/mTk6HYIKbrikhXJsJme189LcCJq.jpg
DramaAdventure

Outcast of the Islands

- Even Her Love Was Primitive!

After financial improprieties are discovered at the Eastern trading company where he works, Peter Willems flees the resulting disgrace and criminal charges. He persuades the man who gave him his start in life, the merchant ship captain Lingard, to bring him to a trading post on a remote Indonesian island where he can hide out.

Release Date : 1951-11-15

Language :English

Adult : false

Status : Released

Production Company : London Films ProductionsUnited Artists

Production Country : United Kingdom

Alternative Titles :

Cast

Trevor Howard

Character Name : Peter Willems

Original Name : Trevor Howard

Gender : Male

Ralph Richardson

Character Name : Captain Tom Lingard

Original Name : Ralph Richardson

Gender : Male

Robert Morley

Character Name : Elmer Almayer

Original Name : Robert Morley

Gender : Male

Wendy Hiller

Character Name : Mrs. Almayer

Original Name : Wendy Hiller

Gender : Female

Kerima

Character Name : Aissa

Original Name : Kerima

Gender : Female

Wilfrid Hyde-White

Character Name : Vinck

Original Name : Wilfrid Hyde-White

Gender : Male

George Coulouris

Character Name : Babalatchi

Original Name : George Coulouris

Gender : Male

Annabel Morley

Character Name : Nina Almayer

Original Name : Annabel Morley

Gender : Male

Peter Illing

Character Name : Alagappan

Original Name : Peter Illing

Gender : Male

Betty Ann Davies

Character Name : Mrs. Williams

Original Name : Betty Ann Davies

Gender : Female

Frederick Valk

Character Name : Hudig

Original Name : Frederick Valk

Gender : Male

A.V. Bramble

Character Name : Badavi

Original Name : A.V. Bramble

Gender : Male

Marne Maitland

Character Name : Ships Mate

Original Name : Marne Maitland

Gender : Male

James Kenney

Character Name : Ramsey

Original Name : James Kenney

Gender : Male

Reviews

C

CinemaSerf

@Geronimo1967

2025-03-17

The plot here is a bit on the convoluted side, but is does allow Trevor Howard to remind us that he could play a nasty character just about as well as anyone. He’s been caught with his hand in the till and so is shunned by his bosses and his Far Eastern community. Fortunately, “Willems” manages to hook up with the decent, maybe even naive, “Capt. Lingard” (Sir Ralph Richardson) who knows some shortcuts through the treacherous seas and offers to take him somewhere remote where he can work with his agent “Almayer” (Robert Morley) and make a fresh start. Pretty swiftly, though, “Willems” takes to the bottle and also a bit of a shine to the deaf chief’s daughter “Aissa” (Kerima) and soon is embroiled in not just a conflict with this traditional community, but with rival operators who want to know of his secret routes through the rocks for the trading goods. Egged on by the duplicitous “Babalatchi” (George Coulouris) he soon turns on the enthusiastic but ineffectual “Almayer” but meantime exposes himself to the wrath of not just the locals but of his benefactor, too. This is quite a powerful story of a man’s self-destructive streak let loose and fuelled by lust, manipulation and spirits and Howard conveys that rather odious “Willems” well. Morley, likewise, is on good form as a character who could just have readily taken holy orders as joined a trading company and who is ill-equipped for any sort of contretemps, even when he sees it coming a mile off. There’s something eerily potent about the effort from Karina too. With virtually no dialogue and just her eyes doing most of her acting for her, you are never quite sure just where she stands in all of this until quite near a denouement that I found fitting, but disappointingly inconclusive. It’s a dark, grimy and seamy look at colonial exploitation, venality and maybe even sanity, too, and Carol Reed uses his cast, the scenarios and Brian Easdale’s score to good effect.