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Le faucon d'or

Original title: The Golden Hawk
  • 1952
  • Approved
  • 1h 23m
IMDb RATING
5.4/10
408
YOUR RATING
Sterling Hayden and Rhonda Fleming in Le faucon d'or (1952)
The seafaring adventures of French privateer Kit 'The Hawk' Gerardo during the Franco-Spanish-English war of the 17th century.
Play trailer1:57
1 Video
12 Photos
ActionAdventureHistoryRomanceWar

The seafaring adventures of French privateer Kit 'The Hawk' Gerardo during the Franco-Spanish-English war of the 17th century.The seafaring adventures of French privateer Kit 'The Hawk' Gerardo during the Franco-Spanish-English war of the 17th century.The seafaring adventures of French privateer Kit 'The Hawk' Gerardo during the Franco-Spanish-English war of the 17th century.

  • Director
    • Sidney Salkow
  • Writers
    • Robert E. Kent
    • Frank Yerby
  • Stars
    • Rhonda Fleming
    • Sterling Hayden
    • Helena Carter
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.4/10
    408
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Sidney Salkow
    • Writers
      • Robert E. Kent
      • Frank Yerby
    • Stars
      • Rhonda Fleming
      • Sterling Hayden
      • Helena Carter
    • 14User reviews
    • 4Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 1:57
    Official Trailer

    Photos12

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    Top cast40

    Edit
    Rhonda Fleming
    Rhonda Fleming
    • Lady Jane aka Captain Rouge
    Sterling Hayden
    Sterling Hayden
    • Captain Christopher (Kit) Gerardo aka 'The Hawk'
    Helena Carter
    Helena Carter
    • Blanca de Valdiva
    John Sutton
    John Sutton
    • Captain Luis del Toro
    Paul Cavanagh
    Paul Cavanagh
    • Captain Jeremy Smithers
    Michael Ansara
    Michael Ansara
    • Bernardo Díaz
    Raymond Hatton
    Raymond Hatton
    • Barnaby Stoll
    Alex Montoya
    • Homado
    Abdullah Abbas
    • Pirate
    • (uncredited)
    Victor Adamson
    Victor Adamson
    • Pirate
    • (uncredited)
    Stanley Blystone
    Stanley Blystone
    • Pirate Lookout
    • (uncredited)
    David Bond
    David Bond
    • Prosecutor
    • (uncredited)
    Nina Borget
    • Saloon Girl
    • (uncredited)
    George Bruggeman
    George Bruggeman
    • Pirate
    • (uncredited)
    Amapola Del Vando
    • Senora del Toro
    • (uncredited)
    Poppy del Vando
    • Doña Elena
    • (uncredited)
    Jimmy Dime
    Jimmy Dime
    • Pirate
    • (uncredited)
    Richard Elmore
    • Pirate
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Sidney Salkow
    • Writers
      • Robert E. Kent
      • Frank Yerby
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews14

    5.4408
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    Featured reviews

    8clanciai

    Sterling Hayden doing well among the pirates

    Sterling Hayden is surprisingly good as a dashing privateersman and even good-looking for a change, and he plays his part well with many fights with swords and fists, in which as usual everything around is smashed to pieces. Rhonda Fleming matches him well with equal dashing merits and no less eager for fights and violent settlements. The colours are splendid, so are the costumes, and there are many rowdy scenes with drunken sailors and loose women and everything you could want from a film of wild buccaneers. The story is about the seizing of a town called Cartagena in Spanish South America which enterprise is not entirely successful. Still, the film is definitely worth watching for its great entertainment value and magnificent display of colourful life at sea among very robust pirates,
    6coltras35

    The Golden Hawk

    Kit Gerardo, also known as The Hawk, is one of Frances's most daring privateers, rescues Rouge from a Spanish ship. She is also a pirate, working to restore the fortune the French took from her. When Kit is captured by the governor of Cartagena, Luis del Toro, Rouge demands that he be hanged for piracy. Only one person knows it, but Kit is the governor's son.

