Valley of the Eagles

Filmed in the icy wilderness of the perilous Arctic

6.0
19511h 26m

A Norwegian scientist builds a device that can convert sound waves into electrical energy. However, the machine is stolen by the scientist's wife and assistant, who head across the frozen tundra towards Russia. A police inspector and a local girl team up with the scientist to help recover the device.

Cast

Photo of Jack Warner

Jack Warner

Inspector Peterson

Photo of Nadia Gray

Nadia Gray

Kara Niemann

Photo of John McCallum

John McCallum

Dr. Nils Ahlen

Photo of Anthony Dawson

Anthony Dawson

Sven Nystrom

Photo of Mary Laura Wood

Mary Laura Wood

Helga Ahlen

Photo of Naima Wifstrand

Naima Wifstrand

Baroness Erland

Photo of Norman MacOwan

Norman MacOwan

McTavis, ferry pilot

Photo of Martin Boddey

Martin Boddey

Chief of the Lost Valley

Photo of Ewen Solon

Ewen Solon

Det. Anderson

Photo of Sten Lindgren

Sten Lindgren

Director-General of the Reasearch Institution

Photo of Fritiof Billquist

Fritiof Billquist

Colonel Strand (uncredited)

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Reviews

G

CinemaSerf

6/10

The gist of this story is settled pretty quickly as a secret sonic device is pinched by “Sven” (Anthony Dawson) and “Helga” (Mary Laura Wood) the wife of it’s inventor from their Stockholm home. Off they set across country, making for Finland and then the USSR. Hot on their tails are intrepid detective “Peterson” (Jack Warner) and the scientist “Ahlen” (John McCallum) who are both determined to stop them before they can sell the gadget to the Soviets. The espionage elements of this are all relatively plain sailing, but the photography of the Arctic wilderness as they give chase is what really makes this worth a gander. There are reindeer by the hundreds being herded by the locals; their lives free of technology and their innate friendliness meaning that these folks look after all comers. Just as that helps those pursuing, it helped those fleeing too. It all culminates in a pristine valley where the snow clings, precariously, to the sides of the mountains ensuring that the local population use only eagles to hunt - silence isn’t so much golden as essential. Can the chasing pair catch up with their antagonists in time? Warner really only ever had one gear, and he doesn’t challenge himself (or us) with his characterisation here. Dawson delivers competently as he usually does when he is the baddie, and the others contribute adequately, if maybe just a bit too verbosely, as the adventure slowly advances amidst the snow and ice to a denouement that is just a little different. It’s nothing special, this film, but I thought the last ten minutes just about made it worth the watch - and, yes, there are a few eagles, too.

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