Lt. Robin Crusoe, U.S.N. Page #6

Synopsis: Lt. Robin Crusoe is a navy pilot who bails out of his plane after engine trouble. He reaches a deserted island paradise where he builds a house, finds an abandoned submarine with lots of gadgets that he can use, and also finds a marooned chimp from the US Space program and a native girl named Wednesday who was exiled by her father. Wednesday thinks Crusoe wants to marry her, and when her father arrives on the island to collect her and Crusoe refused to marry her, chaos ensues.
Director(s): Byron Paul
Production: Buena Vista
  1 win.
 
IMDB:
6.0
G
Year:
1966
110 min
144 Views


There's a guy there putting

out a distress signal.

Take it easy. You know the rules.

Don't meddle with the natives.

I don't think this guy is a native.

And those girls look like

they're gonna cream him!

- Girls?

- Why didn't you say so?

Let's check it out.

They're coming! Look!

They're gonna kill me!

You guys, look over

there! Help! I'm Navy!

Look, I'm Navy! Please

hurry. They're coming!

- Help!

- Okay, I'm hooked up.

Hurry! Hurry!

Hurry up!

- Haul him up!

- Take it up!

Watch it!

I don't know who you are, but

I sure do admire your style.

- They weren't about to let you go.

- Don't I know you?

Crusoe. Lt. Crusoe.

Yeah. Let's get out

of here. Those girls...

Wait! We gotta go back.

Back? You've gotta be out of your skull.

Those people are dangerous.

We've got to. There's another guy

back there more important than I am.

Lower away!

Be right back! Floyd!

Floyd, where are you?

Floyd? Floyd?

Get out, you coward. Big

hero you turned out to be.

We gotta move. That girls' Olympic

team is coming. They got spears.

Come on. They wanna kill us, boy. Move!

You wanna be an ape-skin rug?

Come on. Come on!

Floyd, get up there!

Come on! Get up. Get up, Floyd!

Take it up! Take it up!

Take it up! Wednesday,

you don't understand!

Take it up!

Wednesday! Wednesday,

I don't deserve you!

Goodbye, Wednesday.

Goodbye, Wednesday.

And that's just about

the way it was, dear.

We had a great reception on the carrier.

Of course, it wasn't for

me. It was all for Floyd,

our nation's first hero of outer space.

They'd been searching for him for years.

Welcome aboard, lieutenant.

Well, Floyd, I'm

delighted to see you again.

You must have had some experience.

I know you're anxious

to hear about the story.

Later, if you don't mind. Excuse me.

Floyd, I've got some

people I want you to meet.

Then we've got a lot of things to do.

The president's on the phone,

sir. He wants to talk to him.

Captain? Sir? I'd like

to give you a full report.

It's really an interesting

story. I was flying about 16...

Hey, mister. That's

a pretty good outfit.

- Mind if I send a picture to my girl?

- Go ahead.

Say, what are you?

Some kind of a hermit?

I'm glad you asked that.

This thing started months ago.

I was flying along about

16,000 feet, I'd say.

Excuse me. They're taking

the chimp. I want a picture.

Oh, no. Go ahead.

Anyway, dear, that's

just the way it happened.

I'll be home soon.

All my love, Rob.

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Don DaGradi

Don DaGradi (1911 – August 4, 1991) was a Disney writer who started out as a layout artist on 1940s cartoons including "Der Fuehrer's Face" in 1943. He eventually moved into animated features with the film Lady and the Tramp in 1955. He also worked as a color and styling or sequence consultant on many other motion pictures for Disney. His greatest achievement was for his visual screenplay for Mary Poppins in 1964 for which he shared an Oscar nomination for Best Adapted Screenplay with Bill Walsh. Don DaGradi died August 4, 1991, in Friday Harbor, Washington. He was named a Disney Legend posthumously, only months after his death. more…

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Submitted on August 05, 2018

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