    The Golden Hawk has all the usual ingredients of a pirate romp: ship, adventures, sword fights, plots/counter plots and gunpowder explosions and of course romance - there's a little twist regarding the man Golden Hawk wants to kill. It's a bit melodramatic and sometimes talky but the sprightly sword fights and ship battles as well as the beautiful ladies like Rhonda Fleming uplifts this film. As for Sterling Hayden, he's an odd choice as a dashing pirate captain, a Casanova of the high seas, and largely he isn't too bad. He's a bit more alive than he's in other films. But someone like John Payne would've been a better fit.
    BrianDanaCamp

    Medium-budget pirate film with above-average script

    When I saw that Sam Katzman was the producer of THE GOLDEN HAWK, I really wasn't expecting much, given his reputation for turning out dozens of low-budget potboilers during his long career. In 1952 alone, the year of this film's release, he produced nine features (five of them in color) and three 15-chapter serials. Yet I was pleasantly surprised by THE GOLDEN HAWK. It had a much more intricate story than usual for Katzman's pirate "epics," boasted much better production values, and offered a more high-powered pair of leads-Sterling Hayden and Rhonda Fleming--than we usually got from him. I'm guessing that Katzman lavished more care on this because the source material-a best-seller by prominent historical novelist Frank Yerby-was more prestigious than anything he usually had to work with. Only one previous Yerby novel had resulted in a screen adaptation-THE FOXES OF HARROW, a lavish 1948 historical drama from 20th Century Fox which starred Rex Harrison and Maureen O'Hara-and only one subsequent work was adapted-THE SARACEN BLADE (1954), also produced by Katzman.

    I was especially taken with Rhonda Fleming's character, who has more than one name in the course of the film, given the multiple identities she takes on. We see her most often as "Rouge," a notorious English pirate queen who is frequently at odds with the hero of the piece, French privateer Kit Gerardo (Hayden), despite the fact that they're in love with each other. She even shoots him at one point when he enters her bedroom and looms over her in her sleep. (It isn't what she thinks it is, but how was she supposed to know that?) Fleming has a dramatic scene where she lambastes Gerardo and his pirate crew for pillaging the land she'd successfully developed into a Caribbean plantation under a new identity during a long absence from the narrative. A bigger-budget Hollywood historical drama might have focused more on her character and the turn of events that created the plantation.

    Helena Carter (INVADERS FROM MARS) is quite good as Bianca de Valdiva, a Spanish lady who falls for Gerardo but winds up marrying his chief nemesis, Captain Luis del Toro (John Sutton), a Spanish officer charged with ridding the region of French pirates and privateers. Carter has a regal quality about her as she deals with each of the characters in turn and sizes them up properly before deciding what course of action is best for her. She and Fleming have a heart-to-heart talk late in the film that's actually quite moving. It's the kind of thing we don't see often from women characters in these types of genre films. John Sutton as the Spanish captain is not the cardboard villain he was in so many of these films (e.g. CAPTAIN PIRATE, SANGAREE), but a fair-minded man with secret knowledge about Gerardo that invokes a compassionate response.

    Hayden's pirate team consists of Paul Cavanaugh, Michael Ansara, and Raymond Hatton, and all three actors are in the film from beginning to end and seem to be having the time of their lives. Cavanaugh was 63 when he made this and Hatton was 64 (and usually playing old coots in westerns by this point), yet the characters are quite vigorous and the two performers engage in a lot of physical action. Speaking of which, Fleming and Hayden perform a lot of action as well. Hayden seems to do all of his own swordfighting in a duel early on with Cavanaugh (who's doubled in much of the scene), while Fleming does a swimming scene that looks pretty rigorous. There is a climactic battle between the French fleet at sea and the Spanish fortress at Cartagena which is pretty spectacular for a sequence chiefly involving miniatures and studio sets.

