High Road to China
Catalog Number
11309
-
Primary Distributor (If not listed, select "OTHER")
Catalog Number
11309
Primary Distributor (If not listed, select "OTHER")
Release Year
Country
105 mins (NTSC)
N/A | N/A | N/A
N/A | N/A
High Road to China (1983)
Additional Information
Additional Information
Tom Selleck takes you on a high adventure!
Take the High Road to China... for an adventure you'll never forget.
High Road to China (a.k.a. Raiders of the End of the World) is a 1983 American adventure-romance film set in the 1920s starring Tom Selleck in his first major starring role, playing a hard-drinking biplane pilot hired by society heiress Eve "Evie" Tozer (Bess Armstrong) to find her missing father (Wilford Brimley). The supporting cast includes Robert Morley and Brian Blessed. The Golden Harvest film (released by Warner Bros.) is loosely based on a novel of the same name by Jon Cleary. However, little beyond character names and the basic premise of an aerial race to China survived the translation to film.
While Brian G. Hutton ended up as the final director, originally, High Road to China was helmed by John Huston, before being replaced by Sidney J. Furie. The musical score was composed by John Barry. It was the 27th highest-grossing film of 1983, bringing in $28,445,927 at the domestic box office.
Release Date: March 18, 1983
Domestic Total Gross: $28,445,927
Domestic Total Adj. Gross: $78,113,400
Take the High Road to China... for an adventure you'll never forget.
High Road to China (a.k.a. Raiders of the End of the World) is a 1983 American adventure-romance film set in the 1920s starring Tom Selleck in his first major starring role, playing a hard-drinking biplane pilot hired by society heiress Eve "Evie" Tozer (Bess Armstrong) to find her missing father (Wilford Brimley). The supporting cast includes Robert Morley and Brian Blessed. The Golden Harvest film (released by Warner Bros.) is loosely based on a novel of the same name by Jon Cleary. However, little beyond character names and the basic premise of an aerial race to China survived the translation to film.
While Brian G. Hutton ended up as the final director, originally, High Road to China was helmed by John Huston, before being replaced by Sidney J. Furie. The musical score was composed by John Barry. It was the 27th highest-grossing film of 1983, bringing in $28,445,927 at the domestic box office.
Release Date: March 18, 1983
Domestic Total Gross: $28,445,927
Domestic Total Adj. Gross: $78,113,400
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