37 Replies to “Alaska Highway (1943) [Drama]”

  1. Took a foolish half the movie to get construction, sans 11,000 primarily Black men, November weather and any professionalism. Appeared a handful of stooges immersed in themselves built the highway on their own. Wish a n honest, serious attempt had been made. At least some documentaries of this 8-month+ monumental event treat the subject with respect.

  2. This film was total bullshit because the actual ALCAN work crew was primarily comprised of African Americans.

  3. Love the army logging operation at 39 minutes…those trees will fall like confetti!…real 1943 global warming types…not…osha would love the tree falling on the bulldozer operator…"accidents happen sir".

  4. Thanks very much for all of your work to post
    all of these great movie memories. Kudos for the terrific narrative that you include for each move. It’s all so professional in its presentation. You have built the best classic movies sight. And the price is great too!

  5. "The producers are especially grateful to the Province of Alberta, Canada, for authentic scenes filmed on the AlCan Highway." The trouble is, the AlCan isn't in Alberta- It begins at Dawson Creek, BC. Silly Americans, lol!

  6. A monumental effort by black and white and american indians and italians etc.etc.It was a great effort by all the men who froze their asses off building this damn road when our country needed it most ,these patriotic men came to the call and I for one honour them for what they did.

  7. my Dad was in the Army Engineer Corps and was in on building the Alaskan Hwy. and when his term was up started a cab company in Juno until the bombing of PEARL Harbor then he took a boat down to Portland and joined the US Navy and was on a submarine during ww2 .

  8. One night I picked up a girl in Whitehorse , drove her @ 300 miles south , when she said , stop mister stop , so I stopped my truck and she jumped out , turned back and said thanks mister , thanks alot . I hope she made it where ever she was going , that was almost 40 years ago .. My wife and I have made several trips back , now the roads are very nice and smooth , easy driving …

  9. I met an oldster here in Everett Washington that had been a road engineer on the Alaska Highway. Rough living…the men were very well paid due to the crazy weather conditions. And Alaska wasn't even a state then.

  10. It has been most interesting to drive those highways over the last few years. Of note, native people told the engineers they could not build roads like they did Outside. You can't remove top soil and compact a road bed. Melting of permafrost caused the bogs. Gather soil from the sides and build on top of the permafrost. Engineers finally got the message and built roads to hold up. In Skagway is a graveyard of locomotives. One has to wonder if any of the rusting hulks took part in that operation.

  11. Very cool! I love to see classic footage of the area where I live. My family has been in the Fort St John area since before the highway was built.

  12. Where my ears deceiving me or were they singing, "I'm a ramblin' wreck from Ga Tech and a hella of an engineer"?  Good movie!  Thanks.

  13. He's playing a young, twenty-something guy still playing games – while in fact he's 44 years old (and looks it).  Another poor problem of Hollywood.  But WWII has called the best and brightest actors to "A" movies and into war.  As you can tell, I don't care for Richard Arlen.  He has little in the way of "Good Looks" and he divorced his own True name for a stage name – which is cowardly. 

  14. I have never understood how Hollywood seems to ALWAYS stick super-younger girls against an aging older guy as if the audience doesn't see it or know the simple truth.  In the movie – Richard Arlen is saying he's only 10 years older than Jean Parker – when he's actually 16 years old.  This happens constantly.  Richard Arlen was born "Sylvanus Richard Van Matimore" in St. Paul, Minnesota.  He was an RAF pilot in WWI – but never saw combat.  Her family was a history of tough, pure American folks.

  15. An uncle, my late beloved father's favorite, died bombing Nazis in Sicily from Tunisia about the time this film was released. I don't know if my uncle, whom I never met, ever saw it; the North African American Air Core was good about showing films about the home front efforts; I hope he did see this film. Twenty-five missions were required of airmen; my uncle died on his voluntary forty-second, a kid from small-town Oklahoma. What amazing humans made up this generation, defending civilization.

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