TORPEDO RUN Orig Movie Still Photo WW2 US Navy Submarine Glenn Ford Periscope
pr35554

Original Movie Still Photo measures approx 8 x 10 in.,
single weight glossy
In fine condition
light general wear from handling/storage/age
few light bends/bumps/smallt creases etc
light toning
slight curling
no tape, tears or pinholes


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Paper Rescue

Torpedo Run is a 1958 American war film directed by Joseph Pevney and starring Glenn Ford as a World War II submarine commander in the Pacific who is obsessed with sinking a particular Japanese aircraft carrier. The film's working title was Hell Below.[2] It was filmed in CinemaScope and Metrocolor.

A. Arnold Gillespie and Harold Humbrock were nominated for an Academy Award for Best Visual Effects.[3]

Plot
In October 1942, ComSubPac directs the American submarine Greyfish, under Commander Barney Doyle, to a Japanese convoy that includes the Shinaru, one of the Japanese aircraft carriers that led the attack on Pearl Harbor. Doyle also learns the target's escort includes a transport ship carrying American prisoners from an internment camp in the Philippines where his wife and child were being held. Doyle's second-in-command, Lieutenant Archer Sloan, tries to talk his friend into letting him handle the torpedo run, sparing Doyle direct responsibility for his family's possible death. In the end, the transport is so close to the carrier that Sloan begs Doyle to abort the attack. Doyle fires his torpedoes, hoping to miss the Yoshida Maru and hit the target. Carefully counting the seconds, they realize one of their torpedoes has hit the transport. Hoping to lure the sub to the surface, the Japanese make no attempt to rescue the survivors. Through the periscope, Doyle can see women and children grasping for pieces of floating wreckage. So as not to endanger his crew, he is forced to leave the prisoners to die.

Doyle follows the Shinaru into Tokyo Bay, but fails to sink it. After surviving a relentless bombardment of depth charges, the Greyfish returns to base at Pearl Harbor. While there, Sloan meets alone with Admiral Setton, accepts Sloan's assessment that, despite experiencing intense guilt for the civilian transport's destruction. Setton offers Sloan a promotion and his own command, but he refuses on the grounds he believes Doyle is still fit for command and wishes to still serve as his second-in-command. Setton then agrees to give the Greyfish "one more trip" to try to sink the Shinaru - but on the condition that Sloan must take the promotion if Doyle fails. But when the Greyfish is assigned a quiet, out-of-the-way patrol area off the Alaskan coast, Doyle thinks he has been betrayed by both Setton and Sloan, and reveals that he knew about the latter's offer of his own command all along. Then word comes that the Shinaru is heading for Japanese-occupied Kiska Harbor. The Greyfish proceeds to the harbor.

An initial encounter with the Shinaru results in the submarine's periscope being disabled and the radio antenna destroyed. Nonetheless, Doyle plans a second attack, a "blind" one with little chance of success. After firing torpedoes, the Greyfish is forced to the ocean floor by a depth-charge attack. The crewmen use Momsen lungs to escape their doomed submarine. When they reach the surface, they are taken aboard another American submarine, the Bluefin. Doyle asks the Bluefin's captain for confirmation that they hit the Shinaru. The Bluefin's captain looks through the periscope, shares the view briefly with Doyle and Sloan, and then, over the intercom, describes the carrier's sinking for Doyle's crew.

Cast
Glenn Ford as Lieutenant Commander / Commander Barney Doyle
Diane Brewster as Jane Doyle
Ernest Borgnine as Lieutenant / Lieutenant Commander Archer "Archie" Sloan
Philip Ober as Vice Admiral Samuel Setton
Richard Carlyle as Commander Don Adams
Dean Jones as Lieutenant Jake "Fuzz" Foley
Robert Hardy as Lieutenant Redley (R.N.)
Don Keefer as Ensign Ron Milligan
L. Q. Jones as "Hash" Benson
Fredd Wayne as Orville "Goldy" Goldstein