VALUTAZIONE IMDb
5,5/10
419
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaPaul Lartal of the Foreign Legion meets the princess of a lost city in the Algerian mountains.Paul Lartal of the Foreign Legion meets the princess of a lost city in the Algerian mountains.Paul Lartal of the Foreign Legion meets the princess of a lost city in the Algerian mountains.
- Regia
- Sceneggiatura
- Star
Oscar Beregi Sr.
- Si Khalil
- (as Oscar Beregi)
Sujata Rubener
- Dancer
- (as Sujata)
Asoka Rubener
- Dancer
- (as Asoka)
Jan Arvan
- Moslem Merchant
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Emile Avery
- Soldier
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Eugene Baxter
- Officer
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Elena Beattie
- Dancer
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Frederic Berest
- Guard Follower
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Don Blackman
- Kumbaha
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Peter Coe
- Lt. Doudelet
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Richard Cowl
- Lebeau
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Recensioni in evidenza
Desert Legion was Alan Ladd's second film after leaving his nurturing studio of Paramount. It was hoped he would get better parts by his agent and wife Sue Carol. But sad to say this was the run of film he got.
It's a typical action potboiler with Alan Ladd in the French Foreign Legion on patrol and in pursuit of a local Algerian bandit who no one can seem to locate. On patrol one day after a couple of raiders, Ladd and his patrol are surprised by reinforcements who come from out of nowhere and everyone is killed, but Ladd. He wakes up and finds desert princess Arlene Dahl nursing him back to health. The next thing he knows he's back at Legion headquarters with this wild tale of a lost city in the desert.
Ever since Universal made Arabian Nights with Jon Hall and Maria Montez they had these middle eastern sets and so you could depend year after year on one or two pictures with that setting. So on this one shot deal Alan Ladd got to do Desert Legion with those same sets.
Maureen O'Hara in her memoirs said no one thought she was more ludicrous cast in these films as a redheaded Middle Eastern princess. But I will say that Desert Legion did provide some explanation why redheaded Swede Arlene Dahl was in North Africa.
Had this film been done a decade earlier it might have made great material for a serial. It has all the ingredients and you just write a bunch cliffhanger semi-climaxes and it would have done well.
Looking like he's having a great old time is Akim Tamiroff as Ladd's sidekick who deserts with him to find this lost city. Richard Conte however just doesn't come off as an Arab.
Desert Legion is the kind of film Alan Ladd should have been done with at his stage of life and career.
It's a typical action potboiler with Alan Ladd in the French Foreign Legion on patrol and in pursuit of a local Algerian bandit who no one can seem to locate. On patrol one day after a couple of raiders, Ladd and his patrol are surprised by reinforcements who come from out of nowhere and everyone is killed, but Ladd. He wakes up and finds desert princess Arlene Dahl nursing him back to health. The next thing he knows he's back at Legion headquarters with this wild tale of a lost city in the desert.
Ever since Universal made Arabian Nights with Jon Hall and Maria Montez they had these middle eastern sets and so you could depend year after year on one or two pictures with that setting. So on this one shot deal Alan Ladd got to do Desert Legion with those same sets.
Maureen O'Hara in her memoirs said no one thought she was more ludicrous cast in these films as a redheaded Middle Eastern princess. But I will say that Desert Legion did provide some explanation why redheaded Swede Arlene Dahl was in North Africa.
Had this film been done a decade earlier it might have made great material for a serial. It has all the ingredients and you just write a bunch cliffhanger semi-climaxes and it would have done well.
Looking like he's having a great old time is Akim Tamiroff as Ladd's sidekick who deserts with him to find this lost city. Richard Conte however just doesn't come off as an Arab.
Desert Legion is the kind of film Alan Ladd should have been done with at his stage of life and career.
Or enchanted valley in the desert. What a wonderful, colorful adventure yarn, starring Alan Ladd, Akim Tamiroff, Richard Conte as the villain and Arlene Dahl who seems as predictable in this kind of films as a bullet in a gun barrel. Or Rhonda Fleming, or Yvonne de Carlo, who could also have played in this movie. Plenty of suspense, action, not many surprises, but who cares, only charm, charm and fifties charm is important here. Especially for old timers movie buffs who saw these movies during their childhood. Universal Pictures typical product, better than Sam Katzman productions for Columbia, and as good as Paramount studios, another good adventure films provider. What else could I say? Just go and watch it. But concerning French Foreign Legion, I would prefer DESERT SANDS or BEAU GESTE. Only a matter of taste.
