Sneha Girap (Editor)

Alaska Highway (film)

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
5
/
10
1
Votes
Alchetron
5
1 Ratings
100
90
80
70
60
51
40
30
20
10
Rate This

Rate This

Director
  
Frank McDonald

Music director
  
Fred Rich

Duration
  

Country
  
United States

5/10
IMDb

Genre
  
Drama

Producer
  
Pine-Thomas Productions

Language
  
English

Alaska Highway (film) movie poster

Writer
  
Lewis R. Foster
,
Maxwell Shane

Release date
  
1943 (1943)

Cast
  
Richard Arlen
(Woody Ormsby),
Jean Parker
(Ann Coswell),
Ralph Sanford
(Frosty Gimble),
William Henry
(Steve Ormsby (as Bill Henry)),
Joe Sawyer
(Roughhouse),
Eddie Quillan
(Pompadour 'Shorty' Jones)

Similar movies
  
The Mistress
,
The Grey
,
Due Date
,
Lost Highway
,
Speed
,
Into the Wild

Tagline
  
ACTION! DANGER! WITH THE U.S. ENGINEERS ON THE ALASKA HIGHWAY

Alaska Highway is a 1943 American film directed by Frank McDonald.

Contents

Alaska Highway (film) wwwgstaticcomtvthumbdvdboxart44228p44228d

Alaska highway 1943 drama


Synopsis

In February 1942 a road construction gang working in Northern California are summoned to a meeting. The boss of the gang has been commissioned as a Major in the US Army Corps of Engineers and signs up the entire crew with his two sons gaining direct entry as Technical Sergeants to build the Alcan Highway. One of the brothers wishes to enlist in the US Marine Corps to fight the Japanese rather than build another road. He changes his mind when he meets the daughter of one of the heads of the project with the two brothers fighting over her as they build the highway. Their feud is forgotten when the Japanese invade Kiska.

Plot

The film begins with the attack on Pearl Harbor. Alaska at the time was weakly defended. Canada had already built the northwest staging route; a series of airfields spread across northwestern Canada.

The decision is made to build a highway to Alaska. The workers are divided into three starting camps, Fort Nelson, B.C., Skagway, Alaska, and Valdez, Alaska.

The workers from Fort Nelson, B.C. begin building a highway north.

The workers in Skagway are transported by the White Pass and Yukon Route railway to Whitehorse. From Whitehorse they begin building a road north and south.

The workers in Valdez, Alaska move to a point inland and begin building a road towards Fairbanks and Whitehorse.

The movie goes on to show some amazing footage of bulldozers building the highway. The black troops arrive and all work hard building the highway.

The highway is opened to traffic. The truck drivers find that the road is better to drive than expected.

However, some of the highway is not correctly built and becomes impassable in rain. Flooded rivers wash away some bridges and they have to be rebuilt. Some of the highway is not properly drained and ice builds up on the road.

Trucks sink into the mud and are frozen into the mud. Some grades are too steep and accidents happen. Civilian contractors are hired to improve the highway.

New bridges are built and telephone lines are added to the route.

Skagway is given a new life by all the troops stationed there. The port is expanded. The White Pass and Yukon Route railway is leased by the army. Supplies flow from Skagway to Whitehorse. One train engineer is given the soldiers medal for risking his life to save his train.

The decision is made to build a highway from Hanes, Alaska to connect to the Alaska highway. The Indians living in remote Alaska are now connected with the rest of the world by the highways.

The airports are upgraded, planes and supplies flow to Russia.

The peace river bridge is dedicated. Politicians and army brass from the US and Canada make speeches.

The highway contractors finish their rebuilding of the highway. This allows supplies to flow into Alaska.

The film ends with scenes of massive convoys of trucks headed north into Alaska. "Now we can press home the attack. This is the road through the brooding wilderness. This is the wedge that has pried open the last great frontier of America. The key which has unlocked the treasure chest of Alaska and the Canadian northwest."

Cast

  • Richard Arlen as Woody Ormsby
  • Jean Parker as Ann Coswell
  • Ralph Sanford as Frosty Gimble
  • William Henry as Steve Ormsby
  • Joe Sawyer as Roughhouse
  • Eddie Quillan as Pompadour "Shorty" Jones
  • Jack Wegman as Sergeant Swithers
  • Harry Shannon as John "Pop" Ormsby
  • Edward Earle as Blair Caswell
  • Keith Richards as Hank Lincoln
  • Soundtrack

  • "Ramblin' Wreck from Georgia Tech" (Credit frames music)
  • References

    Alaska Highway (film) Wikipedia
    Alaska Highway (film) IMDb Alaska Highway (film) themoviedb.org