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Gunga Din

  • 1939
  • T
  • 1h 57min
VALUTAZIONE IMDb
7,2/10
13.392
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Gunga Din (1939)
Trailer for Gunga Din
Riproduci trailer2:12
1 video
99+ foto
Buddy ComedyAvventuraCommediaGuerra

Nell'India del XIX secolo, tre soldati britannici e un portatore d'acqua nativo devono fermare il risveglio di massa segreto del culto omicida dei thug prima che possa coinvolgere tutto il t... Leggi tuttoNell'India del XIX secolo, tre soldati britannici e un portatore d'acqua nativo devono fermare il risveglio di massa segreto del culto omicida dei thug prima che possa coinvolgere tutto il territorio.Nell'India del XIX secolo, tre soldati britannici e un portatore d'acqua nativo devono fermare il risveglio di massa segreto del culto omicida dei thug prima che possa coinvolgere tutto il territorio.

  • Regia
    • George Stevens
  • Sceneggiatura
    • Joel Sayre
    • Fred Guiol
    • Ben Hecht
  • Star
    • Cary Grant
    • Joan Fontaine
    • Victor McLaglen
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • VALUTAZIONE IMDb
    7,2/10
    13.392
    LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
    • Regia
      • George Stevens
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Joel Sayre
      • Fred Guiol
      • Ben Hecht
    • Star
      • Cary Grant
      • Joan Fontaine
      • Victor McLaglen
    • 140Recensioni degli utenti
    • 59Recensioni della critica
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
    • Premi
      • 4 vittorie totali

    Video1

    Gunga Din
    Trailer 2:12
    Gunga Din

    Foto136

    Visualizza poster
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    Visualizza poster
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    + 129
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    Interpreti principali46

    Modifica
    Cary Grant
    Cary Grant
    • Cutter
    Joan Fontaine
    Joan Fontaine
    • Emmy
    Victor McLaglen
    Victor McLaglen
    • MacChesney
    Douglas Fairbanks Jr.
    Douglas Fairbanks Jr.
    • Ballantine
    Sam Jaffe
    Sam Jaffe
    • Gunga Din
    Eduardo Ciannelli
    Eduardo Ciannelli
    • Guru
    Montagu Love
    Montagu Love
    • Colonel Weed
    Robert Coote
    Robert Coote
    • Higginbotham
    Abner Biberman
    Abner Biberman
    • Chota
    Lumsden Hare
    Lumsden Hare
    • Major Mitchell
    John Alban
    John Alban
      Charles Bennett
      Charles Bennett
      • Telegraph Operator
      • (non citato nei titoli originali)
      Gene Coogan
      Gene Coogan
      • Lancer
      • (non citato nei titoli originali)
      Joe De La Cruz
        Jimmy Dime
        Jimmy Dime
        • Thug
        • (non citato nei titoli originali)
        Ray Dixon
          George Du Count
          • Pandu Lal
          • (non citato nei titoli originali)
          Anna May the Elephant
          • Elephant
          • (non citato nei titoli originali)
          • Regia
            • George Stevens
          • Sceneggiatura
            • Joel Sayre
            • Fred Guiol
            • Ben Hecht
          • Tutti gli interpreti e le troupe
          • Produzione, botteghino e altro su IMDbPro

          Recensioni degli utenti140

          7,213.3K
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          Recensioni in evidenza

          10slokes

          Hollywood's Greatest Message Movie?

          Anyone with a young boy in the house who won't watch black & white movies should put this on their television set. When the child walks by, wondering what all the on screen shouting and shooting's about, tell him this is a picture for adults and that he isn't big enough to watch it yet. That'll hold him there for a few minutes; director George Stevens and his team will keep him to the end.

          I think my father did that to me, anyway, and I'm the better man for it. This classic adventure yarn, set in India during the British occupation, features a trio of Army sergeants who find their tight union facing dissolution as one prepares to marry his sweetheart. Help arrives in the form of a vicious Thuggie revolt that the soldiers find themselves united against.

          "Gunga Din" was one of the great movies to come out of Hollywood's finest year, 1939. Even more than most great movies from that Golden year, it is entertaining in a very immediate and accessible way. The theme music is instant hummable nirvana. While shot in California, the camera work (the only thing in "Gunga Din" that got so much as an Oscar nomination) has a windblown grandeur that feels very much like the Raj of a hundred years before. The battle scenes are shot in a very realistic manner, not too violent but very messy as people fall and shoot and run in all corners of each frame in a way that feels real, not staged like some Cecil B. DeMille Biblical slaughter fest.