    I can't vouch for the historical accuracy of the film, only for its entertainment value as a mid-range studio genre film with colorful sets and costumes, plenty of action, a fast pace, intriguing characters and lively, energetic performers. Finally, there's a sequence set in an island village that's worth singling out. A pair of dancers puts on quite a sexy show for the pirates, which sets the pulses racing for both Hayden and Carter, although they don't get to do much about it. However, I'd sure like to know who those dancers are. IMDB has no credit for either one of them.
    5CinemaSerf

    The Golden Hawk

    I'm a fan of the genre - nothing better than a good swashbuckling adventure on the high seas. Well, actually there are plenty better than this rather poor effort. Sterling Hayden is certainly no natural as the eponymous privateer "Kit Gerardo" caught up in the Napoleonic war in the Caribbean. His marauding is perilous, though, particularly once he rescues the feisty "Rouge" (Rhonda Fleming) and discovers that she is also in his line of work - and out to avenge herself on the French. As the warfare hots up, the affianced of the Governor is also apprehended. "Bianca de Valdiva" (Helena Carter) takes a shine to our hero, but he has already taken a shine to "Rouge" but she in turn is trying to get the governor "del Toro" (John Sutton) to catch and hang the man! Still with me? Well, one further complication arises as we discover just why "Kit" is so determined to bring down the governor. To be fair, it does finish strongly with a good hearty battle, but the build up and relentless chatter robs the film of much pace or sense of peril and nobody at all in front of the camera is having a very good - or convincing - day. The production is a bit basic and stage bound which doesn't help, but at the end of the day this is just a let down that has little to redeem it.
    searchanddestroy-1

    Good little pirates movie

    Directed by a specialist of this kind of topics, Sidney Salkow already gave us RAIDERS OF THE SEVEN SEAS and PRINCE OF THE PIRATES too. Besides, Columbiia Pictures also provided such films: LAST OF THE BUCCANEERS. This is not at the scale as SPANISH MAIN, ANNE OF THE INDIES nor BLACKBEARD THE PIRATE, but it can esaily match AGAINST ALL FLAGS, BUCCANEER'S GIRL (Universal Pictures and CARIBBEAN (Paramount Studios). I was surprissed to see Rhonda Fleming here, she who was under contract - if I am right - with Paramount whilst Yvonne de Carlo was at Universal for this kind of material. So this film is a good surprise for pirtes movies buffs, despite the producer Sam Katzman whose it is one of his best efforts, compared to what he gave us with director Bill Castle for instance. Great scenes or fighting for such a low budget.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Some of the artwork on the walls of the governor's office (at about 48 mins) is seen again in the plantation room where Kit and Rouge are conversing (at about 52 mins).
    • Goofs
      The Spanish soldiers appear wearing breast plates and helmets that properly belong to the 16th century. By the late 17th century--the period of this movie--all the armies of Europe wore coats and three pointed hats.
    • Quotes

      Captain Christopher (Kit) Gerardo aka 'The Hawk': The red-haired girl who escaped from your ship to mine... what do you know of her?

      Captain Luis del Toro: Only that she was newly arrived at Marie Galante. The other prisoners didn't know much about her. Did you find her entertaining?

      Bernardo Díaz: Sure, she *shot* him.

      [the crew men laugh]

      Captain Luis del Toro: Never expect a wildcat to show gratitude, Captain.

    • Connections
      Featured in Pirates of Tripoli (1955)
    • Soundtracks
      What Shall We Do With A Drunken Sailor?
      (uncredited)

      Traditional

      Sung in the tavern in the opening scene

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    FAQ13

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • January 15, 1954 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • The Golden Hawk
    • Filming locations
      • Los Angeles County Arboretum & Botanic Garden - 301 N. Baldwin Avenue, Arcadia, California, USA
    • Production company
      • Sam Katzman Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 23m(83 min)
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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