AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
5,4/10
246
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaThe princess of Samarkand and an English knight confront the armies of Genghis Khan.The princess of Samarkand and an English knight confront the armies of Genghis Khan.The princess of Samarkand and an English knight confront the armies of Genghis Khan.
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Artistas
Lucille Barkley
- Azalah
- (não creditado)
Gregg Barton
- Kalmuk Officer
- (não creditado)
Leon Belasco
- Nazza the Astrologer
- (não creditado)
Aen-Ling Chow
- Chinese Girl
- (não creditado)
Robert Dane
- Archer
- (não creditado)
Kenneth Garcia
- Boga
- (não creditado)
Robert Hunter
- Captain Herat
- (não creditado)
George J. Lewis
- Noyou
- (não creditado)
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Elenco e equipe completos
- Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro
Avaliações em destaque
At the onset, you must know that I am not saying this because I am Mr. Political Correctness. No, my gripe about having white actors playing everyone in this movie is simply that they look nothing like Mongols or Uzbekistanis! And, the last time I remember seeing an epic about this material, John Wayne himself starred as Genghis Khan ("The Conqueror")! Here, Marvin MIller plays Khan...and Ann Blyth plays an Uzbekistani princess! It's simply a matter of bad casting and believability...and having all these white Americans in every role does harm the overall film...and it can't help but do this. So, apart from this, is it a good movie?
The story begins with Sir Guy (David Farrar) arriving at the Uzbek capitol, Samarkand, to meet the Princess (Blyth). It seems Genghis Khan's horde are on their way and he offers his assistance. Now, if you think about it, an English knight could have offered no help against Khan...none...as Khan controlled the largest and most dominant army of all time. She rejects his offer...which isn't a bad thing. Soon emissaries of Khan arrive and you wonder with whom, if anyone, the princess will make an alliance.
Much of this movie makes the mistake of being talky instead of action-packed. This doesn't mean I'm a great fan of just action, but here it would have been appreciated. I'm guessing most people watching the movie don't care about the machinations and talk....so I'm probably not alone here. The worst part about all the talk was Sir Guy...who always was yelling or sounding like a man with a bad case of gout. But others manage to come off pretty badly due to the stilted dialog.
Overall, while the film looks expensive, it's dreadfully dull, badly written and a historical mess. Watch it if you want...but I think it's more an ordeal than fun to watch.
The story begins with Sir Guy (David Farrar) arriving at the Uzbek capitol, Samarkand, to meet the Princess (Blyth). It seems Genghis Khan's horde are on their way and he offers his assistance. Now, if you think about it, an English knight could have offered no help against Khan...none...as Khan controlled the largest and most dominant army of all time. She rejects his offer...which isn't a bad thing. Soon emissaries of Khan arrive and you wonder with whom, if anyone, the princess will make an alliance.
Much of this movie makes the mistake of being talky instead of action-packed. This doesn't mean I'm a great fan of just action, but here it would have been appreciated. I'm guessing most people watching the movie don't care about the machinations and talk....so I'm probably not alone here. The worst part about all the talk was Sir Guy...who always was yelling or sounding like a man with a bad case of gout. But others manage to come off pretty badly due to the stilted dialog.
Overall, while the film looks expensive, it's dreadfully dull, badly written and a historical mess. Watch it if you want...but I think it's more an ordeal than fun to watch.
The marauding Mongol hordes set their sights on the ancient city of Samarkand. The son of Genghis Khan (Harry Brandon) and Howard Petrie as "Tugluk" are despatched in the advance guard to wrest the city from the beautiful Princess - Ann Blyth. They don't reckon on a troop of passing Crusaders led by the gallant "Sir Guy of Devon" (David Farrar) and so a bit of a tussle ensues. It's a melodrama with sand and costumes; Blyth looks great - though she, and Farrar are as wooden as usual. The best character is that of the "Shaman" - an over-the-top George Macready - causing mischief as he whispers poison into the ears of the Khan. It's hampered by the sound stage setting - some of the fight scenes are a little too rigid, and the dialogue is pretty stilted, but it is still a decent enough watch.
I saw this about five years ago and don't remember the specifics, but I thought that Ann Blyth, whom I've always liked a lot, was very interesting in this role, as a very strong and forthright princess. She also looked beautiful in the costumes. I think she was far superior to the generally frazzled and annoyed Maureen O'Hara, and of course a better actress than campy Maria Montez, and should have been in perhaps a couple more costume dramas/exotic fantasies since she showed here that she had the capabilities of bringing such a character to life.
Ann Blyth makes a lovely and fetching princess of Samarkand. But in The Golden
Horde her main concern is saving her city from all kinds of tribes who want conquer it and her.
Into her life comes a knight who is an emissary of the Christian kings of the west offering aid. Today David Farrar would be a military adviser.
A lot of double and triple dealing is involved before a climatic battle which is staged quite well. The cast also does well with the hokey dialog they have to spout.
Universal turned out these medieval Mideast epics the better to take advantage of the sets built for Maria Montez This is far from the best of them.
Into her life comes a knight who is an emissary of the Christian kings of the west offering aid. Today David Farrar would be a military adviser.
A lot of double and triple dealing is involved before a climatic battle which is staged quite well. The cast also does well with the hokey dialog they have to spout.
Universal turned out these medieval Mideast epics the better to take advantage of the sets built for Maria Montez This is far from the best of them.
It's a good story but a bad script. This material could have been used better. An English ambassador with crusaders arrive at Samarkand to assize the armies and threats of the Mongols under Djenghis Khan in 1220 and succeed blatantly in disturbing the peace at court and upsetting all plans of the ruling Queen (Ann Blyth) and the Mongols. The characters are made more as types than characters, the intrigues peter out into small fry business, and in the fights and battles everyone is killed except the right ones. The script gives a very casual and superficial impression, although the Queen's character (Ann Blyth) is fascinating enough but should have been made so much more of. David Farrar is not up to his ordinary standard here but feels rather degraded in such a Hollywood cliché character as this. James Macready on the other hand is just the type for his scheming shaman in his weezy voice, and Djenghis Khan himself (Marvin Miller) is also good and convincing. In brief, this is no more than a casual spectacular entertainment providing a good story with many possibilities but giving the actors, in spite of their excellence, very little chance of proving their worth by a poor shorthand manuscript.
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesUniversal-International used music from this film to replace the original Japanese score in their re-edit version of King Kong Contra Godzilla (1963)
- ConexõesReferenced in King Kong Contra Godzilla (1963)
Principais escolhas
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- How long is The Golden Horde?Fornecido pela Alexa
Detalhes
- Data de lançamento
- País de origem
- Idioma
- Também conhecido como
- The Golden Horde
- Locações de filme
- Empresa de produção
- Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro
- Tempo de duração
- 1 h 17 min(77 min)
- Proporção
- 1.37 : 1
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