Bear Island (1979) Poster

(1979)

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6/10
Nice chilly little thriller.
poolandrews17 November 2009
Warning: Spoilers
Bear Island starts as various scientists of differing nationalities head towards the icy NATO owned Bear Island, a small island in the Artic, where they intend to study the effects of climate change on the melting glaciers. Among them is interested American Frank Lnsing (Donald Sutherland) whose father Captained a German World War II U-Boat & since Bear Island was the last recorded position of his father's boat he wants to see if he can find it, however all is not well as various other parties in the expedition have more sinister motives. Why did team leader Otto Gerran (Richard Widmark) designate certain areas as avalanche risks when they were not? What is he trying to keep people away from? Who sabotaged the radio mast? Who deliberately started an avalanche that killed one scientist & almost killed Lansing? Just what watery cold secrets does Bear Island hide & why does it appear certain people will kill for them & just who is the mysterious Zelda?

This British Canadian co-production was co-written & directed by Don Sharp & was based on the novel of the same name published in 1971 by Alistair MacLean although I have not read it so cannot compare the two but this film adaption differs greatly from it's source novel in many ways, as a film I quite liked Bear island & thought it was a fairly watchable espionage thriller with hints of James Bond style action all set on an isolated cold Artic island cut off from civilisation which adds tremendous atmosphere to the film. The set-up is quite good & there's definite intrigue here but it shoots it's load a little too early on although the actual identity of Zelda is kept secret until the end the reasons behind everything is a little predictable. The action adventure scenes are good if a little understated with a lengthy snow mobile/hover-boat chase at the end & two skiers trying to out run a huge avalanche the two main action set-piece highlights. At almost two hours long some may lose patience with it but I thought the time flew by which is always a good sign & I was fairly gripped by it even if things turn out a little underwhelming at the end. The character's are alright although I would have liked more motive for some of the lesser ones to have been the villain & a few more red herrings, basically I would have liked some slightly stronger mystery elements but I still liked it overall.

Bear Island seems to be fairly obscure with few user comments & no external reviews on IMDb, it has certainly never been released on DVD anywhere & only issued once on VHS here in the UK during the mid 80's although it does occasionally turn up on telly every so often. The film is well made & has a really icy isolated atmosphere, I almost felt the Artic chill while watching this at home although the version I saw was horribly pan and scanned & you could hardly tell what was going on in certain zoomed in grainy as hell shots that surely would have looked so much better in it's proper aspect ratio. The action scenes & fights are nice enough & there's a few decent explosions as well.

Filmed on location in Alaska, Canada & in the studio in London, England this looks good with good production values although it apparently bombed big time at the box-office which is probably why it's not more well known or more widely released. There's a good solid cast of pros here including Donald Sutherland, Vanessa Redgrave, Richard Widmark, Christopher Lee, Lloyd Bridges & Lawrence Dane although some of the accents are a bit poor.

Bear Island doesn't have much in common with it's source novel but as an action adventure with a sprinkling of mystery you could do worse & I did like it, worth a watch at lest if you can find a copy or catch it on telly.
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6/10
Not great, but much better than expected
TheLittleSongbird14 July 2011
I had heard that Bear Island was not a good movie at all, but I wanted to see it anyway because I like the cast a lot. When I eventually saw it, I didn't find it great, but it was much better than I expected.

Pros: Lovely photography and great sets and locations. Atmospheric score by Richard Farnon. Great performances from Richard Widmark and Christopher Lee, Vanessa Redgrave has her moments but has an inconsistent accent. Sharp and well paced direction.

Cons: As much as I love Donald Sutherland, he does look bored and stiff here. The dialogue is uneven, having moments when it is decent but some of it is really quite bad. The story has great idea and starts and ends well, but the film is rather sluggish with some of the middle section feeling like filler.