Another trip to the ex-village sexton/film buff yielded a pleasant evening of movie talk and viewing – in this particular case, the former being more rewarding than the latter in view of the fact that the 25-year old print of the obscure Alan Ladd vehicle DESERT LEGION was so washed out as to belie its having been originally shot in "glorious Technicolor"! Indeed, the only color scheme prevalent throughout the screening was a reddish hue that, more than anything else, is a tell-tale sign that a celluloid print is well past its "best before" date. But, as if that was not disheartening enough, the film kept sticking in the projector, making the image jump up and down, requiring our host to make his expert manual interventions a handful of times. For better or worse, the film we were watching was a routine star actioner that even I was unaware of before seeing its worn poster proudly displayed during the latest exhibition of such rare items held regularly for the public by our host. The script requires the viewer to accept diminutive Ladd as a formidable Legionnaire who possesses the only credentials to capture a renegade Arab rebel (played by one of the least likely actors suited for this role, Richard Conte!) that has been preying on their sentries and save the mythical Shangri-La-like community of Medara, buried deep within the desert, from his evil clutches. For support, Ladd only has his old, tale-spinning buddy Akim Tamiroff, while the inevitable love interest is provided by Arlene Dahl – with Universal clearly believing that the audience would not have anyone but another statuesque Arabic redhead (a' la Maureen O'Hara) for a leading lady!! Despite the intermittent sprinkling of intriguing ideas – Ladd is abducted by the mysterious Dahl and taken to her hidden abode in clear imitation of Pierre Benoit's much-filmed "L'Atlantide"; the two confrontations between Ladd and Conte are both unconventional in nature and setting: in the arena with the two contestants sharing one spear between them and, the climactic one, atop a mountain's rock-face – this particular mix, unfortunately, fails to rise to any particularly memorable or even satisfactory level
which makes the possibility of a future revisit via superior elements highly improbable!
I flat out disliked Desert Legion, and did not care for Alan Ladd's character Paul. Lartel ( this from a Ladd fan). Why? He was stupid ( leading his troops into a major defeat where only he survives), and arrogant. I can understand being stupid and arrogant if you are the bad guy, or the film is a comedy, but Ladd was supposed to be the hero, and the comedy was supplied by Private Plevko ( Akim Tamiroff) who was the best one in the film. Which is a major read I consider this to be Ladd's worst film ( at least his BEST film ( Shane) is his next one. Perhaps as bad as Ladd was Richard Conte.as Omar Ben. Khalif. He was a one dimensional bad guy if there ever was one. I will say Arlene Dahl (Morjana) is nice to look at in Technicolor ( although nothing more then a beautiful love interest, and I will take Sophia Loren from Legend Of The Lost in the desert both in looks and in realism over Arlene Dahl any day of the week). I give this movie two stars. One for Tamiroff and one for looking at Arlene Dahl. 2/10 stars.
While searching in the Algerian desert for a bandit, a Foreign Legion patrol is led into an ambush. The sole survivor is Captain Lartal who, after being wounded, recovers consciousness to find someone has taken him to the gates of the Legion post.
In solving the mystery, Legionnaire Alan Ladd discovers a lost city, the beautiful Arlene Dahl and a villainous Richard Conte.
Desert Legion is a romantic desert fantasy (photographed in Technicolor) with a dreamy feel like Lost Horizion. The fabled city of Mardala is sort of a shangri-la, a place where a red-haired Beauty lives. This is quite an entertaining picture and as I have a hankering for for old-fashioned predictable outdoor action movies with a cartoon-like villain and a heroic stalwart hero amidst the desert landscape. It can be a bit too languid in pace, and needed a pick me up mid-way, but it's entertaining on the whole. There's a tense spear throwing sequence. It ends with an exciting action finale.
In solving the mystery, Legionnaire Alan Ladd discovers a lost city, the beautiful Arlene Dahl and a villainous Richard Conte.
Desert Legion is a romantic desert fantasy (photographed in Technicolor) with a dreamy feel like Lost Horizion. The fabled city of Mardala is sort of a shangri-la, a place where a red-haired Beauty lives. This is quite an entertaining picture and as I have a hankering for for old-fashioned predictable outdoor action movies with a cartoon-like villain and a heroic stalwart hero amidst the desert landscape. It can be a bit too languid in pace, and needed a pick me up mid-way, but it's entertaining on the whole. There's a tense spear throwing sequence. It ends with an exciting action finale.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizBased on a 1927 novel by Georges Arthur Surdez titled "The Demon Caravan". Surdez (1900-49) contributed many adventure stories to such publications as "Collier's", the "Saturday Evening Post" and "Argosy". He was especially noted for his French Foreign Legion tales.
- Citazioni
Crito Damou aka Omar Ben Khalif: [to Lt. Lopez] A brave and silent soldier. We shall see how long you can remain brave and silent.
- ConnessioniReferenced in The Hollywood Collection: Alan Ladd: The True Quiet Man (1999)
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Dettagli
- Data di uscita
- Paese di origine
- Lingua
- Celebre anche come
- Desert Legion
- Luoghi delle riprese
- Azienda produttrice
- Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro
Botteghino
- Lordo Stati Uniti e Canada
- 1.650.000 USD
- Tempo di esecuzione
- 1h 26min(86 min)
- Proporzioni
- 1.37 : 1
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