Native girl helps US Seabees free her villagers from Japanese troops.
During World War II, a group of US Air Force soldiers crash land on a remote tropical island. There, they discover a hidden Nazi laboratory where twisted experiments are being conducted, resulting in terrifying creatures known as She Demons. The soldiers must fight for their lives and find a way to escape the island.
From Hell It Came is a horror film set on a South Seas island where a native prince is wrongly accused of murder and is executed by being staked to a tree trunk. The prince's spirit possesses the tree and seeks revenge on those who have betrayed him. The film follows the mass confusion and chaos that ensues as the tree goes on a killing spree.
In the depths of a remote island, a group of tourists find themselves trapped and hunted by a gigantic alligator. As they struggle for survival, they uncover a dark secret involving a native tribe and ritual sacrifices. With destruction and death looming over them, they must find a way to escape the island before it's too late.
Documentary about the inhabitants, both human and animal, of the Belgian Congo. Released in 1958.
A woman, raised in the most-strict New England atmosphere, marries a stern, God-fearing sea captain and is thrown suddenly into the romantic, colorful and licentious atmosphere of a South Sea island outpost. With her inhibitions and repressed desires what will be her reaction to the charms of the sensuous of the beautiful tropic nights and the call of love?
A couple leaves for a vacation on a tropical island and finds happiness and love... just not with each-other.
In San Francisco, Sylvia Douglas and her fiancée, James Callahan, a reformed crook, make their getaway after Jim, disgusted with his inability to find a job, un-reforms and steals a diamond necklace. Graham, a detective, gives chase to a desolate island in the South Pacific where a rum-running gangster, Murdock, holds him captive. Callahan becomes infatuated with a native girl, Leona, and Sylvia turns to Graham for protection against the offensive Murdock. A volcano eruption causes problems for all.
An expedition is sent into the rugged Australian outback to search for a lost white woman.
A group of American adventurers discover a bed of black pearls off a South Pacific island. When one of them is shot dead, a young girl in the group is accused of the crime.
A girl, Carol whom the audience is quickly informed "has been around," and her father arrive to take over the business management of an island in the Bahamas owned by Adrian Ainsworth, descendant of many ancestors who have handled it over the years to the satisfaction of its 250 native residents. He is married to a woman who stays away from the island because she is lonely when there. Adrian doesn't want Carol or her father there, and they don't want to be there. Romance can't be lurking far behind the beautiful sunset.
An ex-con from Devil's Island enlists the support of the governor's daughter in exposing a prison mining operation.
A suspicious boyfriend believes his girlfriends card nights are much more than that, but he gets more than he bargains for when he spies on the ladies.
While deep sea diving off the South American coast, Papa Rico, the owner of a fishing boat, finds the statue of an idol, a remnant of the lost treasure of the Paracan Indians.
Lord Cyril Wimborne, a barrister, divorces his wife, Myra, and takes custody of their child, Kenyon, when he finds her name linked with the profligate Major Pollock. Myra goes into seclusion while Pollock, intending to conceal Myra's innocence, goes to Burma. A few years later Myra sees Kenyon in the park with Mrs. Debenham, a widow with designs on Wimborne. Noting the resemblance between the lady in the park (whom he calls his "princess") and a photograph of his mother, Kenyon invites Myra to dinner at a time when his father, who has curtailed the visits to the park, plans to be away. At the same time Harold Courtenay, an old family friend, sees an opportunity to reunite the estranged couple.
Explorer Paul Hoefler leads a safari into central Africa and what was then called the Belgian Congo, in the regions inhabited by the Wassara and the famous Ubangi tribes.
Exemplifying Kipling's adage, a white man falls to pieces when he is in the South Seas.
In a small town in Argentina, where he arrives Carlos (Gaston Pauls), a young architect, to design a complex of cottages. The architect, partner in crisis, strikes up a casual relationship with Estela (Marina Vilte), a 13-year instead, without realizing that this encounter, naive and Plato, make the girl discovers love and end up make it a teenager. Only the arrival of his wife, Ana (Ariadna Gil), who will try to mend her relationship, she will discover the importance of that feeling that you've already lost.
Jungle Jim must protect rare pony-like animals whose glands produce a powerful narcotic. On the way, he fights a giant spider.