All in all, not great, not awful, just somewhere in between. 6/10 Bethany Cox
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7/10
Good cast with some great locations and sets
udar5523 March 2010
German scientist Otto Gerran (Richard Widmark) leads an expedition to icy Bear Island - which was also a base for Nazi U-boats in WWII - for some kind of environmental research. Included in the group are fellow scientist Frank Lansing (Donald Sutherland), nurse Heddi Lindquist (Vanessa Redgrave), Russian Lechinski (Christopher Lee) and boat captain Smithy (Lloyd Bridges) among others. When they arrive at the titular location, the group discovers one of the three folks stationed there has gone missing. Before you can say TEN LITTLE INDIANS, folks start getting offed in an effort to hide the island's secret.

This is a pretty enjoyable action-mystery adaptation of Alistair MacLean's snowbound novel. The cast is all game, which is good as this must have been a hell of a production to shoot as 70% of it looks shot on location (Alaska and Canada). Director Don Sharp keeps things moving fast and, while you'll probably solve most of the mystery early on, there are still some nice twists. The production is nicely mounted, with great sets and some nice Bond-esquire snow chases. One great scene has Sutherland discovering a German U-boat and he finds the dead crew aboard it, shackled to their posts.

One interesting thing my friend who sent this to me pointed out is that this totally has a vibe of John Carpenter's THE THING. Now, of course, THE THING is a remake but I'd wager that film's screenwriter Bill Lancaster or John Carpenter saw this before setting about their version. The opening - where a lone guy runs across a snow-covered plain while being chased by a snowboat - sounds exactly like the opening of Carpenter's film. Look for Bruce Greenwood in his first big screen roll as Tommy the Technician, sporting an epic beard.
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Good movie
dturner-518 July 2002
I read the book and saw the movie. I enjoyed both. Donald Sutherland was excellent. This is a suspense thriller and so it goes slower than a typical action flick. If you expect this to be an action flick you will be disappointed. There are a few surprises which is typical of the writer's style.

If you want an action movie MacLean is not for you as he is the Master of Suspense and writes in a way to keep you on the edge of your seat wondering what is going on. If you see this from the middle, you will be bored, you must see it from the start and watch with full attention. If you miss any of the plot, you will get confused frustrated and wonder why you're watching the movie.

When you watch this, don't do anything else except watch it and I assure you that you will applaud this movie along with others like unto it like Where Eagles Dare, Guns of Navarone, Force 10 from Navarone, Ice Station Zebra, Detonator I and Detonator II, Satan Bug and a few more. The only one that dragged for me was Puppet on a Chain but I saw it chopped up on network TV so I need to see it again unchopped, unedited and not edited for television.
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7/10
Good Movie
lucioaraujo7 February 2019
Film with good scenes from Alaska and good actors. He holds attention until the end of the film
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7/10
This film has the vibe of John Carpenters The Thing
szovati28 January 2020
The similar theme music, Arctic setting, Norwegians and group alone left wondering who the antagonist is. This is a neat little film I found cross referencing Donald Sutherland films I haven't seen before. The Nazi U boat subplot is also great for its atmosphere. Another bonus is that it offers a pretty good line up of old school actors such as Richard Widmark, Loyd Bridges and Christopher Lee. There aren't many great films about the Arctic but this is one that you will enjoy.
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4/10
The More Thrills It Sets Up The More Silly It Becomes
Theo Robertson18 November 2005
Warning: Spoilers
I found BEAR ISLAND listed in today's page of the TV guide so popped onto this page to find out if it was any good or not . Obviously I also read the plot summary which told me Nazi gold could be the key to the mystery so right away I realised Nazis wanted to their hands on some gold . I'm not criticising anyone for letting me know this because it's my own fault for reading plot summaries on this site

!!!!! YES THERE'S SPOILERS !!!!!

