Now watching:
Lady in the Lake (1946, dir. Robert Montgomery)

seen from Kazakhstan
seen from Iraq

seen from United States
seen from China
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Malaysia
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Germany

seen from Netherlands
seen from China
seen from Ukraine

seen from Australia

seen from China

seen from Malta

seen from Malta
seen from China
Now watching:
Lady in the Lake (1946, dir. Robert Montgomery)
2000 AD #124
View On WordPress
Where the Sidewalk Ends (1950) Otto Preminger
March 24th 2026
Cy-Kill! Hans-Cuff! Spay-C! Ads in Eagle from October/November 1984 for Robo Machines. A strip, written by Tom Tully with art by Mario Capaldi (and later Kim Raymond), began in Eagle No. 138 to tie in with the toy line. Awkwardly the same issue, on the page before this strip began, carried a full page colour ad for a similar line of toy robot figures that appeared to be in disguise.
The Caine Mutiny premiered in New York City on 24 June 1954, before wider release in July.
Based on Herman Wouk's 1951 novel (which had been a stage production in 1953), the film shifts focus from Ensign Keith (Robert Francis) to Captain Queeg (Humphrey Bogart).
Film studios did not want to make the film without the involvement of the US Navy, and the Navy was reluctant to get involved with a film depicting an officer as insane (or a film with the word "mutiny" in its title). Producer Stanley Kramer purchased the rights to Wouk's novel with his own money and after 15 months of negotiation, the Navy agreed to provide access ports, ships, and planes, and Columbia Studios put the film into production.
Director Edward Dmytryk had been blacklisted since 1947 and had gone to England, returned in 1951 and named names before HUAC. He was taken off the blacklist, but no one hired him, except Kramer. They had worked on 3 low-budget films (The Sniper, Eight Iron Men, and The Juggler) before Kramer hired him to direct The Caine Mutiny.
The film was a commercial and critical success, and was nominated for 7 Academy Awards, including Best Picture, Best Actor (Bogart), Best Screenplay (Stanley Roberts), and Best Supporting Actor (Tom Tully). It did not receive an Oscar.
The Incredible Adventures of Janus Stark - cover by Francisco Solano Lopez.
Tom Tully (writer), Dave Gibbons (artist), "Harlem Heroes", 2000 AD #2, 5 Mar 1977.