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A l'ouest de Zanzibar

Titre original : West of Zanzibar
  • 1954
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 30min
NOTE IMDb
5,6/10
214
MA NOTE
Sheila Sim and Anthony Steel in A l'ouest de Zanzibar (1954)
The story of native tribesmen who move towards Mombasa, getting drawn info the world of ivory smuggling.
Lire trailer2:18
1 Video
12 photos
AventureDrame

Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueThe story of native tribesmen who move towards Mombasa, getting drawn info the world of ivory smuggling.The story of native tribesmen who move towards Mombasa, getting drawn info the world of ivory smuggling.The story of native tribesmen who move towards Mombasa, getting drawn info the world of ivory smuggling.

  • Réalisation
    • Harry Watt
  • Scénario
    • Max Catto
    • Jack Whittingham
    • Harry Watt
  • Casting principal
    • Anthony Steel
    • Sheila Sim
    • William Simons
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    5,6/10
    214
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Harry Watt
    • Scénario
      • Max Catto
      • Jack Whittingham
      • Harry Watt
    • Casting principal
      • Anthony Steel
      • Sheila Sim
      • William Simons
    • 9avis d'utilisateurs
    • 4avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Vidéos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 2:18
    Trailer

    Photos12

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    Rôles principaux20

    Modifier
    Anthony Steel
    Anthony Steel
    • Bob Payton
    Sheila Sim
    Sheila Sim
    • Mary Payton
    William Simons
    William Simons
    • Tim Payton
    Orlando Martins
    Orlando Martins
    • M'Kwongwi
    Edric Connor
    • Ushingo
    David Osieli
    • Ambrose - Ushingo's Son
    Bethlehem Sketch
    • Bethlehem - Ushingo's Son
    Martin Benson
    Martin Benson
    • Lawyer Dhofar
    Peter Illing
    Peter Illing
    • Khingoni
    Edward Johnson
    • Half Breed
    Juma
    • Juma
    Howard Marion-Crawford
    Howard Marion-Crawford
    • Wood
    • (as Howard Marion Crawford)
    Stuart Lindsell
    • Colonel Ryan
    • (as R. Stuart Lindsell)
    Sheik Abdullah
    • Dhow Captain
    Joanna Kitau
    • Ketch African
    Roy Cable
    • Senior Official
    Fatuma
    • Tana
    Arabs and Africans of Kenya Tanganyika Uganda and Zanzibar
    • Réalisation
      • Harry Watt
    • Scénario
      • Max Catto
      • Jack Whittingham
      • Harry Watt
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs9

    5,6214
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    Avis à la une

    6richardchatten

    "I can't see how there are any elephants left; every second shop seems to be an ivory dealer!"

    Cannily scheduled during the chilly month of January by Talking Pictures, the second of Harry Watt's two Technicolor tours of the Dark Continent boasts excellent photography of the local wildlife fairly well integrated into the action (although described in the credits as made at Ealing Studios).

    The narrator describes at the outset that the 'white gold' of smuggled ivory has taken the place of the 'black gold' of slavery; which at least was a step in the right direction.

    But the conflict of interests between European tree-huggers and black 'smugglers' continues to worry away today.
    5spookyrat1

    What Went Around, Is Still Going Around!

    West of Zanzibar is a real historical oddity. Besides being the only sequel that Ealing Studios ever produced, the film does highlight true to life conservation and social issues that still impact our contemporary world some 65 years later. It's just a pity that in searching for solutions to these issues, it's frequently inferred that the white colonial masters often have the best ideas, whilst playing down past colonial involvement which may have led to the problems beginning.

    I have no idea why these Bob Payton yarns were so popular at the time. It can't have been the magnetic charisma of Anthony Steel, the actor playing the game warden character. He simply doesn't have any. Neither does he have any chemistry whatsoever with his onscreen wife, Mary. He also manages to have his acting pants pulled down, by Edric O'Connor, who plays Ushingo, the chief of the local Galana tribe. O'Connor is quite exceptional in the role and clearly was no amateur performer.

    The dramatic content focusses on illegal ivory poaching and smuggling (the I suspect, real life footage of an elephant being hunted and killed for its tusks is jarring) which as mentioned earlier still plagues our world and especially the elephant populations of the planet. A sub-story deals with the Galana's tribal lands being affected by soil erosion, with the resulting effect of younger tribal members drifting off towards the city and both its attractions and associated social problems.

    Harry Watt, a regular Ealing director, specialised in both raising socially aware issues in his films, whilst making said films overseas. I direct interested readers towards his 1959 offering made in Australia, The Siege of Pinchgut, which is definitely NOT your typical crooks versus cops siege movie.

    In WOZ, Watt is less successful in laying down a coherent narrative and sustaining a pacy delivery supplemented by a good deal of suspense. Things do pick up in the third act, where I found the constant back projections and use of inserted documentary stock footage, rather entertaining, but probably not for the right reasons. It was also amusing watching Mary Payton thundering through the African plain lands punishing this ancient 4 wheel drive truck, come personnel carrier.

