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Trader Horn

  • 1931
  • Approved
  • 2h 2min
VALUTAZIONE IMDb
6,1/10
1282
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Harry Carey, Edwina Booth, and Duncan Renaldo in Trader Horn (1931)
Guarda Trailer [EN]
Riproduci trailer2:31
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36 foto
AvventuraAzioneDrammaRomanticismo

Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaTwo white traders in the darkest Africa of the 1870s find a missionary's daughter, who was captured as a child by a savage tribe and now worshiped as a goddess.Two white traders in the darkest Africa of the 1870s find a missionary's daughter, who was captured as a child by a savage tribe and now worshiped as a goddess.Two white traders in the darkest Africa of the 1870s find a missionary's daughter, who was captured as a child by a savage tribe and now worshiped as a goddess.

  • Regia
    • W.S. Van Dyke
  • Sceneggiatura
    • Ethelreda Lewis
    • Dale Van Every
    • John T. Neville
  • Star
    • Harry Carey
    • Edwina Booth
    • Duncan Renaldo
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • VALUTAZIONE IMDb
    6,1/10
    1282
    LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
    • Regia
      • W.S. Van Dyke
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Ethelreda Lewis
      • Dale Van Every
      • John T. Neville
    • Star
      • Harry Carey
      • Edwina Booth
      • Duncan Renaldo
    • 36Recensioni degli utenti
    • 17Recensioni della critica
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
    • Candidato a 1 Oscar
      • 3 vittorie e 1 candidatura in totale

    Video1

    Trailer [EN]
    Trailer 2:31
    Trailer [EN]

    Foto36

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    Interpreti principali10

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    Harry Carey
    Harry Carey
    • Aloysius 'Trader' Horn
    Edwina Booth
    Edwina Booth
    • Nina Trent - the White Goddess
    Duncan Renaldo
    Duncan Renaldo
    • Peru
    Mutia Omoolu
    • Rencharo - Horn's Gun Bearer
    Olive Carey
    Olive Carey
    • Edith Trent
    • (as Olive Golden)
    Bob Kortman
    Bob Kortman
      Marjorie Rambeau
      Marjorie Rambeau
      • Edith Trent
      • (scene tagliate)
      C. Aubrey Smith
      C. Aubrey Smith
      • St. Clair - a Trader
      • (non citato nei titoli originali)
      Riano Tindama
      • Witch Doctor
      • (non citato nei titoli originali)
      Ivory Williams
      • Man
      • (non citato nei titoli originali)
      • Regia
        • W.S. Van Dyke
      • Sceneggiatura
        • Ethelreda Lewis
        • Dale Van Every
        • John T. Neville
      • Tutti gli interpreti e le troupe
      • Produzione, botteghino e altro su IMDbPro

      Recensioni degli utenti36

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      Recensioni in evidenza

      7planktonrules

      Wow, how times have changed!

      "Trader Horn" is a very good film, but it's also a monstrous film--a very strange combination. I noticed that I my wife and I watched it, she was terrified and even angered several times--mostly because the filmmakers were so darned irresponsible in the way they treated the animals (and even cast members!).

      The film begins with Horn (Harry Carey) and Peru (Duncan Renaldo) trekking through Africa with their porters and Horn's assistant, Rencharo (Mutia Omoolu). They are looking to trade salt and trinkets to the locals for ivory and furs. But, instead of taking advantage of the naiveté of these tribesmen, the tables end up getting turned on them. Despite Horn's experience on the Continent, he's finally out of his league--among incredibly hostile natives who seem bent on killing them all. In an odd twist, they meet up with a savage white woman living among these locals and they take 'Nina' with them on a cross-country run from these hostile warriors. This portion of the film is highly reminiscent of the later film "The Naked Prey" (with Cornel Wilde).

