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Hub AI
The Flying Fontaines AI simulator
(@The Flying Fontaines_simulator)
Hub AI
The Flying Fontaines AI simulator
(@The Flying Fontaines_simulator)
The Flying Fontaines
The Flying Fontaines is a 1959 American circus film about trapeze artists. It stars Michael Callan.
Rick Rias gets out of the army and returns to his old job as a trapeze artist. He discovers his old girlfriend has married another trapeze artist.
Veteran actor Pierre Watkin appears uncredited in his last film role as a doctor.
It was one of a number of circus-themed films around this time that followed from the success of Trapeze (1956) (others were Toby Tyler and The Big Circus). The film was originally known as High Trap. Filming started 20 April 1959. The sets were designed by the veteran art director Paul Palmentola, his last film credit.
Variety called it a "fastmoving circus yarn" in which "the whole panorama of the circus is vividly portrayed."
Photoplay wrote "We get a good look at three new young players: Michael Callan, Evy Norlund and Rian Garrick... Mickey comes across nicely as a temperamental “flyer” who's lugging around a burden of guilt, but too bad, against the circus background there wasn't a story with more color, laughs, action."
Filmink argued Callan "easily outshone the other new Columbia contract players who were in it."
The Flying Fontaines
The Flying Fontaines is a 1959 American circus film about trapeze artists. It stars Michael Callan.
Rick Rias gets out of the army and returns to his old job as a trapeze artist. He discovers his old girlfriend has married another trapeze artist.
Veteran actor Pierre Watkin appears uncredited in his last film role as a doctor.
It was one of a number of circus-themed films around this time that followed from the success of Trapeze (1956) (others were Toby Tyler and The Big Circus). The film was originally known as High Trap. Filming started 20 April 1959. The sets were designed by the veteran art director Paul Palmentola, his last film credit.
Variety called it a "fastmoving circus yarn" in which "the whole panorama of the circus is vividly portrayed."
Photoplay wrote "We get a good look at three new young players: Michael Callan, Evy Norlund and Rian Garrick... Mickey comes across nicely as a temperamental “flyer” who's lugging around a burden of guilt, but too bad, against the circus background there wasn't a story with more color, laughs, action."
Filmink argued Callan "easily outshone the other new Columbia contract players who were in it."