    This is by no means a flawless film. But Watt and his script writers, obviously had a handle on some of the big issues affecting the African continent in the 50's. Come the second decade of the 21st century and folks, they still haven't been resolved.
    6boblipton

    Moving Past Trader Horn

    A tribe in East Africa has moved from their old areas, which has dried up and is no longer suitable for farming, down to the lowlands near Mombasa. Some of the young men finding that killing elephants illegally and selling their ivory is a way to get ahead in rapidly changing East Africa. Anthony Steele, on official leave from his job working with the natives, tries to track down those who really profit from the trade, with the reluctant urging of his wife, Sheila Sim.

    It's a late colonial era view of East Africa, amidst which is set one of those tracking-down-the-smugglers stories that was a fixture of British crime drama. However, this Ealing production has moved on a bit from TRADER HORN, and the natives are human, particularly Edric Connor as the chief, and so is the villain of the piece -- Martin Benson, playing a native lawyer, a graduate of the Sorbonne, who lectures Steele on England's industrial revolution and angrily congratulates him on his naive good will.

    This being a movie set in Africa, the movie can shift at any moment from an indoor courtroom to documentary footage, showing the most dangerous animals in Africa -- hippopotami -- or the markets of Zanzibar, wart hogs and elephants at a watering hole, native fishermen using suckerfish to catch sea turtles, or a native fishing festival. The director is Harry Watt, whose filmography indicates he was happier filming documentaries than story films.

    Still, it's a well-told if typical story, set in an exotic location, and if its attitudes are not those we espouse today, there are some bright moments that survive well.
    3malcolmgsw

    Dull And Slow

    At times it is difficult to make out if this film is supposed to be a dramatic narrative film or a glorified travelogue.Since this was the pre jet age,not many people could journey to Africa and see these sights for themselves.They could view them in black and white on their 12 inch TV screens but that was it.So the antics of the dung beetle seem to supplant the importance of moving the plot onwards.In the cinema the audience had to suffer in silence whereas we can now happily fast forward.the plot is about ivory poaching,apparently as bad then as it is now.Anthony Steel plays the game warden and seems to be carved out of ivory himself.Sylvia Simm seems to have a different costume for every scene.Michael Balcon's Ealing only had 2 years remaining,and watching lame efforts like this ,it is not very surprising.
    7jimjamjonny39

    Ivory traders

    You can understand why certain illegal ivory hunters do this job. They're poor and need to survive. Only problem is that the people paying them to murder the elephants are giving them a pittance and are making huge profits for themselves. It's amazing to think that Africa's elephant population from 26 million elephants in 1800 to fewer than one million today. Elephant tusks from Africa average about 2 metres in length and weigh over 20 kg.

    The buyers of ivory express genuine concerns about cruelty towards animals, however, less than one-third of them believe that elephants are very endangered.

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      Opening credits: The events and characters portrayed in this film are wholly fictitious.
    • Gaffes
      When the poachers are hunting the elephants, a kookaburra call is clearly heard. Kookaburras are only found in Australia, a continent thousands of miles east of Zanzibar.
    • Citations

      Mary Payton: Don't you understand what all this is doing to innocent African tribes?

      Lawyer Dhofar: Perhaps I do. Perhaps I do not. But, but Mrs. Payton don't you think you are being a little, to put it delicately, starry-eyed about these so-called innocent tribes? Oh. come, Mrs. Payton, we must be realists. The world cannot wait for civilisation to catch up with the primitive black man.

      Mary Payton: For one thing, this ivory business is destroying a fine, pastoral people, the Golanas; turning them into slum savages.

      Lawyer Dhofar: But Mrs. Payton, in Africa, that is what the black man is doomed to be - a slum savage. Oh, it is regrettable but inevitable. Perhaps you conveniently forget your Industrial Revolution and what it did to your people?

      Lawyer Dhofar: Africa, Mr Payton, is having its own industrial revolution. And no sentimental heart-burning is going to stop it.

      Lawyer Dhofar: But you, speaking as an African...

      Lawyer Dhofar: I am not an African. A Phoenician, perhaps; a Persian even - but not an African.

      Bob Payton: I'm proud to call myself an East African.

      Lawyer Dhofar: It is easy for a conqueror to be magnanimous. You are not an African, Mr. Payton. What are your inmost thoughts at this moment? Because I talk to you as man to man. Aren't they "I'd like to smack this little wog on the kisser?" Or something like that? I am a barrister-at-law, Mr Payton, a graduate of the Sorbonne but out here, my home, I am a wog. A munt. A nigger, even. And you ask me to sympathise with you in perpetuating that? I'm all for a change, Mr Payton, and if because of it the picturesque Golanas disappear, it's just too bad. That is the right expression, isn't it?

      Lawyer Dhofar: But please forgive me. You must have so many missionary activities to occupy you, I must not detain you any longer.

      Bob Payton: Now look here...

      Lawyer Dhofar: In this cynical world, it is indeed charming to meet an idealist. Best of luck to you, Mrs Payton. Mr Payton, may you cure the growing pains of Africa.

      Bob Payton: [now outside the office] Phew, that didn't go according to plan.

    • Connexions
      Follows Quand les vautours ne volent plus (1951)

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    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 21 juillet 1954 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • Royaume-Uni
    • Langue
      • Anglais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • West of Zanzibar
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Zanzibar, Tanzania
    • Sociétés de production
      • Ealing Studios
      • Schlesinger Organization
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

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    • Durée
      • 1h 30min(90 min)
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.66 : 1

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