Sphinx
- 1981
- Tous publics
- 1h 58m
IMDb RATING
5.2/10
1.9K
YOUR RATING
Egyptologist Erica Baron finds more than she bargained for during her long-planned trip to The Land of the Pharoahs: murder, theft, betrayal, love, and a mummy's curse.Egyptologist Erica Baron finds more than she bargained for during her long-planned trip to The Land of the Pharoahs: murder, theft, betrayal, love, and a mummy's curse.Egyptologist Erica Baron finds more than she bargained for during her long-planned trip to The Land of the Pharoahs: murder, theft, betrayal, love, and a mummy's curse.
- Director
- Writers
- Stars
John Gielgud
- Abdu-Hamdi
- (as Sir John Gielgud)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
Okay, so Sphinx is not a great movie, but it's not a bad one, either. Funnily enough, with better film craft, it would be no worse than Raiders of the Lost Ark given they traffic in a lot of the same cliches. But that movie had a comic book nostalgia that gave it energy this film lacks. Without the window dressing, all that's left is the simplistic story. Notice I said story. There's not much here in terms of that, but there's a lot of plot. The characters never seem to tire of doing and saying any number of things to keep the movie going. Some are more interesting than others.
Leslie-Anne Warren, who looks particularly lovely here, plays an Egyptologist who gets pulled into various factions of graverobbers hoping to loot ancient Egyptian treasures. If you're a fan of old movies, you've seen this set up a million times before, the difference being this movie tries hard -- mistakenly -- to give it some solemnity that all those cliffhangers in the 1930s and 1940s did not. There's really no need. This is escapism, not drama, something that by the 1970s and 1980s, the people making the movies had forgotten.
Take Steven Spielberg. Like author Stephen King, he just recycled stuff we've seen a million times before. But Spielberg gave it a bit more gloss, turning B movie ideas in expensive amusement park rides that worked especially on audiences born in the 1950s and 1960s. The biggest problem with Sphinx is director Franklin Schaffner, a remarkably workmanlike filmmaker who somehow hit it big with some pseudo epics like Planet of the Apes and Patton. Now, even if you're a fan of no-nonsense, traditional directing, you'll notice how Schaffner seems to have little style or imagination.
The result is Sphinx often looks nice in terms of pure photography but lacks many of the components of great escapism. Add to it some sloppy editing that makes the story hard to follow, and you're left with a good idea never quite done.
Leslie-Anne Warren, who looks particularly lovely here, plays an Egyptologist who gets pulled into various factions of graverobbers hoping to loot ancient Egyptian treasures. If you're a fan of old movies, you've seen this set up a million times before, the difference being this movie tries hard -- mistakenly -- to give it some solemnity that all those cliffhangers in the 1930s and 1940s did not. There's really no need. This is escapism, not drama, something that by the 1970s and 1980s, the people making the movies had forgotten.
Take Steven Spielberg. Like author Stephen King, he just recycled stuff we've seen a million times before. But Spielberg gave it a bit more gloss, turning B movie ideas in expensive amusement park rides that worked especially on audiences born in the 1950s and 1960s. The biggest problem with Sphinx is director Franklin Schaffner, a remarkably workmanlike filmmaker who somehow hit it big with some pseudo epics like Planet of the Apes and Patton. Now, even if you're a fan of no-nonsense, traditional directing, you'll notice how Schaffner seems to have little style or imagination.
The result is Sphinx often looks nice in terms of pure photography but lacks many of the components of great escapism. Add to it some sloppy editing that makes the story hard to follow, and you're left with a good idea never quite done.
A luminous and glamorous production spectacularly shot in Egypt. Woman archaelogist called Erica Baron (Lesley-Anne Down) searches for hidden riches in the tomb of an Egyptian king. She is researching for a paper on Mernephtah, chief architect to Pharaoh Seti I. She meets with unscrupulous art dealer Abdu-Hamdi (John Gielgud) and witnesses him being threatened by black-market dealer Stephanos Markoulis (John Rhys-Davies). Beyond the sealed door was the last undiscovered treasure in Egypt - And it's all hers - If she can get out alive !. Someone is hunting tourists out of season !.
