Assault on a Queen is a 1966American action-adventure heist film directed by Jack Donohue, in which a ragtag crew of adventurers salvages a World War II German submarine to hijack and rob the luxury ocean liner RMS Queen Mary while it is at sea.[1][2]The screenplay was written by Rod Serling, adapting Jack Finney's 1959 novel of the same name, and the film was produced by William Goetz for Seven Arts Productions and Sinatra Enterprises, with Paramount Pictures handling distribution.[1][2] Filming took place on location aboard the actual RMS Queen Mary, adding authenticity to the maritime sequences.[1]The story follows diver Mark Brittain (played by Frank Sinatra), who leads a multinational team including Vic Rossiter (Anthony Franciosa), Italian beauty Rosa Lucchesi (Virna Lisi), engineer Tony Moreno (Richard Conte), submarine expert Eric Lauffnauer (Alf Kjellin), and electrician Linc Langley (Errol John). After failing to recover sunken treasure, the group restores the submarine and disguises themselves as British naval officers to board the Queen Mary, demanding its valuables under threat of torpedoing the vessel.[1][2] Their plan unravels when the ship's SOS summons a U.S. Coast Guard cutter, resulting in a chaotic escape where several crew members are killed, the stolen loot is lost at sea, and the survivors flee on a life raft.[1]Notable for its score composed by Duke Ellington, the film runs 106 minutes in Technicolor and widescreen format, and premiered in Philadelphia on June 15, 1966, before a wider U.S. release in July.[1][2] Though it featured a high-profile cast and an innovative premise blending submarine thriller elements with caper tropes, Assault on a Queen received mixed reviews and underperformed at the box office.[1]
Background
Source Material
Assault on a Queen is a 1959 thriller novel by American author Jack Finney, originally serialized in the Saturday Evening Post as "The U-19's Last Kill" before its publication by Simon & Schuster.[3][4] The story centers on a group of six adventurers—five men and one woman—who salvage a sunken World War I German submarine from the floor of the Atlantic Ocean off the coast of New York.[5] They refurbish the vessel with the audacious intent of using it to hijack the RMS Queen Mary, a luxury ocean liner, in a high-stakes robbery aimed at plundering its valuables.[3] The narrative unfolds from Fire Island, New York, emphasizing the group's multinational composition, including American, British, and German members drawn together by desperation and shared wartime expertise.[4]The novel explores themes of adventure and heist fiction, infused with post-World War II intrigue as the characters' backgrounds as ex-submariners from Allied and Axis forces highlight lingering tensions and opportunistic alliances in the postwar era. Unlike more action-oriented interpretations, Finney's work places greater emphasis on psychological tension, particularly through the protagonist's internal conflict and moral reckoning; as the heist reaches its climax, the protagonist is overcome by conscience, thwarting the plan's completion and underscoring the ethical perils of such criminal audacity.[3]Character archetypes in the novel—such as the resourceful engineer, the enigmatic foreign expert, and the reluctant everyman narrator—serve to build suspense via interpersonal dynamics and the daunting technical challenges of submarine salvage, rather than overt physical confrontations.[3]Upon its release, Assault on a Queen garnered mixed critical reception for its inventive premise. Kirkus Reviews praised the "outrageous audacity" of the crime, likening it to a modern "great train robbery," but critiqued the narrative for lacking sufficient imaginative depth to sustain the plot's scale, noting that the detailed technical aspects ultimately strain the reader's credulity more than the targeted ship.[3] The novel's suspenseful pacing and focus on moral ambiguity contributed to its appeal as a caper thriller, inspiring later adaptations including Rod Serling's screenplay for the 1966 film.[3]
Development
Producer William Goetz acquired the film rights to Jack Finney's 1959 novel Assault on a Queen in the early 1960s through Seven Arts Productions after the project had been shelved by initial rights holder Ray Stark, who had purchased them in 1960.[6]Goetz then partnered with Paramount Pictures to finance and distribute the adaptation.[6]Goetz commissioned screenwriter Rod Serling to adapt the novel in 1965, transforming its core premise of a ragtag crew using a salvaged World War Isubmarine to hijack the RMS Queen Mary—changed to a World War IIsubmarine in the film—into a feature film script.[6] Serling's version emphasized interpersonal dynamics among the characters to heighten dramatic tension suitable for the screen.[1]Frank Sinatra's Sinatra Enterprises joined as co-producer, leveraging Sinatra's star power to secure key cast members and shape the project's creative direction and budget allocation.[1]Jack Donohue was chosen as director, bringing his extensive television experience—including directing episodes of The Frank Sinatra Show and The Red Skelton Show—to his second feature film following Marriage on the Rocks (1965).[1]
Synopsis and Cast
Plot Summary