The problem is once you know Nazis are involved there's little mystery left as to who they are or their motives . Who are the Nazi agents ? I'm sort of guessing that it won't be Judith Rubin or Lechinski , not with their ethnic backgrounds . Lansing confesses later on that he was born in Germany but it's already established by this time that he's one of the good guys so it's not him and when someone says " I wish people would obey orders " it's just too obvious that they're a Nazi which doesn't leave much room for anymore red herrings . It should be pointed out for those of a pedantic nature that it's Neo-Nazis who are the bad guys

The plot would have worked far better as a TEN LITTLE INDIANS type story but for some reason the movie plays out like a James Bond action thriller . I've not read the source novel but the narrative is totally ridiculous as we're treated to a fast paced action set piece every five minutes and apart from being silly they're often unnecessary to like the old geezer commandeering a helicopter to save the drowning hero ten minutes into the film . It also leaves massive plot holes like why do the hero and heroine make their way to the harbour on the slow moving snow mobiles when there's a couple of bigger , faster more powerful snow mobiles that they could have used ? That's so the Nazis can escape and pursue them on the journey and this lack of thinking on the part of the producers condemns this movie as a below par thriller
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6/10
No bears
Wuchakk6 November 2016
Released in 1979 and directed by Hammer-alumni Don Sharp from Alistair MacLean's novel, "Bear Island" is an arctic thriller about an international group meeting at the eponymous isle near the Arctic Circle off the Northern coast of Norway. Several people die under dubious circumstances and it becomes clear that some of the personnel are doing the killing; and why. Donald Sutherland, Lloyd Bridges and Vanessa Redgrave play the main protagonists while Richard Widmark plays the curmudgeonly leader of the expedition. Christopher Lee is also on hand as an interesting loner.

Unlike similar arctic thrillers, like 1968's "Ice Station Zebra," which was absurdly set-bound, "Bear Island" features great location shooting with Alaska substituting for Norway. There's a lot of action, including an avalanche, several explosions, a great knock-down-drag-out fist fight and a falling radio tower; there's also some good tension between the characters. But something keeps "Bear Island" from standing out. The script needed SOMETHING to make it more compelling, like a head-turning female or a steamy romance. Yes, Barbara Parkins is on hand, but her role is too small; and Redgrave's part is thoroughly academic. Nevertheless, there's enough good here to give it a marginal recommendation for those who appreciate realistic (to a point) arctic adventures, like 2009's "Whiteout." Sutherland, for instance, is excellent as the main protagonist.

The film runs 118 minutes and was shot in Glacier Bay National Park, Alaska, and British Columbia, as well as studio work in England.

GRADE: B-
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5/10
Various UN scientists converge upon Arctic in search of a Nazi U-Boat based on the work of Alistair MacLean
ma-cortes10 August 2010
A team of weather scientific - Vanessa Redgrave , Richard Widmark, Barbara Parkins , Lloyd Bridges, Christopher Lee - who are actually secret agents intelligently posing as UN researchers gather together at a remote Arctic outpost and discover a criminal intrigue about a Nazi treasure .Shortly after they arrive begin dying in assumed accidents . They are wind up at the same base and realize that are being murdered one by one at the isolated location under mysterious circumstances . As continuous explosion , traps , avalanches , accidents and sabotages. The starring , Donald Sutherland, suspects on Nazi duo might be on the premises , because of belonging to ¨ Reich Kinder¨ . He discovers a strange organization ruled by ¨Celda¨ who want to destroy the world economy . The plot wavers between suspenseful and illogical , while everybody involves overacts in an apparent attempt to figure out what the heck's going on .

This thrilling movie about a group of scientific find themselves embarking on a suspenseful investigation contains moving sequences , intrigue , tension and wonderful, coloured locations from Arctic . It displays sizzling scenes about snow-boat and snow-motorcycle on some overwhelming chase sequences that are the movie's best . Dark photography during the night scenes but marvelous cinematography when reflects spectacularly the breathtaking Arctic outdoors by cameraman Alan Hume . Beautifully filmed on location in Glacier Bay National Park, Gustavus, Alaska, USA ,Pinewood Studios, Iver Heath, Buckinghamshire, England, UK (studio),Stewart, and Tide Lake ,British Columbia, Canada, Tide Lake, British Columbia .Rousing and exciting musical score by Robert Farnon. The motion picture , well produced by Peter Snell, is regularly directed by Don Sharp. This Canadian adaptation based on the novel by Alistair McLean packs habitual combination included on his books , as foolish dialog , stirring action , impressive locations and colorful characters . Other films based on his novels are the following ¨Force 10 Navarone¨, ¨ Guns of Navarone ¨, ¨ Puppet on chain ¨, ¨ When the eagles dare ¨ and ¨ Breakheart pass ¨ among others . Rating : Acceptable and passable . The picture will appeal to whodunit/thriller buffs
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7/10
Sort of like "Ten Little Indians", but in the Arctic....and with Nazi gold.
planktonrules10 August 2022
In some ways, I think the rather cold reception "Bear Island" had when it debuted was because author Alistair MacLean set the bar so high with previous film adaptations of his novels. This is the same guy who brought us "The Guns of Navarone", "The Satan Bug" and "Where Eagles Dare"...so I really think people expected a bit too much from "Bear Island". After all, it's a pretty good film but not nearly in the same class as these other movies.