          The script doesn't just set up action scenes, it also develops the relationship of the three sergeants with great dollops of humor. The main focus is on Sgt. Cutter, chasing after tall tales of golden treasures. It's a rare actioner for Cary Grant, and his lightness is just right for a film that never takes itself seriously even as it develops taut suspense.

          Anchoring the trio is Sgt. MacChesney (Victor McLaglen), who dotes over his elephant Annie and tries to protect Cutter from his own hare-brained schemes. He's just as funny in his own way, leaving Sgt. Ballantine (Douglas Fairbanks Jr., displaying some nice Errol Flynnish dash) as the one with the love interest and grounding enough to know he needs to chuck his boyish pals and grow up.

          If "Gunga Din" was a Lifetime movie, it would be about Joan Fontaine's efforts to save her man from his two loser friends and their skull crushing hijinks. But since it's a guys' film, the accent here is on how the threesome must stay together and save Ballantine from a fate worse than death, not only marriage, but as Cutter indignantly exclaims several times, the tea business, too.

          The political correctness police are hard on this film, not so much for the gender issue but the idea of British soldiers saving poor Indians from the vicious Thuggies. It reeks of colonial apologia. Thankfully, this film was made back when, and the producers thus felt no need to spell out the obvious liberalism at the heart of the film, that these three sergeants, so full of derring-do and false racial pride, have to be saved along with the rest of their army by a humble bhisti that only one of the three had any time for when he sought their approval. After all, for all their swashbuckling glory, the film's true sacrifice involves the title character, played so heart-wrenchingly by Sam Jaffe.

          Back when this film was made, movie mogul Jack Warner had a saying: You want to send a message, use Western Union. Still, it seems like the messages were flying fast and furious in "Gunga Din." I watch the film now and wonder if audiences back then were meant to wonder what Gunga Din was really up to when he led Cutter to the golden temple. Was he really plotting revenge against his British overlords? Would he have been justified in doing so, especially given MacChesney's cold treatment of him? When Col. Weed delivers that eulogy, the poem by Rudyard Kipling on which the film is loosely based, was it with a nod in the direction of imperialism's folly, of lording it over someone who proved "a better man than I am" in the end? What did they make of the Guru's great speech, delivered in perfect clipped English: "You have sworn an oath as soldiers to maybe die for a faith, which is your country, England. Well, I can die for my country and my faith as readily as you...India, farewell."

          Of course, the same character also instructs his brutal followers: "Kill for the love of killing! Kill for the love of Kali! Kill! Kill! Kill!" Which means we are allowed to hate him and root for the British, and save the questions about what it all means for later.

          What "Gunga Din" means to me, most of all, is the quickest, surest 90-minute thrill ride on video. Cutter never found his golden temple, but there's one for all of us watching "Gunga Din."
          hundd44

          Politically incorrect only to the historically ignorant

          While it is fashionable in too many circles to condemn anything which portrays European colonialism generally, and the British Empire specifically, in a favorable light, a little historical knowledge will show that Kipling's story, as well as this superb film, are hardly the reactionary racist screed some would like to demote them to. Gunga Din is a regimental bhisti - a water carrier - and in 19th century India that meant that he had a job which guaranteed a place to sleep and food in a very brutal society. Considering that he was also an "untouchable" - a member of India's lowest caste - this was something. Colonel Weed is correct in saying "he had no official status as a soldier" - bhistis were non-military auxiliaries. As for his loyalty to the British, there were many Indians who clearly preferred British rule to that of their fellows - and not just the maharajas and princes.

          If you read the story - and watch the movie with an objective eye - at the end, all the major characters have nothing but respect for Gunga Din. Sergeant MacChesney (Victor McLaglen) is clearly shamed by the fact that Din, in the end, was not only the better soldier but the better man - he sacrificed himself to prevent the ambush and massacre of the British column. The most telling example that the movie doesn't "put down" Gunga Din is at the end when Colonel Weed posthumously appoints the former regimental bhisti as a Corporal in the regiment. Corporal was a BRITISH rank - the equivalent Indian rank was Havildar. So, he was appointed as a BRITISH non-commissioned officer who could command British troops - hardly an example of political incorrectness.

          Yes, this is "men-as-buddies" flick. However, this movie has a special appeal to anyone who has actually served in the military - those are the types of friendships you make (you'll share your last drop of water with your mess mate) and keep for the rest of your days. It acknowledges that. So enjoy it - it is a rousing tale - and keep the PC-nonsense out of it. The bad guys lose in the end while the best man is recognized for his virtues - you don't even get that it in real life.
          kimo-watanabe

          Wonderful Movie

          This movie was one of my favorites when I was growing up, and so when I bought the VHS tape a few months ago I was somewhat apprehensive about watching it again. I thought that maybe my memory of the film was a little sugar coated.

