moviebox header nav
moviebox search icon
muted

La route est ouverte

1946

R

1 h 31 m

Royaume-Uni

Adventure

Drame

Western

It's the start of WWII in Northern Australia. The Japanese are getting close. People are evacuating and burning everything in a "scorched earth" policy. Rather than kill all their cattle, a disparate group decides to drive them overland half way across the continent.
More

6.5 /10

558 people rated

Regarder en ligne

Dans l’appli

Épisodes

Meilleurs acteurs

Avis des utilisateurs

Épisodes
Meilleurs acteurs
Avis des utilisateurs

Épisodes

film
lklk
Netflix
Plex
Meilleurs acteurs(14)
starring avatar
Chips Rafferty
Dan McAlpine
default avatar
John Nugent Hayward
Bill Parsons
default avatar
Daphne Campbell
Mary Parsons
default avatar
Jean Blue
Mrs. Parsons
default avatar
Helen Grieve
Helen Parsons
default avatar
John Fernside
Corky
default avatar
Peter Pagan
Sailor ("Sinbad")
default avatar
Frank Ransome
Charlie
default avatar
Stan Tolhurst
Manager
default avatar
Marshall Crosby
Minister
default avatar
John Fegan
Police Sergeant
default avatar
Clyde Combo
Aborigine Jacky
default avatar
Henry Murdoch
Aborigine Nipper
default avatar
Steve Dodd
Aborigine

Avis des utilisateurs

author avatar

Marcus Pobee

07/06/2023 12:54
Moviecut—The Overlanders
author avatar

nardi_jo

30/05/2023 00:29
The Overlanders_720p(480P)
author avatar

Elisa

29/05/2023 21:43
source: The Overlanders
author avatar

zozo gnoutou

16/11/2022 13:07
The Overlanders
author avatar

serenaaa_lalicorne

16/11/2022 02:02
This is a simple story well told, although some allowance has to be made for the limited acting skills of the principals, and for the obvious budgetary constraints (let's not forget the world was recovering from a major upheaval in 1946 when the film was made). The characters are believable, as are their motivations and reactions to obstacles. The women are as sure-footed as the men (unusually for the time), and the same can be said for the aboriginals with respect to the white characters. It doesn't quite qualify to be classified with (the original) "Flight of the Phoenix" but watching it is a far better way to spend a couple of hours on a wet afternoon than watching the remake of THAT excellent film. In summary - believable (and tight) story line, above average script, acceptable acting but let down by some minimalist cinematography which doesn't make the best use of the available landscape.
author avatar

Audrey Benga

16/11/2022 02:02
I haven't seen this film for many years, but I still fondly remember it. I probably saw it last on television around 1990 or so, but the film was good enough to leave a fond recollection of it. POTENTIAL PLOT SPOILER FOLLOWS? In theme, it's very much like American cattle drive movies, in that a large heard of cattle must be driven across a long distance against adversity, but its set against a WWII backdrop. The cast, containing some familiar Australian actors, interacts well. The Australian bush makes for an interesting character, in a way, all of its own, although the movie is filmed in black and white, so the dynamic of color is not at work here. A female character adds an element not generally present, at least in the drover characters, in an American cattle drive movie. A good, entertaining, movie. I wish I could find it on DVD.
author avatar

simsyeb

16/11/2022 02:02
Somewhat dated at the turn of the century but a wonderful look back at outback life at the end of WWII. There is no pretence in this movie... it is an honest insight into the life of the drovers who, before road trains, faced the outback with their vast herds of cattle and drove them for months through all conditions. Rafferty is of course the perfect image of the young drover of those days. There is even some dialogue relevant to the changing country and things that we would understand 50 years later. A must see for all Aussies.
author avatar

Bradpitt Jr & Bradpitt

16/11/2022 02:02
The most striking characteristic of this film is its splendid cinematography - for a cineast enjoying fine photography, this is an inexhaustible gold mine of fine sequences. The story is no less impressing, it's a true story, of how a determined farmer decided to rather drive his thousands of cows across all Australia than leave to the Japanese, as the invasion was imminent. It's a wondrous epic of surmounting atrocious difficulties, constantly under the threat of the herd starting a stampede, which the thousand bullocks actually do twice, and the question of the miracle of how so many cows could be well and appropriately directed into a film must arise. Well, they did it, and as a true story made almost like a documentary, it is better and more impressing than most westerns, excelling them all in downright determined stalwartness obliged by necessity, in absolutely genuine Aussie style.
Disclaimer: All videos and pictures on MovieBox are from the Internet, and their copyrights belong to the original creators. We only provide webpage services and do not store, record, or upload any content.