The story is set, naturally, on Bear Island...a speck of land about midway between the top of Norway and Svalbard in the upper Arctic Circle. To say it's remote is a definite understatement. On this actual island are some fictitious features...such as a NATO base, an international research station and an old bombed out Nazi U-boat base.

The research station is the setting for most of the film. Among the multinational cast are some folks who aren't particularly nice. It seems that in the old Nazi base was a shipment of Nazi gold...and these niceness impaired folks want the gold...even if it means killing everyone else there. Lansing (Donald Sutherland) is intent on unraveling the conspiracy.

The cast is generally very good...with some nice veteran actors like Sutherland, Lloyd Bridges, Vanessa Redgrave, Christopher Lee and Richard Widmark. Most are welcome though I think Widmark was horribly cast, as he was supposed to be a German but sounded, well, like he was trying in vain to effect some sort of Nordic accent...maybe.

So is the film good? Well, it's decent...with some nice action and an engaging, albeit farfetched story. Worth seeing...if only to get a load of Widmark's accent!
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2/10
Did anyone read the book?
Bruce-3919 August 1999
You read Alistair MacLean's excellent novel, then you sit and watch this film. After you've gotten over the sheer awfulness of it, a question springs to mind. Did anyone involved with this film read the book? The script writers seem to have glanced at the back cover of the paperback edition before churning out this dreck. They didn't read the back cover, just glanced.
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8/10
They don't make 'em like they used to
rlaine7 August 2010
I've been a movie geek since my childhood in the early 80's. This is one of the titles that for some reason stuck in my mind, even tho I never saw it because I was too young. Now was the first time I caught it on TV (scandinavian TCM). I'm surprised to see it's only available as a Spanish DVD and has an such a low score on IMDb (5.4/10).

I must say it's one of the better films I've seen this year, although I'm easy to please when it comes to certain types of film and this really is one of them. The locations and set design are amazing. This kind of isolation, feel of cold bleak winter, snow storms are very rarely portrayed so well, it's up there with Carpenter's The Thing. Grab a warm cup of coffee on a rainy day or a whiskey on a darkening evening while watching this.

I saw this without subtitling and had a bit of a trouble keeping up with the plot, even tho I'm pretty fluent in English. There are characters from USA, Germany, Denmark, Poland etc and a lot of exaggerated accents. It also doesn't make it much easier to follow the plot when the actors have similar clothing and are covered all the way, so you can't see their faces when outdoors.

I'm not much into action, but the scenes here worked. They are quite few, but longish and build slowly. There is some noticeable trick cinematography and jump cuts, but they're easily forgiven.

It's a fun detail that the expedition to Bear Island is initially about investigating the global warming. Judging by the original book synopsis, this wasn't the case on Maclean's book, but added to the movie. The movie is already over 30 years old so it's a nice eye opener for those who think global warming is something Al Gore invented.

