AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
5,8/10
155
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaSet in the diamond fields of South Africa, Stafford Parker is a lawman trying to maintain a semblance of law and order in the "Wild South".Set in the diamond fields of South Africa, Stafford Parker is a lawman trying to maintain a semblance of law and order in the "Wild South".Set in the diamond fields of South Africa, Stafford Parker is a lawman trying to maintain a semblance of law and order in the "Wild South".
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Artistas
Ronald Adam
- Robert Southey
- (as Ronald Adams)
Avaliações em destaque
David Farrar wears a realistically ugly mustache in this movie about Stafford Parker, the leader of the diamond miners along the Vaal during the period when the Boers and the British were wrangling peacefully for control of the land. He loves Salvation Army lass Homor Blackman, and is loved by bar girl Diana Dors, and has the villainous Niall MacGinnis as his adversary; it was all right when he was selling whiskey to the Blacks, but now MacGinnis is buying diamonds from them. Gasp.
Given that all we know about the real Stafford Parker is there was one, it's a surprisingly warty portrait of the period, with the air of an A Western. Farrar acts somewhere between Errol Flynn and Preston Foster in his performance. The movie is peppered with stage extravaganzas of "Up in A Balloon, Boys" and lynchings and battles, so that the editing has an almost stroboscopic effect. It's always at least watchable, and frequently better. I just wish the print was a little lighter.
Given that all we know about the real Stafford Parker is there was one, it's a surprisingly warty portrait of the period, with the air of an A Western. Farrar acts somewhere between Errol Flynn and Preston Foster in his performance. The movie is peppered with stage extravaganzas of "Up in A Balloon, Boys" and lynchings and battles, so that the editing has an almost stroboscopic effect. It's always at least watchable, and frequently better. I just wish the print was a little lighter.
I guess that the two very recent reviews were prompted by DC being screened on the excellent British TV channel Talking Pictures. (I watch more films on it than all the other TV channels together.) The film's based on fact though I couldn't find much about Stafford Parker on the Web, save that he customarily wore a large white top hat!
David Farrar didn't fully convince as Parker, his slight build making him an unlikely victor in his gritty fistfight with the far larger Niall MacGinnis. But generally the acting was very acceptable and I was impressed with the realistic grubbiness of Klipdrift and its residents - a welcome contrast to the neat towns and smarty-turned out actors of most American Westerns.
At least three of the cast had appeared together in "A Boy, a Girl and a Bike", released the same year as DC: Honor Blackman, Diana Dors and John Blythe.
David Farrar didn't fully convince as Parker, his slight build making him an unlikely victor in his gritty fistfight with the far larger Niall MacGinnis. But generally the acting was very acceptable and I was impressed with the realistic grubbiness of Klipdrift and its residents - a welcome contrast to the neat towns and smarty-turned out actors of most American Westerns.
At least three of the cast had appeared together in "A Boy, a Girl and a Bike", released the same year as DC: Honor Blackman, Diana Dors and John Blythe.
I've had the pleasure of seeing several movies just recently directed by David MacDonald and this is the best. Looking through his IMDb page I noticed that he turned to television in the 1950's as so many directors and big name actors did and he directed some of the series I used to watch and enjoy as a boy but It's Diamond City that has made me aware of his name at last. This is a rousing adventure film set in the gold mines of South Africa where a true life character named Stafford Parker temporarily became President of the Republic of the area before the British government annexed it. Played with gusto by the underrated David Farrar, Stafford Parker bulldozes his way through the picture, never shy of physically fighting off the villains intent of getting the gold for themselves. Niall McGuinness gives a convincing portrayal of the big brawling adversary, Diana Dors (only 18) is the barmaid who is besotted by Farrar who in turn falls in love with the missionary's (Mervyn Johns) daughter played by a young Honor Blackman, who sadly passed away recently aged 94). I smiled at one point as Diana Dors refers to Honor as the 'Kid'. Blackman was 6 years older than Diana in reality although Diana has much more impact than the mousy (at the time) Blackman who changed all that later through The Avengers (TV) and Goldfinger. This film plays much like a western and I was very impressed with sets, dirty, muddy, ramshackle buildings, much like it may have been and reminding me of the Dodge City sets in the great TV series Deadwood. There are some really great fight scenes like in a John Wayne western and an impressive charge on horseback by the gold diggers against the villains near the closing scenes. Intelligently written and acted, particularly by Farrar, I loved this movie.
Take advantage of this forties till mid sixties period to enjoy, because the British film industry did not provide such films after 1966 and the likes of KARTHOUM, only because of the fall of its colonial empire. But before this mid decade, you had plenty of those features, maybe less famous than the Hollywood productions but still interesting and worth the watch. And many of them remained in obscurity. Such as this one, directed by a British adventure film director: David Mac Donald, mostly known for CHRISTOPHER COLUMBUS and less MOONRAKER - 1958. So, yes, this one is good to catch, and you have Diana Dors....
David Farrar is "Parker", a man trying to bring some sense of law and order to a diamond mining community in pre-colonial South Africa. Most of his fellow citizens welcome his proposals save for "Muller" (Niall MacGinnis). The former wins a concession from the local chief to mine and export the diamonds after a bit of fisticuffs with his nemesis, but that just serves to sow the seeds for the constant undermining of his ideals until a final denouement with both men fighting for their lives, and for control of "Hopetown". Filmed on location, it looks quite good but the adventure elements are all too often dragged into melodrama by the romantic ones. Diana Dors ("Dora" - who does a decent on-stage number here) and Honor Blackman ("Mary") find themselves the object of not just the desires of "Parker" but of his friend "David" (Andrew Crawford) and there is a touch of bible-based do-gooding from Mervyn Johns to further clutter up the narrative. The script is very wordy at times, and I could have done with a better lit production too. Farrar tries his best here, but sadly this is just another routine, and pretty forgettable, effort from all concerned.
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesDiana Dors was a late replacement for Jean Kent. She was signed in 1947 to a non-exclusive, six-year contract with the Rank Organization. After this film project, which was supposed to be her breakthrough as a leading lady, became a commercial failure, Rank freed her from her contract, effectively becoming a free agent.
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Detalhes
- Data de lançamento
- País de origem
- Idioma
- Também conhecido como
- Diamond City
- Locações de filme
- Empresa de produção
- Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro
- Tempo de duração1 hora 30 minutos
- Cor
- Proporção
- 1.37 : 1
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