In the Bahamas, salvage diver Mark Brittain is recruited by Rosa Lucchesi and her partner Vic Rossiter, along with their boat hand Linc Langley, to search for sunken Spanish treasure off the coast.[1] While diving, Brittain discovers a derelict World War II German U-boat sunk decades earlier.[1][7]Abandoning the treasure hunt, the group decides to raise the submarine. They enlist former U-boat officer Eric Lauffnauer, who identifies it as a vessel he once commanded, and mechanic Tony Moreno to repair and refit it for operation.[1][7] Lauffnauer devises an audacious scheme: disguise the U-boat as a British warship, approach the RMS Queen Mary at sea, board the liner, and rob its vault of $3 million in passenger cash by threatening to torpedo the ship.[1][7] Brittain reluctantly agrees, motivated partly by his growing attraction to Rosa, while Rossiter harbors jealousy and secretly helps Lauffnauer arm the submarine with live torpedoes.[7]The team launches their plan in the Atlantic Ocean, surfacing the U-boat near the Queen Mary and hailing it as a distressed Britishvessel.[1] Brittain, Rossiter, and Lauffnauer, dressed as Royal Navy officers and armed with submachine guns, board the liner and overpower the captain and crew.[1][7] They force the captain to open the vault, load the cash aboard the submarine via lifeboats, but the Queen Mary crew manages to transmit an SOS signal before being subdued.[1]As the U-boat submerges to escape, a U.S. Coast Guard cutter arrives in pursuit.[1] Internal conflicts erupt: Rossiter is killed in a violent struggle aboard the submarine, and Lauffnauer shoots Moreno during an argument over the loot.[1] To evade detection, the robbers jettison the money overboard.[1] When the Coast Guard vessel rams the U-boat, Lauffnauer attempts to fire a torpedo in retaliation, but Brittain intervenes to halt the attack; the submarine is critically damaged and sinks, drowning Lauffnauer.[1][7]Brittain, Rosa, and Linc escape in a life raft, drifting empty-handed toward South America and reflecting on the ultimate failure of their greed-fueled endeavor.[1]
Principal Cast
Frank Sinatra stars as Mark Brittain, the skilled diver who leads the group's underwater salvage operation and becomes central to the high-stakes scheme. Sinatra also served as a producer on the film through his company, contributing to its development alongside Seven Arts Productions.[8]Virna Lisi plays Rosa Lucchesi, the ambitious and cunning financier who assembles the team and drives the audacious plan forward. An acclaimed Italian actress born in Ancona, Lisi brought her European stardom to this early Hollywood role following her U.S. debut the previous year.[9][10]Anthony Franciosa portrays Vic Rossiter, the opportunistic and street-smart partner whose involvement adds tension and unpredictability to the ensemble dynamics. Franciosa's performance highlights his character's evolving motivations and quick-witted opportunism throughout the adventure.[11][12]Alf Kjellin appears as Eric Lauffnauer, the former German U-boat commander whose naval expertise and commanding demeanor prove essential to executing the complex operation. Kjellin's authoritative presence underscores the role's military precision and intensity.[1]Richard Conte takes on the role of Tony Moreno, the resourceful engineer who handles the technical aspects of the submarine's restoration and the heist's mechanics. Conte's seasoned portrayal emphasizes the character's reliability and hands-on ingenuity.[10]In supporting roles, Errol John plays Linc Langley, a crew member who assists in the boat's operations and the group's endeavors, while Murray Matheson depicts the Captain of the Queen Mary, offering a dignified and skeptical authority aboard the iconic liner.[13][1]
The pre-production phase of Assault on a Queen encompassed extensive logistical planning and technical groundwork to realize the film's high-seas heist narrative, produced by William Goetz under Seven Arts Productions and Sinatra Enterprises, Inc. Significant portions of the budget were dedicated to special effects, including the creation of detailed miniature models for the RMS Queen Maryocean liner and the World War II-era German U-boat central to the plot.[8]Art director Paul Groesse led the design of these miniatures, collaborating with the production team to ensure accurate scaling and visual realism for integration into the sea-based action sequences.[11] Cinematographer William H. Daniels, drawing on his expertise from prior underwater shoots, meticulously planned the filming approach for the film's aquatic elements, coordinating lighting and camera setups to capture both submerged and surface scenes effectively.[14]Essential external coordination included arrangements with the U.S. Coast Guard to utilize cutter vessels such as the USCGC Androscoggin (WHEC-68) and USCGC Minnetonka (WHEC-67), providing authentic maritime support and appearances in key exterior shots.[15] Sets for interiors, including the submarine and ship compartments, were constructed at Paramount Studios in Hollywood, facilitating controlled environment testing before on-location work. Safety measures for the water-intensive production were prioritized, incorporating protocols for underwater filming and specialized diver training tailored to Frank Sinatra's role as the lead diver character. The screenplay by Rod Serling informed these preparations by outlining the sequence demands.[1]
Filming Locations