It's far from perfect movie (from a relatively unknown Hammer horror director!), but the arctic scenery, some enjoyable performances (Sutherland) make up for it. Catch it if you can (TCM shows the widescreen version). It's a true nostalgia trip to a movie land that doesn't seem to exist anymore.
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6/10
Bear Island
CinemaSerf5 June 2023
I've seen this film I don't know how many times and I never can remember the ending... I think that is probably because so much of the preamble in this overlong arctic drama is dull and listless. Certainly it has an A-list cast, but somehow the whole just doesn't equal the sum of the parts. Richard Widmark ("Otto") heads up a group of scientists on the eponymous island that was formerly used as a Nazi submarine base. It doesn't take us long to discover that on board one of the abandoned U-boats is a the stuff to give "Goldfinger' a wet dream - and someone amongst them is determined to secure it for themselves, regardless of the increasing mortality rate amongst their colleagues. The snowscapes do lend much eeriness and chill to this Alistair MacLean thriller, but the acting isn't remotely joined up. Vanessa Redgrave sports a ropey accent as "Dr. LIndquist" and Donald Sutherland just seems to be in a jovial, Errol Flynn mode for much of his performance as "Lansing" before the thing starts to slide, rather stolidly, towards an ending that really does disappoint. It's a good story, this - plenty of double dealing in the stye of "Ice Station Zebra" (1968) and nobody knows whom to trust. Thing is, Don Sharp just doesn't build on that mistrust; nor on the claustrophobic surroundings of their hostile environment - he just relies too much on the box office status of this well past it's best cast and sadly it just underwhelms.
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4/10
Not very good
TurboarrowIII26 September 2014
I don't think this is a very good film.

There are a lot of iffy accents. An all star cast don't seem to have any enthusiasm. Donald Sutherland puts in just about the worst performance I have ever seen from him. He talks in a monotonous drawl and just seems bored with the whole thing.

There is some action but it isn't very exciting and the whole film seems gloomy and grey with no real spark.

As I said the cast don't look like they really want to be there and appear to be going through the motions.

I haven't read the book so not sure if the film is like it or not but if the book is as poor as the film then I wonder why they bothered to make it.

An all star cast ought to have meant a better film but this is definitely not very good in my opinion.
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Chiller, not thriller
Oct26 March 2007
Comparing Alistair MacLean and Ian Fleming is salutary. Both were heavy-drinking Scots who wrote action thrillers, hitting the jackpot in the Fifties and Sixties. But whereas Fleming's novels have risen to be Penguin Modern Classics, MacLean-- once said to be the world's best-selling novelist-- is now totally out of print in the States, and in and out of it in his own country.

Fleming created a flat but fascinating protagonist who became more interesting than the villains and girls he encountered; MacLean never used the same character twice, preferring chase and setting to psychology. His inability to invent interesting female foils was absolute; often they have the same name, Mary or variants thereon. MacLean trusted that the story would be its own reward, but without psychological flesh on the bones his stock situation-- group of professionals in tight-lipped quest for a treasure, one of them a snake in the grass- becomes wearisome.

MacLean's other handicap was that he liked money. After "The Guns of Navarone" hit dollar paydirt, he increasingly wrote with movie adaptation in mind, producing hybrids that were neither literary nor cinematic; whereas Fleming barely lived to see the Bond films blossoming into history's biggest screen moneyspinner.

"Bear Island" is a case study in the frosty aridity of MacLean's "visual" imagination. The gang are placed in a locale he knows and loves: the Arctic, scene of his first hit, "HMS Ulysses", and "Ice Station Zebra", a good film. In the background is World War Two, in which MacLean's naval service was the making of him. The principals are uneasily allied in search of Nazi gold buried on Bear Island, near Spitzbergen. There is much betraying and motive-revelation, chases in boats and on skis and snowmobiles, close-quarters work with fists, knives and guns, before the treasure hunt is played out. But it's all as chilly as the temperature.

To begin with, the film was an Anglo-Canadian co-production, never a promising sign; it was shot in British Columbia with a cast ill at ease with their roles. Donald Sutherland, the Canadian contribution, gawps and mumbles in his usual fashion, hardly the strong silent MacLean hero. Vanessa Redgrave-- incredibly, this was the part with which she chose to follow an Oscar for "Julia"-- is a statuesque Scandinavian with a wobbly Ingrid Bergmanesque accent. Christopher Lee seems to pine for cape and fangs. Lloyd Bridges, the bad apple, hams it up in a manner anticipating his turn to actual self-parody in "Airplane!".