          I was; however, pleasantly surprised to find that I still loved watching it as much as I did when I was a kid. It's a great action adventure movie. A previous reviewer commented on the lack of sophistication the movie conveys.

          Whoever that guy is, he needs to lighten up. It's hard to look at for example the special effects and cinematography in an action adventure movie such as this when compared to the special effects and cinematography of Crouching Tiger Hidden Dragon. Time's have changed, and movies with them. If you keep that in mind while watching this film, and have a good time with it you'll love this movie.

          I would love to see this come out on DVD, it's a great movie.
          tristanjohn-1

          One of the film classics

          In the most general of terms Gunga Din not only qualifies as a classic but more or less defines the term "classic" in every respect. I wouldn't know how to fault this film, as it succeeds on every level.

          You begin with a workable idea for a story. Then you follow that up with superb script writing, direction and photography, and wonderful performances by the entire cast. The end result of that collaboration of successful effort is, as it must be . . . a classic.

          And not only does Gunga Din succeed as a mere action adventure, which would be impressive enough, but it's comedic relief serves as a virtual workshop for aspiring directors who, lamentably today, just don't seem to get that part of the equation in all too many cases--you know, as in movie-making is an art? Or at least it used to be.

          There's seems to be a gap in our society's culture when it comes to the enjoyment of art which attempts to communicate on various intellectual levels. I would put this down to dubious education all around if I had to pick just one culprit, but I don't know, maybe that's too simplistic. I experience fear, though, when I read negative comments from viewers of films as rich in various, and to me obvious, qualities as is Gunga Din. All I hear in these cases, at best, is a fundamental lack of artistic appreciation at base.

          Well, for these people I imagine that all that's left is to simply go out and buy the cheap remakes of the classic films, which are, of course, a dime a dozen nowadays. And then I suppose they will get what they need: presumably a package of questionable casting, incompetent direction, in many instances virtually no attempt at intelligent character development whatsoever, along with x-many minutes of gratuitous violence and endless smash-ups, replete, of course, with plenty of LFE icing for this new-age filmic cake.

          Meanwhile, I hope that my daughter will come to appreciate the great films such as Gunga Din for the classic productions they were upon release, and which they certainly remain today.
          polygene

          Rudyard Kipling's poem brought to life in a powerful, strikingly meaningful way...

          This old film just has some important elements the bulk of current films seem to lack: strength of character, genuine heroism and an understanding of what true altruism and sacrifice mean. And Sam Jaffe, a terrific (now-unfortunately-deceased) character actor breaks the viewer's heart as the "regimental bhisti, Gunga Din," who takes constant abuse and gives his all, including his life, to carry water to the men of the Queen's regiment even in the thick of battle.

          Funny, I don't remember it as a comedy, though I think there may have been some spots of humor in it, but then, I was rather young the last time I saw it on the Late, Late Show... too many years ago to even want to think about.

          It's a wonderful movie and I hope the animated version, coming out next year, does the poem and story the same good service the 1939 film managed to do.

          Highly recommended.

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          Trama

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          Lo sapevi?

          Modifica
          • Quiz
            The gong in the title sequence is the same one used to summon King Kong six years earlier.
          • Blooper
            In every scene with the snake pit, the strings making them move are visible.
          • Citazioni

            Sgt. Thomas 'Tommy' Ballantine: You displease me greatly, and I ignore the both of you.

          • Curiosità sui crediti
            The credits appear on a gong. Standing next to the gong is a Hindu man, and every time he strikes the gong, the credits change.
          • Versioni alternative
            German theatrical version was cut by approx. 12 minutes. This version was later shown on TV but never released on any home media format. Only in 2018 the film was released on DVD, with approx. 4 minutes restored.
          • Connessioni
            Featured in I giovani arrabbiati (1959)
          • Colonne sonore
            God Save the King!
            (1744) (uncredited)

            Written by Henry Carey

            Incorporated into the music score

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          Dettagli

          Modifica
          • Data di uscita
            • 7 ottobre 1939 (Italia)
          • Paese di origine
            • Stati Uniti
          • Lingua
            • Inglese
          • Celebre anche come
            • Aufstand in Sidi Hakim
          • Luoghi delle riprese
            • Indian Springs Road, Alabama Hills, Lone Pine, California, Stati Uniti(English fort)
          • Azienda produttrice
            • RKO Radio Pictures
          • Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro

          Botteghino

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

          Specifiche tecniche

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          • Tempo di esecuzione
            • 1h 57min(117 min)
          • Colore
            • Black and White
          • Proporzioni
            • 1.37 : 1

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