A British prisoner of war working at a zoo gets the chance to escape from the Germans, so he does and takes with him the elephant that he's been caring for. Together, they head for the Swiss... Read allA British prisoner of war working at a zoo gets the chance to escape from the Germans, so he does and takes with him the elephant that he's been caring for. Together, they head for the Swiss border and freedom.A British prisoner of war working at a zoo gets the chance to escape from the Germans, so he does and takes with him the elephant that he's been caring for. Together, they head for the Swiss border and freedom.
- Willi
- (as Helmut Lohner)
- Sami
- (as Jurgen Draeger)
- Elephant Keeper Kellermann
- (as Ernst Fritz Furbringer)
- Zoo Director Stern
- (as Eric Jelde)
- Geordie
- (as John Porter Davison)
Featured reviews
This is not high art, but the story is good, and there's a nice little twist, too. The cast is universally good and you can tell the actors are having a good time. Joining Reed and Preiss is an elfin Michael J. Pollard as a fellow POW turned goofy guerilla. Peter Carsten and Helmut Lohner are Brooks' German guards and Karin Baal is the cook who, with a very 60's sensibility, explains to Brooks why she made what might not have been such an obvious choice in the 1940's.
All in all Hannibal Brooks is a highly entertaining film. If only this movie were on DVD, or even video for that matter.
A war comedy with adventures , thrills , humor , spectacular battles and a good thrilling climax . It is a sympathetic tale with entertainment and funny enough , featured by some likeable roles who enhance the amusement . It waves from comedy , noisy action to melodrama . Main and support cast are pretty well . British Oliver Reed plays a POW assigned to evacuate valuable elephant from Munich zoo , giving an agreeable acting , forming a peculiar buddie movie with snub-nosed American Michael J. Pollard who steals the the show by delivering comic relief , while the elephant wins all hearts in the emotive final. They're very well accompanied by a fine support cast , such as : Wolfgang Preiss as Colonel Friedrich von Haller , John Alderton as Bernard , Peter Carsten as Kurt , gorgeous Karin Baal as Polish Vronia , Ralf Wolter and brief appearance by James Donald as POW priest.
Hannibal Brooks (1969) contains a sensitive and catching musical score by French composer Francis Lai . As well as colorful cinematography by Robert Paynter , though a perfect remastering being really necessary . The picture was acceptably directed by Michael Winner. He had important commercial success in the mid-70 with his fetish actor, Charles Bronson , achieving various box-office hits, as ¨Deathwish I and II¨, furthermore ¨The mechanics¨ and ¨The stone killer¨. With his obsessive need to work, Winner accepted many inferior projects, including two weak Death Wish sequels , though occasionally he attempted to make more prestigious films, notably ¨The Nightcomers¨ (1971), a prequel to Henry James' The Turn of the Screw, made in Britain with Marlon Brando; and ¨A chorus of disapproval¨ (1989), a satisfying version of Alan Ayckbourn's bittersweet comedy . Hannibal Brooks (1969) rating : 6.5/10 . Fun and enjoyable film that will appeal to Oliver Reed fans and WWII enthusiasts.
I think that the main problem that Oliver Reed is one of the finest actors of the past thirty years - all brooding menace and power bubbling under the surface. Considering his role as Bill Sykes (the ultimate depiction of a vicious character), he is quite believable here.
However Pollard hams up his role and plays it like a smacked up hippy. I can't imagine that the French Resistance fighters would have followed him for an instance, and I am sorry to say he is badly miscast here.
The film is also, to an extent, a little derivative, with some pretty shoddy direction. It does have some superb cinematography which helps balance this out, but to be honest its a film to watch on December 27th when you have had your fill of Christmas cheer and just fancy something light.
Did you know
- TriviaAida, the Elephant, who plays "Lucy", lived at the Rotterdam Zoo until July 23rd, 1981, when she died at age 46. She arrived in Rotterdam from Thailand on Jul 9th, 1940, at the age of 5 years-old, already trained to obey some human commands in Thai, just 2 months after the Nazi blitz bombing of Rotterdam on May 14th, 1940, which killed over 900 and left over 30,000 homeless. Aida then survived 18 Allied air force bombing runs over Rotterdam from June 1941 to December 1944. Then, Aida survived the Nazi food blockade of the Netherlands until May 1st, 1945, when Allied relief was parachute dropped into Rotterdam. Over 18,000 Dutch citizens starved to death during the famine. Another survivor of the Nazi food blockade was actress Audrey Hepburn who took refuge with her mother's family in Arnhem: Her family survived the famine by beating tulip bulbs into flour and baking tulip bread. Until her death, Aida was a prized performing elephant at the Rotterdam Zoo often appearing before classes of children and responding to her trainer's spoken commands.
- Quotes
Dr. Mendel: [Wanting to improve his English, and not realizing that the word is the same in German and English] How do you say "elephant"?
Stephen 'Hannibal' Brooks: [Not hearing the question, but instead commenting that they have arrived] We are here.
Dr. Mendel: Ah, the "Ve are here".
[This starts the running joke of Dr Mendel referring to the elephant as the "ve are here"]
- ConnectionsReferenced in Operation Dumbo Drop (1995)
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Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Languages
- Also known as
- Hannibal Brooks
- Filming locations
- Egg, Vorarlberg, Austria(the bridge scene)
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour 41 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1