All are often encased in anoraks and big fur hoods, so knowing who is doing what to whom is a puzzle. The pace is crippled by the conditions: fights seem slapstick, and there is a ludicrous moment when several characters flounderingly "break into a run" knee deep in snow, at a leaden pace. The icy scenery is attractive, but to get scale the camera has to stand well back, diminishing the figures of the actors and making their manoeuvres seem as trivial as a puppet show.

Director Don Sharp, as Ken Annakin noted in his memoirs, was better at derring-do than humour, but nobody goes to MacLean for a laugh: here too he is unlike Fleming, whose pawky vein of wit was broadened by the Bond scenarists and has preserved the early 007 entries magnificently. The solemnity of "Bear Island"'s furry, flailing personnel becomes risible.

The picture, in short, was a weary and chilly haul for the audience. Not that many were given the chance; it was hardly released to cinemas and became a TV schedule filler. It might as well have been a midatlantic melange from Lord Grade.
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7/10
Much better than I expected!
daniel-kyle15 February 2023
I avoided seeing this for over 40 years, though I had lived in Northern B. C. in 1978-79 near where it was filmed. In fact, much of the cast had telephones hooked up to their rooms in Stewart, B. C. for the duration of the shoot, and therefore when the new phone books came out in 1979 they were listed under their well-known names (but, of course, the lines had been disconnected by then).

Anyway, I found this to be quite a good movie and better than most other Maclean adaptations. Certainly the production values, direction, editing, sound, and cinematography are all very good.

The acting is at times questionable, but depends on how much you like the actors: I have never found Donald Sutherland compelling.
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7/10
Overlooked Spy-thriller on former U-Boat northern outpost!!
elo-equipamentos10 November 2023
Hard to find Bear Island from the master of spy-thriller Alistair MacLean's novel, is too much overlooked picture as its reputation suggest, it takes place at far off and frozen Norwegian Bear Island nearby artic circle, where has an UN's research climatic station lead by a notorious German scientist Dr. Otto Geran (Richard Widmark) and an international team of expert scientists studying the climates changes worldwide which is behind of the melting of polar ice caps, turns out that such remote place was in WWII German's outpost of U-boats, also spread some whispers about a Nazi's gold hidden somewhere in the island.

Just on arrival on Bear Island US's station the German descendant Frank Lansing (Donald Sutherland) together the American Smithy (Lloyd Bridges) and also from Iron Curtain the bleak Polish Lechinski (Christopher Lee) teaming up with researchers on the former Nazi's base, there Lansing is introduced with Norwegian Dr. Heddi Lindquist (Vanessa Redgrave), as expect each one has a reason to stay there, the Nazi gold, however Lansing actually is the son the former Captain of U-Boat 351, he supposedly wanna knows about his old dad died on WWII, the forthcoming events will baffled him, meanwhile some weird accidents start to happen whenever someone is alone or in pairs, then came up the code name Celda that means the unknown leader behind of all tragic events.

Alistair Maclean is one my favorite spy-thriller writer, he wrote on similar freeze environment another plot as on Ice Station Zebra, magnificently shot on the vastness of Canadian frosty landscape, also the gloomy atmosphere on U-Boat submarine cave, it made a perfect backdrop to delve into a spy-hunt-thriller, criminally underrated.

Thanks for reading

Resume:

First watch: 1986 / How many: 2 / Source: TV-Youtube / Rating: 7.
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4/10
Not worth watching on pan and scan..............................
ianlouisiana23 November 2009
Warning: Spoilers
"Five U.S.A." butchered "Bear Island" yesterday afternoon,the net result being not worth watching.A significant proportion was out of focus,the sound unintelligible,the effect of the flickering visuals almost stroboscopic.From the wreckage it might hardly be fair to criticise what may well have been a masterpiece of cinema for all I know although the bits I did see don't give that theory a great deal of credence. Certainly the acting didn't seem to be up to much,Mr Donald Sutherland apparently having his dialogue written by Harold Pinter,the others by the balloon filler for the old wartime action comics,being of the "Gott in Himmel,Fritz",variety. There is an early McGuffin about climate change but basically "Bear Island" is yet another 'Search for Nazi Gold',a plot that even 30 years ago was sprouting whiskers. Mr Lloyd Bridges tries hard to keep a straight face and Mr Sutherland dives into water cold enough to freeze a polar bear's chuff and comes out wisecracking. Some guy gets barbecued by a Verey Pistol and is blown clear out of a ship's bridge,floating away on his back like a holiday maker at Clacton. If these excerpts,gleaned from a confusing melange of sounds and images are anything to go by I probably wouldn't have much liked "Bear Island" anyway,but it would have been nice if "Five U.S.A." had given me the opportunity.
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7/10
Should've been better with the cast it had
neil-douglas201018 December 2022
Based on the Alistair MacLean novel this is an at times exciting thriller with a great cast. There are other times when it gets a little bit confusing, there does seem to be a lot of characters doing nothing.

