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  1. On its own merits, however, The Blue Lagoon remains an enjoyable — if highly unrealistic — coming-of-age tale, worth watching simply for the gorgeous technicolor cinematography, and Simmons’ luminous face gracing the screen. Redeeming Qualities and Moments: Jean Simmons in one of her earliest leading roles

  2. The Blue Lagoon is a 1949 British coming-of-age romance and adventure film directed and co-produced by Frank Launder (with Sidney Gilliat) and starring Jean Simmons and Donald Houston. The screenplay was adapted by John Baines, Michael Hogan , and Frank Launder from the 1908 novel The Blue Lagoon by Henry De Vere Stacpoole .

  3. The Blue Lagoon: Directed by Frank Launder. With Jean Simmons, Donald Houston, Susan Stranks, Peter Rudolph Jones. In the Victorian period, two children are shipwrecked on a tropical island in the South Pacific and fall in love while growing up together.

    • (652)
    • Adventure, Drama, Romance
    • Frank Launder
    • 1949-05-06
  4. La isla perdida película dirigida por Frank Launder y protagonizada por Jean Simmons, Donald Houston y Susan Stranks. Año: 1949. Tema: Supervivientes. Sinopsis: Dos niños sobreviven a una catástrofe naval y deben sobrevivir en una isla desierta.

    • Jean Simmons
    • Frank Launder
  5. 11 de jul. de 1980 · Drawing on a library relic, a 1903 American novel by Henry DeVee Stacpoole (what a handle!) that inspired a British movie with the teenage Jean Simmons in 1948, "The Blue Lagoon"...

    • Gary Arnold
  6. www.doctormacro.com › Movie Summaries › BBlue Lagoon, The (1949)

    Directed by Frank Launder. Camera: Geoffrey Unsworth. With Jean Simmons, Donald Houston, Susan Stranks, Peter Rudolph Jones, Noel Purcell, James Hayter, Cyril Cusack, Nora Nicholson, Maurice Denham, Philip Stainton, Patrick Barr, Lyn Evans, Russell Waters, John Boxer, Bill Raymond, Gladys Boot. Henry Devere Stacpoole's lyrical novel "The Blue ...

  7. Did you know the 1980 version of Blue Lagoon was a remake? I didn’t, either. As it turns out, none other than the usually prudish Jean Simmons played in the original! Obviously, this version was a lot less filthy than the remake, and there wasn’t any nudity, but for 1949, it was incredibly daring.