Principal photography for Assault on a Queen took place from late 1965, with key exterior sequences captured in the Bahamas and California to leverage authentic maritime settings for the film's high-seas heist narrative.[16] The opening salvage scenes, depicting the recovery of a World War IIGerman submarine, were filmed near Nassau in the Bahamas, where the production coordinated with the RMS Queen Mary's transatlantic itinerary to integrate real ocean footage during the liner's port call. This location choice enhanced the visual realism of the underwater and coastal action, contrasting the tropical waters with the impending tension of the plot.[16]In California, exterior shots of the RMS Queen Mary were obtained using the actual ocean liner, which was still in service and would be permanently docked in Long Beach from 1967 onward; this marked the ship's debut in a major Hollywood production and provided grand, period-accurate scale to the climactic robbery sequence.[17] The production faced logistical challenges in synchronizing shoots with Cunard's busy late-1965 cruise schedule, requiring the crew to travel to Nassau and adapt to the liner's brief stops, which added complexity to the on-location work but contributed to the film's dynamic visuals of the massive vessel at sea. Permissions for filming on and around the Queen Mary involved collaboration with Cunard Line officials to ensure minimal disruption to its voyages.[16][18]Interior scenes, including those aboard the submarine and the Queen Mary, were primarily shot at Paramount Studios in Hollywood, Los Angeles, allowing for controlled replication of confined ship environments and dialogue-heavy moments. For the heist sequences involving submerged action and vessel interactions, the team utilized water tanks to simulate underwater dynamics, with model work conducted in the Sersen Tank at Fox's Ranch in Malibu Canyon to create convincing effects of the submarine approaching the liner without relying solely on practical boats. These studio elements were crucial for safety and efficiency, blending seamlessly with on-location footage to heighten the thriller's suspenseful pacing.[18][19]
Music and Soundtrack
The original score for Assault on a Queen was composed by jazz legend Duke Ellington in 1966, infusing the film with a distinctive jazz style that heightened tension during heist sequences and added romantic undertones to character interactions.[20] Recorded with an 18-piece band featuring Ellington regulars like Cat Anderson on trumpet and Johnny Hodges on saxophone, the music blended orchestral elements with improvisational jazz flair.[21] Key cues include the "Prelude," which serves as the main title theme with sweeping orchestral swells to establish the adventure's scale, and "Rosa’s Theme," a sultry melody underscoring the romantic subplot between Frank Sinatra's character and Virna Lisi's.[21]Additional music was provided by composer Nathan Van Cleave, who adapted and expanded Ellington's contributions for action-oriented scenes, particularly the underwater salvage operations and high-stakes confrontations.[22] Tracks like "The First Dive (Raising the Sub)" employ rhythmic jazz motifs to build suspense during the submarine recovery, while "The Big Heist" delivers a 10-minute suite of pulsating rhythms and brass accents to amplify the film's climactic robbery sequence.[21] Van Cleave's orchestrations ensured seamless integration, compensating for Ellington's touring commitments that limited his direct involvement beyond the initial recordings.[20]No official soundtrack album was released contemporaneously with the film; the score remained largely unavailable until Dragon's Domain Records issued the world premiere CD in 2016, limited to 1,000 copies and mastered from the original monaural stems.[23] Ellington's contributions later appeared in jazz retrospectives compiling his film work, such as expanded discographies highlighting his cinematic output. In the film, the score underscores the heist suspense through dynamic jazz layers, contrasting the novel's narrative focus by introducing auditory tension absent in Jack Finney's print descriptions of silent, methodical plotting.[21]
Release
Theatrical Release
Assault on a Queen had its U.S. theatrical release on June 15, 1966, distributed nationwide by Paramount Pictures, marking the start of a wide summer rollout across theaters.The film runs 106 minutes and was shot in Technicolor, utilizing Panavision for its widescreen format to capture the expansive maritime action sequences.[1][2]Internationally, the rollout began in late 1966, with releases in other European markets; non-English versions included dubbing.Marketing efforts centered on Frank Sinatra's commanding presence and the film's audacious heist concept, with posters prominently displaying Sinatra against the backdrop of the RMS Queen Mary and trailers building suspense around the submarine's role in the plot twist.[24][25]
Box Office Performance
Assault on a Queen grossed $2.7 million in U.S. and Canada rentals during 1966, positioning it as a mid-tier performer among Frank Sinatra's releases that year.[26]The film's summer release on June 15, 1966, capitalized on school vacations to draw audiences, yet it underperformed, partly due to mixed critical reception that may have influenced attendance. In the broader context of 1960sheist films, Assault on a Queen followed the trend established by successes like Ocean's 11 (1960) but fell short in commercial impact compared to such contemporaries.[1]
Reception
Critical Response