There's a U Boat with loads of stolen gold lying somewhere underneath Bear Island, and there's a lot of dodgy suspects after it. Donald Sutherland plays Frank Lansing, an American whose father just happened to be the Captain of the U Boat. He's got great support from Vanessa Redgrave as Heddi, the doctor in the camp, Christopher Lee though is wasted and Richard Widmark is going through the motions. Decent effort though it just could've been better.
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5/10
You had me at "Nazi gold".
Space_Lord30 January 2005
Warning: Spoilers
This film has a superbly bearded cast. Donald Sutherland, Christopher Lee, and several other cast members sport some real bushy numbers that you just don't see nowadays. I guess if you're hanging out in the arctic the natural thing to do would be to have a beard growing competition.

But I digress! What else do you need besides beards? How about a taut suspense thriller with Russian spies, snowmobile chases and a submarine full of Nazi gold? I must admit when I first put this in the VCR I wasn't sure what to expect. An action flick with explosions? Some convoluted international espionage? As well as these things, I soon settled into a half decent movie which has a surprisingly great plot! Some of the chases last a little too long for my liking, but hey, who cares what I think! Enjoy the movie!
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6/10
No bears, but plenty of Nazi gold.
mark.waltz7 January 2022
Warning: Spoilers
A rather dull first half changes halfway for an exciting ending to a panoramic film that on a big screen must have looked incredible. That is very noticeable over the opening credits as this very northern part of Norway as the helicopter with the camera pans over the Snowy Mountains region filled with crevices and nothing resembling life. We end up at a remote research laboratory where on all star cast is gather together, and they have to figure out which one are not see descendants looking for gold left after World War II.

Donald Sutherland is the hero and Vanessa Redgrave the leading lady, but unfortunately, she seems to be doing a Cloris Leachman impression with her fake accent, disappointing considering her many talents. They are joined by Lloyd Bridges, Christopher Lee, Richard Widmark and Barbara Parkins, but once again, no bears. There is really a Bear Island in Norway, so they are telling the truth about that. Don't confuse it with the one in North Carolina.

Halfway through the movie is where the action really starts, so up until then, the location photography is the star. But once the action starts, it's a non-stop, particularly when the radio tower crashes and everyone tries to think of who the saboteur could be. Great sound editing of the northern winds making the atmosphere very frightening, and chases on some opulent snowmobiles are very exciting. I was surprised to discover who the villain was which helped raise this a notch for me.
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3/10
Not my favorite version of a MacLean novel
ebuhrer-25 December 2007
I've read all of Alistair MacLean's novels, most of them multiple times...this was almost as bad as the job they did on ICE STATION ZEBRA...the musical score was noisy and sounded as if it had been recorded on a battery-operated cassette tape recorder, and what a waste of some great actors and actresses...my main problem with the film is how disjointed it is from scene to scene...one minute people are stranded on a glacier, the next they are driving into town...and how did those two Hitler-youth Nazis get all that stuff (I'll let you find out "what stuff?") up that narrow shaft?! Even my dog wouldn't believe it. Believe this: the novel is better. Films that MacLean wrote the screenplay for are much truer to the original story lines. Fortunately, this film did not end the careers of Regrave, Sutherland, Bridges, and Widmark...
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8/10
Not the best MacLean film, but still with plenty enough of excitement and a good story.
clanciai28 September 2017
As usual with Alistair McLean, it's a great story, but this time they fooled around with it a little too much, overdoing it into almost a parody, drowning the thriller in deafening music and exaggerated technical effects, waltzing around with snow scooters in wild goose chases, and so on. Everything is good until the stormy night, when everything collapses and relapses into chronic confusion, and on top of it all the actors can't speak clearly. Donald Sutherland is clear enough and sticks to his role all the way, Vanessa Redgrave is fair enough also in her acting as always, Richard Widmark also excels in honesty as usual, and who already in 1979 grapples with the problem of climate change and global warming, Christopher Lee is the greatest actor here though, playing an honest Russian for a change, Lloyd Bridges is queer enough, but in the resulting confusion of the sabotages coming in tautologies, it's not quite clear who fired on whom and who caused all those fires and ruined the generator, the radio mast, mixed up the books and so on. Many seem to have messed with many things, and what about poor Larsen? Was his body ever found? Who killed him and why? What did he try to communicate? Sorry, there is too much confusion in this hullabaloo of intrigues and counter-intrigues.