Based on the novel by Robin Cook, and scripted by John Byrum the film benefits from an impressively brilliant scenary, wonderful production design by Oscarized Gil Parrondo and spectacular Egyptian landscapes. Easy-on-the-eye adventure hokum with a beautiful star facing more perils than Indiana Jones as she searches for the long-lost tomb of ancient pharaoh Seti I. It's plotted to maximize confusion, a messy script that takes every opportunity to work in an action sequence, mostly pursuits shot with some shaky camerawork and with a peculiar plot starred by an archeologist searching for a lost tomb. It turns out to be a workmanlike and sometimes thrilling flick that just lacks the surges of real excitement that might have turned into an adventure classy. An amazing, timely and exciting story very well set in Egypt about an archaeologist in danger because of his discoveries. On the whole this Sphinx results to be an average movie , but enteratining enough. It contains a twisted intrigue about an adventurer archeologist along with her mysterious, suspicious lover, both of them undertake a dangerous journey through pyramids , deserts , the busy Cairo , and underground vaults plenty of tombs. Together with Lesley Ann Down who gives a so-so acting, turns up a good cast, such as Frank Langella who's a suitably ambivalent hero, the french Maurice Ronet, Martin Benson, John Rhys-Davies, Saeed Jaffrey. And John Gielgud shows up, rather surprisingly, as the Egyptian owner of an antique shop . Don't bother for the lousy storyline with plenty of flaws and gaps, containing unlikely happenings and a disjointed conclusion. This is a clear case of a lame project that only a best seller, -heavily pre-sold-could have financed.
Highlights the powerful and evocative musical score by Michael J. Lewis. Errnest Day's colorful photograpy makes the most seductive locations. Shot in Egypt and showing real monuments and pyramids , including wide sightseeing. Other locations include Great pyramids Giza , Keops , Kefren , Mizerinos and pyramid of Zoser , Cairo , Luxor and Budapest, Hungary. The direction, by Schaffner, is lively enough to cover most of the holes on the script. Franklyn J. Schaffner made excellent motion pictures such as "The Planet of the Apes", "Patton, " "Papillon" , ¨"Nicholas and Alexandra" , after the flop of his film titled " Islands in the Stream ", in which went on to coincide with the actor of "Patton" , George C. Scott , he decided to embark on a project more commercial and successful as "The Boys From Brazil" ; however , ¨Sphinx¨ ,¨Lionheart¨, ¨Si Giorgio¨ were other box office failures . Rating : 5.5/10 , worthwhile watching for the Egypt lovers.
Based on the novel by Robin Cook, and scripted by John Byrum the film benefits from an impressively brilliant scenary, wonderful production design by Oscarized Gil Parrondo and spectacular Egyptian landscapes. Easy-on-the-eye adventure hokum with a beautiful star facing more perils than Indiana Jones as she searches for the long-lost tomb of ancient pharaoh Seti I. It's plotted to maximize confusion, a messy script that takes every opportunity to work in an action sequence, mostly pursuits shot with some shaky camerawork and with a peculiar plot starred by an archeologist searching for a lost tomb. It turns out to be a workmanlike and sometimes thrilling flick that just lacks the surges of real excitement that might have turned into an adventure classy. An amazing, timely and exciting story very well set in Egypt about an archaeologist in danger because of his discoveries. On the whole this Sphinx results to be an average movie , but enteratining enough. It contains a twisted intrigue about an adventurer archeologist along with her mysterious, suspicious lover, both of them undertake a dangerous journey through pyramids , deserts , the busy Cairo , and underground vaults plenty of tombs. Together with Lesley Ann Down who gives a so-so acting, turns up a good cast, such as Frank Langella who's a suitably ambivalent hero, the french Maurice Ronet, Martin Benson, John Rhys-Davies, Saeed Jaffrey. And John Gielgud shows up, rather surprisingly, as the Egyptian owner of an antique shop . Don't bother for the lousy storyline with plenty of flaws and gaps, containing unlikely happenings and a disjointed conclusion. This is a clear case of a lame project that only a best seller, -heavily pre-sold-could have financed.