Upon its release in 1966, Assault on a Queen received mixed reviews from critics, who often praised the film's ambitious action sequences and production values while critiquing its pacing and script. Variety commended producer William Goetz for supervising a "remarkable job" in rendering the "wild-eyed premise" of Jack Finney's novel plausible through special effects and underwater sequences, though it noted the overall execution as serviceable rather than exceptional.[8] In contrast, The New York Times described the screenplay by Rod Serling as "slick, standard" with dialogue that veered from "flip to banal," highlighting weaknesses in character development and tension-building.[27]Critics offered divided assessments of the lead performances, particularly Frank Sinatra's portrayal of the level-headed leader Mark Brittain. Some lauded Sinatra's inherent charisma and understated authority as a grounding force amid the ensemble, contrasting effectively with more flamboyant roles like Anthony Franciosa's scheming Vic.[1] Others viewed his performance as autopilot or bland, lacking the spark seen in his earlier heist films like Ocean's 11.[27] Virna Lisi's role as the glamorous Rosa Lucchesi was frequently highlighted for its visual appeal and subtle romantic chemistry with Sinatra, but reviewers noted its limited depth, often reducing her to a decorative presence who "moons" over the protagonist.[27][1]The film's overall critical reception has been aggregated at 36% on Rotten Tomatoes, based on six reviews as of 2023, reflecting a consensus on its implausible plot as a persistent flaw that undermines suspense despite engaging heist elements.[28] Retrospective analyses in the 2010s have reframed the movie more charitably as campy, nostalgic fun—a modest 1960s matinee adventure with escapist appeal, though still hampered by slow pacing, studio-bound direction, and logical gaps in the submarine refurbishment scheme.[1][7]Turner Classic Movies describes it as an "unpretentious" period piece elevated by Sinatra's star power and Duke Ellington's jazzy score, suitable for viewers appreciating lighthearted pulp thrills over realism.[1]
Audience and Legacy
Assault on a Queen has cultivated a modest but dedicated audience, particularly among enthusiasts of Frank Sinatra's filmography, who appreciate its swashbuckling heist elements and the star's charismatic performance as the leader of a ragtag crew. On IMDb, the film holds a 5.6/10 rating from 1,332 user votes, with many reviews highlighting the thrilling adventure premise while pointing out the limitations of its dated special effects and miniature work.[2][29] This reception aligns briefly with the critical consensus of a middling entertainment value, though audience appreciation often centers on its escapist fun rather than technical polish.[28]In terms of legacy, the film occupies a niche in the heist subgenre as an inventive 1960s caper involving maritime intrigue, predating more polished ensemble theft stories and showcasing an audacious plot to hijack a luxury liner. It stands out as one of the few productions of the era to utilize the real RMS Queen Mary for key filming sequences, adding authenticity to its ocean liner setting and contributing to discussions of practical location shooting in mid-century Hollywood.[16][7]Culturally, Assault on a Queen is frequently featured in retrospectives of Rod Serling's screenwriting career outside his iconictelevision work, underscoring his versatility in adapting Jack Finney's novel for the big screen. The movie also plays a minor role in analyses of Sinatra's post-Rat Pack phase, illustrating his shift toward standalone adventure vehicles amid a mix of commercial and artistic endeavors. Often categorized as a B-movie due to its modest production scale and uneven execution, the film has experienced a revival in interest through streaming availability, drawing new viewers curious about Sinatra's lesser-known projects and 1960s genre filmmaking.[30][31][32]
Home Media and Availability
Physical Releases
The film was initially released on VHS by Paramount Home Video in 1992.[33] No Laserdisc edition has been documented.Olive Films, under license from Paramount, issued the first DVD and Blu-ray versions on March 27, 2012, both in Region 1 and presented in the original 2.35:1 widescreenaspect ratio.[7][34]The Blu-ray features an AVC-encoded 1080p transfer sourced from the original elements, delivering sharp detail, bold colors, and enhanced clarity that markedly improves upon the softer visuals of the prior VHS release.[34][7] Neither the DVD nor Blu-ray includes supplemental materials such as commentary tracks or featurettes.These Olive Films editions were produced as manufactured-on-demand titles with limited initial runs and are now out of print; as of 2025, used and new-old-stock copies typically sell on secondary markets for $20 to $50.[35][36]
Streaming and Digital
As of November 2025, Assault on a Queen is not available for subscription streaming but can be rented or purchased digitally on platforms including Amazon Video, Apple TV, Google Play, and Fandango at Home, typically in high-definition (HD) format.[37][38][39]Digital purchases have been offered on iTunes and Google Play since at least 2012.[39]Since its initial home media push in 2012, the film has seen updates through inclusion in Paramount's catalog revivals during the 2020s, enhancing its digital accessibility without a 4K UHD release to date.[40]