      While the film is exciting and has a lot of great action location sequences, the film also is very tough to watch. Because the film was made in the Pre-Code era (where rules about film content were rarely enforced), the film is amazingly violent. In fact, MGM didn't like the final product, so they took a bunch of animals (probably from circuses or zoos) to Mexico and had them kill each other or killed them outright and stuck this into the movie!! There was no PETA or American Humane Association to oversee the project and it is tough watching animals actually die. In particular, there is a scene where a lion is impaled on a spear and it appears that they really did this for the entertainment of the audiences! Uggh. Additionally, being a Pre-Code piece, Nina spends much of the movie wearing very little--and all the native women are topless--which was not a problem in 1931. However, with the toughened Production Code of 1934, this film would have been heavily edited to be shown in the States or not at all. Because of all this, it's a film you definitely cannot ignore!! Exciting location shots, lots of action and a bit of trash--all make for a very exciting but unsavory film.
      7NewEnglandPat

      The perils of the African bush and savanna

      This early 1930s talkie is a fine jungle adventure in spite of its dated, pedestrian look. A great white hunter takes his protégé in tow and leads a safari through the African wilds, braving wild animals and savage tribesmen in search of ivory. A major angle is a missionary's search for her long-lost daughter who is now a white goddess living among a savage native tribe. Conflicts arise between Horn and his protégé over the girl who has a wild, feral animal attraction. The film has a great deal of exciting, realistic footage of wild animals in search of prey and the attacks are recorded in detail. The hippos and crocodiles in the rivers make for some tense moments during the safari's canoe crossings as the party races for safety from pursuing natives. Harry Carey Sr., Duncan Renaldo and Edwina Booth star in this fine but unpolished feature which is introduced by a music score that is not heard again for the entire movie. The only other instruments of note being the foreboding, percussive native drums during a "ju-ju" when the tribes work themselves into a wild, killing frenzy.
      8bnnw

      An amazing 1930 photographic encapsulation of remote areas of Africa

      With a background spanning over twenty years in the African bush during the 60's, 70's and 80's I am amazed at the locations used for filming. In 1930 (film released in '31) the areas used were very remote and still are over eighty years later.

      Part of the film was shot on the eastern shore of Lake Tanganyika along with another in the interior of Uganda. The Pygmy (Efe) segment is from the Ituri Forest in what is now the Democratic Republic of Congo and besides being very remote and hazardous was, and still is, an unhealthy area. As recent as 2003, marauding rebels were seizing Pygmy hunters and eating them according to the U.N.

      Uganda, Tanganyika (Tanzania) and the southern Sudan were rampant with Malaria and a number of production crew fell ill with it. The Tse Fly was the bearer of Sleeping Sickness and prevalent in these areas as well as the Kenya Colony where some filming took place.

      Although the plot is lacking by today's standards, the commitment to film in these areas was a major attempt to show the real Africa of its time along with footage of it's indigenous Flora and Fauna. Due to this diligence, today we have a timed photographic encapsulation of these areas available to the general public which is not readily accessible elsewhere.
      6mik-19

      A parade of exotic animals

      'Trader Horn' is screen history. It influenced the evolution of the adventure epic immensely and was a direct inspiration for director W.S. Van Dyke's own effort from the year after, the first Tarzan movie with Johnny Weissmuller. 'Tarzan the Ape Man' is not among the best of the Weissmuller Tarzans, nor can I say of 'Trader Horn' that in itself it is a great movie by any standards.

      Trader Horn is an experienced trader on the African savannas, and takes his young sidekick Peru on an extended journey to show him the wildlife and the fauna of his home in the wild. After being caught by a hostile tribe they escape with a white young girl who was abducted when she was a baby, and both Trader Horn and Peru fall in love with her.

