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40 000 cavaliers

Original title: 40,000 Horsemen
  • 1940
  • Approved
  • 1h 40m
IMDb RATING
6.0/10
269
YOUR RATING
Betty Bryant and Grant Taylor in 40 000 cavaliers (1940)
DramaHistoryWar

Three young Australians join the army at the beginning of World War I and are assigned to the Australian Light Horse cavalry, which is serving in Palestine. The three eventually take part in... Read allThree young Australians join the army at the beginning of World War I and are assigned to the Australian Light Horse cavalry, which is serving in Palestine. The three eventually take part in the attack during the Battle of Beersheba, which was the last cavalry charge in modern wa... Read allThree young Australians join the army at the beginning of World War I and are assigned to the Australian Light Horse cavalry, which is serving in Palestine. The three eventually take part in the attack during the Battle of Beersheba, which was the last cavalry charge in modern warfare.

  • Director
    • Charles Chauvel
  • Writers
    • Elsa Chauvel
    • Charles Chauvel
    • E.V. Timms
  • Stars
    • Grant Taylor
    • Betty Bryant
    • Chips Rafferty
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.0/10
    269
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Charles Chauvel
    • Writers
      • Elsa Chauvel
      • Charles Chauvel
      • E.V. Timms
    • Stars
      • Grant Taylor
      • Betty Bryant
      • Chips Rafferty
    • 12User reviews
    • 3Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos10

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    Top cast23

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    Grant Taylor
    Grant Taylor
    • Red Gallagher
    Betty Bryant
    • Juliet Rouget
    Chips Rafferty
    Chips Rafferty
    • Jim
    Pat Twohill
    • Larry
    Harvey Adams
    • Von Hausen
    Eric Reiman
    • Von Schiller
    Joe Valli
    • Scotty
    Albert C. Winn
    • Sheik Abu
    Kenneth Brampton
    • German Officer
    John Fleeting
    • Capt. Gordon
    Harry Abdy
    • Paul Rouget
    Norman Maxwell
    • Ismet
    Pat Penny
    • Capt. Seidi
    Charles Zoli
    • Cafe Proprietor
    Claude Turton
    • Othman
    • (as Claude Turtin)
    Theo Lianos
    • Abdul
    Roy Mannix
    • Light Horse Sergeant
    • (as Sergeant Roy Mannix)
    Edna Emmett
    • Dancing Girl
    • Director
      • Charles Chauvel
    • Writers
      • Elsa Chauvel
      • Charles Chauvel
      • E.V. Timms
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews12

    6.0269
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    Featured reviews

    10giw-1

    Extras for this movie included my Dad

    Of course, since my dad passed away many years ago, I can't verify this. But I do remember him telling us kids that, as a member of the Australian Army Signals Corp, he and many of his fellow soldiers were recruited as horsemen to ride over the Kurnell sand hills as extras in this movie.

    Since this was filmed in 1941, Australia was already in the war. My Dad's was record shows his service in New Guinea as a Lieutenant in the signals corps. I also remember him telling me about how he was trained to ride a motor bike so, along with the horse riding his story about being an extra was probably something to do with preparing them for service overseas.

    If anybody that reads this is able to provide some verification that would be greatly appreciated.
    9peter_omalley2003

    A must see

    This is a classic Oz film made by the director who made Errol Flynn's first film(In the Wake of the Bounty"). I first saw this film as a child and was enthralled by it. Some of the scripting is a bit on the mawkish side and, as in any war film, there is a bit of flag waving (otherwise why make it?)but the action scenes are very well done.Given American insularity their lack of familiarity with the story shouldn't intrude on their enjoyment of it. Well written it recounts (fictional) events leading up to the Aust. Light Horse charge at Beersheba in World War 1. It shows well the dry, laconic Australian bushman's sense of humour and the capacity for friendship which used to be such a great Australian characteristic. Well made and an important film it still holds up well after 64 years.
    6CinemaSerf

