Agrega una trama en tu idiomaA colonial police officer in Rhodesia hunts down the albino terrorist who raped and murdered his fiancée.A colonial police officer in Rhodesia hunts down the albino terrorist who raped and murdered his fiancée.A colonial police officer in Rhodesia hunts down the albino terrorist who raped and murdered his fiancée.
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Elenco
- Dizaki
- (as Harry Makela)
- Pub customer
- (sin créditos)
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Todo el elenco y el equipo
- Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro
Opiniones destacadas
Sybil Danning fans get to see her in only a few scenes. This is NOT a sexy movie. Her character (Sally) has a key role in the plot development. Her riding a horse to the climactic confrontation for her character reminds me of classic "maiden in peril" Westerns, and thus ends up being of quite appropriate.
The film credibly portrays the lives of European settlers determined to remain in their adopted land despite the increasing danger of rebellion. Most of them honestly believe that it is possible to live in peace with the Africans as long as they are willing to accept their "civilizing" guidance. The rebels are presented as bloodthirsty thugs who terrorize other Africans and have no real program of true revolution other than savage hatred of the White Man. Most of the Africans are more or less loyal to the Whites and are usually shown to be strong, honorable, and trustworthy, although often in a patronizing manner.
Christopher Lee is quite good as a police chief determined to prevent vigilante justice when a group of terrorists led by an albino (pronounced "albeeno" in the film) witch doctor (Horst Frank) rape and murder the fiancée of a man recently retired from the police force. He (James Faulkner); along with a couple of equally vengeful African servants of the victim's elderly father (Trevor Howard); takes off into the bush to find and kill those responsible. These are not evil men out to indiscriminately slaughter Africans but people who feel that there can be no rest for their souls until they spill the blood of The Albino and his crew. Lee sympathizes with their feelings but is firm in his determination to maintain law and order and bring the killers to justice legally. This, of course, also means hunting down the revenge party, causing the settler's militia to mutiny and withdraw from the operation.
The pursuit of both the killers and the posse is grim and realistic, causing the viewer to actually perceive the stresses and fatigue of the participants. Although somewhat cheaply done, subtly racist, and overly clipped and trite in spots, the film is of great interest from both the historical and moral perspective. I saw it many years ago, but, unfortunately, it; like a surprising number of other quality films; hasn't been made commercially available on either VHS or DVD.
The film itself suffers from its only real problem: Goslar directed the movie as a mix of revenge thriller in the tradition of the John Boorman classic "Deliverance" and a tedious social drama that can not succeed in leaving clichés about African natives out of the story. So the film itself becomes a mishmash of entertaining exploitation film and laughably banal social comment. Whenever Goslar goes for the exploitation, he succeeds; we witness a savage (if not that explicit) rape and murder, some really painful torture and a graphic head shot in "Dawn of the Dead" tradition, only that this film was made two years earlier. Whenever Goslar goes for social comment, the movie becomes bothersome, because it's not really convincing. The climax, on the other hand, is a worst case scenario that partially manages to bring the two aspects of the story together.
All in all, this film is quite interesting for fans of obscure films of the Seventies (be it for the actors alone), but it's also a good example for a movie that doesn't live up to its potentials.
The plot is very simple. An albino black man has become the leader of a rebel group. In an act of terror and defiance, he and his men abduct a white woman...raping and murdering her. The rest of the film is about the efforts to bring these killers to justice and to try to prevent the whites in the country from taking the law into their own hands. The guy trying to stop both sides from killing each other is Bill (Christopher Lee).
There are many problems with this movie. It was filmed in Rhodesia and it appears that many of the folks in the film aren't actors at all. Additionally, the cinematography is pretty poor and the movie just looks cheap. Additionally, the film seems like it's trying to titilate...showing irrelevant footage of topless natives as well as a very vivid rape scene which SHOULD have been toned down. Apparently, when the film was brought for release in the UK, censors demanded they cut much of the rape footage.
The acting is a bit forced but is easily overlooked for the greater story which is a nice blend of action and pathos.
Stereotypes are here but they may surprise you in how they are implemented.
This is not your typical John Wayne action flick but neither is it an anti Rhodesian hack piece. It walks the line between the two and offers up a compelling story of revenge action and drama.
It benefits most from not having Andrew, V. McLaglen's heavy hand to turn it into a parody od the book. Is he did with the wild geese.
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- Citas
Whispering Death: You know your eyes? There's so much hate there. Like a man on the edge of insanity. Is it because of your girl? You're surprised my English is so good. I went to an excellent university.
Terrick: You disgust me.
Whispering Death: She was very beautiful, wasn't she? She had skin, so soft to the touch. Her breasts, full and firm. And she was very brave. At first she was silent. But then later she began to scream. And scream and scream. You should have heard her. It was quite wonderful and very stimulating.
Terrick: [he screams in anguish] Awwww!
Terrick: Terrick. You are Terrick aren't you? She kept calling out your name. Again and again. But you weren't there to help her, were you?
Terrick: One way or another, you're dead, Albino.
Whispering Death: It's you and your kind who are going to die. We shall sweep through this country like a bush fire. But you won't be there to see it.
- Versiones alternativasAlthough passed intact for UK cinema the Heron video release suffered over a minute of cuts to the rape of Saly.
- ConexionesFeatured in Tod in der Sonne: Ein Interview mit Jürgen Goslar (2012)
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