      Yes, it is very simplistic, no more than a pitch for a cartoon really. Trader's education of his young protegé is much too didactic to bring any kind of life into any work of fiction, but we do get to see a lot of exotic animals, which in 1931 would have been more than enough point. The film overall is brought down by Harry Carey's strangely unsympathetic portrayal of Trader. It is not so much his racism, that was a given in Western movies at the time, no escaping it, but Carey's Trader is sullen and mean-spirited and condescending to each and everybody, you tire of him quickly. And I got very severely fed up with his way of always addressing Peru as 'lad' or 'boy' in this fake Irish accent. Peru, played by dazzling young Spanish actor Duncan Renaldo, is nothing if not sweet, transcending matiné-idol cuteness, and you forgive him his delighted outburst, "They are not savages, they are just happy, ignorant children!" So watch it and appreciate its historical impact. Just don't expect a serious contender to any of the later and infinitely better adventure yarns.

      6/10
      6bkoganbing

      In the heart of Africa gin and quinine gets them through

      I don't think any film that managed to finish its shooting schedule and be released ever had as much problems as Trader Horn. So much so that for 20 years no American film company ever went back to Africa for location shooting until The African Queen and King Solomon's Mines. But so much footage survived that MGM was able to stock a series of Tarzan films and not put its players at risk the way Harry Carey, Duncan Renaldo and Edwina Booth were.

      The plot is a skimpy one. Carey is your basic white hunter who is taking along a young friend Renaldo into some unexplored country in search of missionary Olive Carey's daughter. When they find her she's now the princess of a savage tribe. But one look at these two, especially Renaldo, makes her realize there are others who look like her. After that it's the three of them plus Carey's gunbearer on the run from the tribe and without weapons in the jungle.

      While American companies avoided Africa, colonial powers like Great Britain shot films in Africa and did it because they knew what the hazards were and took precautions. The goring of a young native by a rhinoceros is real and captured on film and frightening. Director Woody Van Dyke kept his cast and crew loaded with gin and quinine. It still did not save Edwina Booth from a rare tropical disease which many thought killed her. I've always believed that was a deliberate publicity stunt by MGM because Ms. Booth was through with show business after this shoot. Who could blame her?

      The first half of the film is a travelogue on safari. At the time this was great stuff for the American movie-going public. Still no studio wanted to face the expenses MGM had during Trader Horn's shooting.

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      Trama

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      Lo sapevi?

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      • Quiz
        When Africans Mutia Omoolu and Riano Tindama were brought to Hollywood for re-shoots, they were refused admission to the Hollywood Hotel because they were black.
      • Citazioni

        Aloysius 'Trader' Horn: Aye, you needn't think there isn't beauty to be found in Africa - beauty and terror. Terror can be a sort of beauty too. If two fellas stand up to it together. - - Sometimes, of course, it's better for two fellas to run away together.

        [laughs]

      • Curiosità sui crediti
        Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer is indebted to the governmental officials of The Territory of Tanganyika, The Protectorate of Uganda, The Colony of Kenya, The Anglo-Egyptian Sudan, The Belgian Congo, whose co-operation made this picture possible - and to White Hunters Maj. W.V.D. Dickinson, A.S. Waller, Esq., J.H. Barnes, Esq., H.R. Stanton, Esq., for their courageous services through 14,000 miles of African veldt and jungle.
      • Versioni alternative
        Originally released with a three-minute prologue featuring Cecil B. DeMille discussing the authenticity of the film with the book's author, Alfred A. Horn. Eliminated for the 1936 re-issue.
      • Connessioni
        Edited into Hollywood: The Dream Factory (1972)
      • Colonne sonore
        Cannibal Carnival
        (uncredited)

        Music by Sol Levy

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      Dettagli

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      • Data di uscita
        • 23 maggio 1931 (Stati Uniti)
      • Paese di origine
        • Stati Uniti
      • Lingue
        • Inglese
        • Swahili
      • Celebre anche come
        • Zov prašume
      • Luoghi delle riprese
        • Tecate, Baja California Norte, Messico(animal fight scenes)
      • Azienda produttrice
        • Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM)
      • Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro

      Botteghino

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      • Budget
        • 1.312.636 USD (previsto)
      Vedi le informazioni dettagliate del botteghino su IMDbPro

      Specifiche tecniche

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      • Tempo di esecuzione
        • 2h 2min(122 min)
      • Colore
        • Black and White

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