    40,000 Horsemen

    This is quite a poignant take on a story of three young Australian lads who joined the Allied forces during the Great War and ended up serving in a Middle East replete with Bosch, scheming and plotting locals and a British high command that sadly wasn't as sharp as their lances. Yep, they were horse soldiers in a signals corp who actually still used signals. It's "Red" (Grant Taylor) who leads this band of irreverent and outwardly undisciplined "individuals" but as the lively vernacular gives way to some courageous and shrewd wartime activities, they soon prove to be more than a small thorn in the sides of their rather pompous and arrogant opponents who just assumed that these ex-con colonialists were a symbol of a British empire on it's knees and scraping the bottom of the barrel. The special effects, particularly the battles and the shelling, are really quite well directed and framed here, giving us a true sense of just how indiscriminate the attacking was and at just how perilous it was for these, and other, young men who had come to take part in a war for King and country that had precious little to do with the security or prosperity of their own nation. It's on that score that this is perhaps a little jingoistic. That's only to be expected, though, given it was made just as the Nazis were starting their own attempt to conquer Europe, but it's quite sophisticated in it's approach and not just a feel-good flag waving exercise. It portrays decent and ordinary men who were hard as nails when called for, but human and considerate of their colleagues when the chips were down. There is room for a soupçon of romance, courtesy of "Red" being rescued by the equally heroic "Juliet" (Betty Bryant), but it still manages to focus more on the spirit of those engaged here and in the end delivers predictably, but still quite effectively.
    7cfolle01

    It's good, if you understand Australia

    This movie shows the Aussie idea of "mateship" from a 1941 perspective. It is a part of our culture and as an Australian I'm proud to see it portrayed in this movie. Even though it does extend the stereotypical Aussie, you have to understand we may have change and grown a lot we still are a country who value friends and our relationships.
    searchanddestroy-1

    The Lives of Australian Horsemen

    I guess this movie is the response to Henry Hathaway's THE LIVES OF A BENGAL LANCER, and also Michael Curtiz' CHARGE OF THE LIGHT BRIGADE made several years earlier. This is a pure propaganda film where the Prussians - Germans and Nazis metaphor in 1940 - are the villains. It takes place during WW1 in the Sinai desert. I did not know this Aussi director nor this movie either, even less this battle. It is rough, tough, impressive in the directing and of course battle sequences. You learn many things thru the viewing of this. Exciting entertainment that deserves to be widely known from todays audiences.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Among those who saw the film on its US release was a young Clint Eastwood. Richard Schickel writes in his 1996 biography of Eastwood: "Treasured among these films and stars [that Clint Eastwood saw while growing up] is one slightly more exotic title, 'Forty Thousand Horsemen'. The story of an Australian cavalry brigade that fought in Palestine in World War I, it starred Chips Rafferty, was made in 1940 and entered the world market a couple of years later. Its dialogue contained a few mild, but in those days shocking, cuss words. Clint remembers going to it with his family and, when the first 'hell' or 'damn' was heard, being aware of respectable citizens leaving the theater. The Eastwoods soon followed, but 'I snuck back later, because I wanted to see the whole movie; it had a lot of action--horses, and lancers and what have you'."
    • Goofs
      It is extremely unlikely that a French woman in Arabia in the early twentieth century would shave her underarms.
    • Quotes

      Red Gallagher: Come to think of it, what's it all about? What are we fighting for?

      Jim: I suppose it's about the right to stand up on a soap box in the Domain, tell the boss what to do with his job if you don't like it. And the right to start off as a roustabout and finish as prime minister, that's what we're fighting for...

    • Connections
      Featured in Forgotten Cinema: The Golden Age of Australian Motion Pictures (1967)
    • Soundtracks
      Waltzing Matilda
      (uncredited)

      Original music by Christina McPherson (uncredited), revised music by Marie Cowan (uncredited) and lyrics by A.B. 'Banjo' Paterson (uncredited)

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • August 13, 1947 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • Australia
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • 40,000 Horsemen
    • Filming locations
      • Kurnell Sandhills, Kurnell, New South Wales, Australia
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 40m(100 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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