The Sea Ghost (1931)

Directed by William Nigh, The Sea Ghost is a moody, low-budget maritime drama starring Alan Hale, Laura La Plante, and Clarence Wilson. Though modest in scope, the film blends post–World War I intrigue, salvage operations, and legal deception, all set against the backdrop of New Orleans harbor life. It was later re-released in 1939 under the title “U 67”, with added footage referencing German submarine warfare.

Plot Summary
Captain Greg Winters (Alan Hale), a disgraced naval officer court-martialed for disobeying orders during WWI, now captains a salvage ship in New Orleans. He crosses paths with Evelyn Inchcape (Laura La Plante), a cabaret owner and heir to a fortune, who is being manipulated by the scheming lawyer Henry Sykes (Clarence Wilson). As Winters investigates a sunken ship and uncovers wartime secrets, he becomes entangled in a web of deceit, inheritance fraud, and romantic tension.

The film builds toward a confrontation involving a former German submarine commander, a hidden treasure, and a battle of wits between Winters and Sykes. Though the pacing lags mid-film, it picks up with brawls, betrayals, and a resolution that restores Winters’s honor.

Cast Highlights

  • Alan Hale as Captain Greg Winters
  • Laura La Plante as Evelyn Inchcape
  • Clarence Wilson as Henry Sykes
  • Peter Erkelenz as Karl Ludwig (a former German sub commander)
  • Claud Allister provides comic relief as a bumbling sidekick

Behind-the-Scenes Trivia

  • This was the final starring role for silent film icon Laura La Plante and the last lead role for Alan Hale before he transitioned to character parts
  • The film was reissued in 1939 as “U 67”, with added footage about German submarine threats, likely to capitalize on rising WWII tensions
  • Early underwater scenes were reportedly filmed using a home aquarium, with visible tropical fish swimming past superimposed actors
  • The film was part of a batch of 200+ independent features syndicated for early television in the 1940s, with documented broadcasts in New York, Fort Worth, Albuquerque, and Los Angeles

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