Still it's worth seeing, if not for anything else then at least for the story and Donald's discovery of his father. Here is the real mystery and central plot of the story – the mysterious fate of the last German u-boat captain, and the scene revealing the u-boat is a thriller in itself you'll always remember.
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5/10
Even for a decent Cast, this was pretty bad
nomoons112 November 2012
Warning: Spoilers
I held off on watching this one and I can't remember why. As soon as I finished this film, I knew why. My instinct told me this was a flop. I should listen to myself more often.

I think it was some time last year I watched a film called "Rituals". It had Lawrence Dane in it, just like in this one, and I decided to watch the special features within that disc. He mentions in an interview very briefly that Richard Widmark complained constantly throughout this entire film. I assumed that was just Widmark being a fairly big star of his day being just that....a star. After I watched I knew why he was complaining. Bad Script, Super Cold temperatures and probably knowing he was involved in a turkey...he wasn't too pleased.

I've never read the novel this was based on but the idea in itself isn't a bad one. The problem is the plausibility of this happening is pretty far fetched. The acting in this isn't that bad really, it's just the lack of any believable dialogue or just too many "quiet" moments it got to be a pretty tedious watch.

There are a few funny moments that come to mind. Right at the end when the entire group at the station sets out to see whats happened to head of the group, they look and see the boat leaving and 1 guy screams..."Smitty". If you've seen this then you'll know that Smitty was played by the Lloyd Bridges character and he was killed off about 3/4 of the way through. Problem is, Smitty is in the harbor, on a boat at least 400 or 500 yards away. How can that guy see that far to see who it was lol. It's ridiculous. There are quite a few scenes where these characters walk around, inside and out, inappropriately addressed for a place at the top of the world. I mean we're talking about sub zero temps and they walk around with some basic jeans and sweaters and maybe some long johns. I don't have to live very far up north of anywhere to know you'd freeze your tail off with what they were wearing.

There were many other "yeah right" scenes but they aren't worth mentioning because they sum up what this film is worth...not a heckuva lot. Save your hours of the day for doing laundry and not thinking you missed out on anything if you missed this one....Trust me...you haven't.
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Icebound thriller gets frosty reception
heedarmy13 April 2001
The UK-Canada co-production treaty of the late Seventies produced a lot of dross. "Bear Island" is better than some of its companions but still no classic.

Alistair MacLean's novel was a turgid affair, written at the start of his long decline as a writer. The film-makers wisely ditch most of his plot but the story they substitute, about an icy hunt for wartime Nazi gold, is no masterpiece of originality. Vanessa Redgrave's Norwegian accent comes and goes (at times, she sounds like the Swedish chef from "The Muppets") and Donald Sutherland tries for depth by speaking - very - very - slowly. Anybody who has seen a few of these films won't take long to guess the identity of the "mystery" villain.

On the credit side, the locations are spectacular and Robert Farnon's music score is appropriately portentous. Don Sharp knows how to direct action (he had been brought in a few years earlier to ginger up another MacLean adaptation, "Pupper On a Chain") and the fights are well-staged.
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