo and those low cuts items she wears.
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5/10
A tale of two islands.
mark.waltz10 February 2017
Warning: Spoilers
One is the Bahama's. The other features a giant apple, and when the girl from the big apple goes to the big pineapple, it's not long before she becomes a Bahama mama. That lady in the sarong here is the flashy Yvonne de Carlo, the future Lily Munster, the future one shot Broadway diva who proved that indeed she was still here. She's a successful career woman who by accident inherits a bequest from a wealthy man, given to her through the man's widow (Frieda Inescort) who believes that there was more going on but didn't seem to mind. Newly rich, de Carlo goes to the Bahama's with her friend Zachary Scott to check out a nightclub bought by Kurt Kasznar and ends up finding her own green acres, not at all reluctant to depart Park Avenue.

Looking at first like a thin version of Alan Hale's skipper, James Arness jumps into the story, stirring up de Carlo and making Scott jealous. Later, an old childhood sweetheart (Howard Duff) shows up, stirring her even more to melodramatic delight. While there aren't any movie stars, there are swimming pools (right off the ocean to obviously avoid sharks), and it becomes a colorful delight, getting campier by the minute. Something shady is soon revealed, and it ain't two ladies under a banana tree. Along with the previous year's "Underwater", this is a delight for the eyes, and when de Carlo breaks into "Bahama Mama", be sure not to sip your tropical cocktail. Scarlet O'Hara's mother, Barbara O'Neill, so deliciously nasty to Bette Davis in "All This and Heaven Too", adds another imperious role to her roster as Duff's very young looking mother.

Made during the last days of Republic studios, it was one of the rare times that studio head Herbert J. Yates cast another star over his wife, Vera "Hruba" Ralston, and thank God for that! Crawford and Stanwyck also ventured there around this time, like Maureen O'Hara had done for "The Quiet Man". There's a Christmas sequence with little kiddies singing "Yes, Jesus Loves Me", and while it could be very cloying, it's actually very sweet. For much of the film, however, it's all about de Carlo and her many admirers, some big fishing scenes (she catches a marlin!), and some travelog style shots of the main areas. But the main story really could be set anywhere. Ultimately, that doesn't really matter, because it is fabulously entertaining from start to finish, colorfully filled with everything that made movie going an absolute joy in the golden age.
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10/10
Christmas in the Bahamas.
copper19636 February 2013
Having a Caribean cocktail with the stunning Yvonne De Carlo is always a welcome treat. Watering down a highball glass full of shiftless men (with one exception) who she encounters along the way is a daunting prospect. De Carlo's "Bahama Mama" is the swivel stick that stirs the island economy. She inherits a hefty sum of cash and quickly enlists Zachary Scott to accompany her to the Bahamas where she purchases a resort/casino. All of the female characters seem to be harboring dark secrets. The male characters, however, come off as clueless (Duff doesn't even recall having a past relationship with Miss De Carlo.) or righteously noble (Arness has the hots for De Carlo but would rather see her return to the mainland, before losing her dignity and money chest.) Arness' character is steadfast against the vice of gambling. He's always preaching against the evils of the roulette wheel. Sleazy Kurt Kazner, yet another investor, has eyes for the female lead, too, but also has ties to some unsavory gangsters. Duff's memory returns and he begins to woo the sultry Yvonne, but Duff's mother is an impediment. She dislikes show people (Decarlo is a singer) or anyone else she feels is beneath her son's station in life. Tough courting rules. Along the way, Decarlo sings and dances up a tropical storm. Her three musical numbers slyly comment on the action taking place on the screen. One reggae-riff, while she's in a drunken stupor, is a highlight. Multiple scandals pop up along the way; secrets are revealed. Duff's meddlesome mother is in the center of things. It all leaves you guessing and a bit perplexed. Set during the Christmas season, the exotic scenery and super bright day-glow colors leap (lords a leaping) from the screen. This film was written by the same woman who penned the Christmas classics Beyond Tomorrow and Christmas in Connecticut. Flame of the Islands completes the yuletide trilogy in fine fashion.
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8/10
Vintage Gold
jromanbaker28 February 2021
This film is a gem, epitomising the best of 1950's ' trashy films '. It is Camp in its way, and there are scenes of Yvonne de Carlo getting drunk in it worthy of Susan Hayward. The version I saw had lost some of its glowing colours, but better a poor copy than no copy at all. It has everything you want in this kind of ' exotic ' film of the period, when the poor flocked to their local cinemas to see places that only the rich could afford to go to. And often the dream is better than the reality, and in films like this Hollywood excelled peddling such dreams for a low price of admission. Howard Duff and Zachary Scott add to the colour of gamblers doomed to eventual failure, and there is a very camp scene where de Carlo swims to safety with a tall blond hunk, and both sexes would have swooned at such an erotic scene of tropical paradise. Track it down. Unavailable to find on DVD ( prove me wrong ) it should be restored to its glorious, if garish colour, and the 1950's furniture is an antique dealer's dream in itself. A definite 8 for those who need trash cinema as well as cinematic classics. And Yvonne de Carlo was definitely a presence on screen to be fondly remembered or for those who cry, who's she ? to discover.
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8/10
Men at the mercy of their women, and women getting caught up with the wrong men
clanciai1 August 2019
She is no Ava Gardner and no Rita Hayworth, but reminds of both. In fact, Ava Gardner would have done perfectly in this role, if you forget about the singing - not even Rita Hayworth would have made singing performances like that, although Yvonne's dancing isn't bad at all. And what about all the guys around her? Zachary Scott is all right and is the one who behaves well. The less said about Kurt Kasznar, the better. Howard Duff was promising indeed, the perfect man to marry, but then there was all that business about his mother, who couldn't live without him, and a godmother on top of that, who is even more possessive. The ladies play the major part in this Caribbean soap opera, although the story and intrigue is quite good and fascinating. Yvonne de Carlo remains the one star of the film, outshining everyone else and dominating every scene. Although the script is good, the dialog could have been better. The hoodlums add some spice into the soup. It's great entertainment in gorgeous surroundings, all the best in the Caribbean, but apparently the budget was a minimum, the screening is poor, and the direction seems rather casual. Nevertheless, the film is definitely worth seeing for the sake of Yvonne de Carlo and her character.
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8/10
Republic Chick Flick
richardchatten19 July 2020
An enjoyable escapist fantasy shot in gleaming Trucolor in which Yvonne De Carlo sashays about the Bahamas while plainly seldom leaving the studio.

The men are mainly there to be infatuated with her. The competition comes in the form of two neurotic middle-aged women united in their loathing of De Carlo: the cool Frieda Inescort (playing an invalid with a stick and in reality already suffering from multiple sclerosis), and Barbara O'Neal - best remembered as Scarlett O'Hara's mother in 'Gone With the Wind' - again playing an ill-fated mother, this time Howard Duff's.
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Flaming Yvonne De Carlo
searchanddestroy-124 January 2023
It is surprising that two Universal Studios stars, "home" stars - Yvonne de Carlo and Howard Duff - of this period played in a Republic Pictures film, precisely in a category of movies which Universal was specialized in.... A Republic Film directed by a "home" Paramount Studios film maker: Edward Ludwig. Who also gave us WAKE OF THE RED WITCH, though, for Republic. Adventure, exotic, colorful, enchanted settings films, romance or noir. It was a Paramount or Universal companies trade mark. More then any other studio. The overall atmosphere seems close to Bruce Humberstone's SOUTH SEA SINNER, produced by Universal Pictures, also an adventure drama taking place in modern period, including more or less noir elements. Edward Ludwig was also a Paramount Pictures film maker, more than Republic Pictures.
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