Highlights the powerful and evocative musical score by Michael J. Lewis. Errnest Day's colorful photograpy makes the most seductive locations. Shot in Egypt and showing real monuments and pyramids , including wide sightseeing. Other locations include Great pyramids Giza , Keops , Kefren , Mizerinos and pyramid of Zoser , Cairo , Luxor and Budapest, Hungary. The direction, by Schaffner, is lively enough to cover most of the holes on the script. Franklyn J. Schaffner made excellent motion pictures such as "The Planet of the Apes", "Patton, " "Papillon" , ¨"Nicholas and Alexandra" , after the flop of his film titled " Islands in the Stream ", in which went on to coincide with the actor of "Patton" , George C. Scott , he decided to embark on a project more commercial and successful as "The Boys From Brazil" ; however , ¨Sphinx¨ ,¨Lionheart¨, ¨Si Giorgio¨ were other box office failures . Rating : 5.5/10 , worthwhile watching for the Egypt lovers.
This is probably the slowest movie I have ever seen, and that's saying a lot since I watch BBC TV on satellite. The story is confusing, the acting is poor, and the casting is unbelievable. Lesley-Anne Down is the movie's only redeeming quality, and she spoils it by having to speak that innane dialogue! I've watched worse, but I've never sat through a slower movie!
Badly written adaptation of a bad novel and a badly directed film that relies on exotic locations and glitzy set decoration, featuring a beautiful "Egyptologist" who has never before been to Egypt, who takes a taxi from the Nile Hilton to the Cairo Museum (next door to each other), and goes into the tomb of Tutankhamun with a Polaroid camera to "do research". (If the public does not understand why this is laughable, they deserve this film). The title "Sphinx" has nothing to do with the plot, which is loosely about the discovery of a lost tomb. Not exactly PC because all the "good" Egyptians are played by Europeans and the "bad" Egyptians are played by Egyptians. In the opening credits the cast names are spelled out in hieroglyphs, which seems to be the extent of the research wasted on this turkey.
Lesley Anne Down plays Egyptologist Erica Baron who gets more than she bargained for when she becomes involved with the plundering of Egyptian artifacts on the black market, thrown in to this mix is murder, betrayal, love, and a mummy's curse! 'Sphinx' is one of those enjoyable films which is pure hokum which makes for a passable rainy day film.
Frank Langella plays Down's mysterious love interest. John Gielgud who is credited as 'Sir' has a small role as an antique dealer, it's interesting to see John Rhys Davies in this production before he appeared in the similarly themes 'Raiders' the Egyptian locations look great as photographed by Ernest Day it's great to see this film in it's original aspect ratio, as i've seen this on television in dreadful 'pan and scan''Sphinx' would make a great 'drinking game' for instance take a drink every time Lesley Anne Down screams!
Frank Langella plays Down's mysterious love interest. John Gielgud who is credited as 'Sir' has a small role as an antique dealer, it's interesting to see John Rhys Davies in this production before he appeared in the similarly themes 'Raiders' the Egyptian locations look great as photographed by Ernest Day it's great to see this film in it's original aspect ratio, as i've seen this on television in dreadful 'pan and scan''Sphinx' would make a great 'drinking game' for instance take a drink every time Lesley Anne Down screams!
Did you know
- TriviaSphinx (1981) was budgeted at $11 million with an expected 13-week shooting schedule, including five weeks of filming in Egypt at Cairo and Luxor. More than $1 million was spent on the interior sets built at the Mafilm Studios. It took six months to create these "vast sets," including a replica of King Tutankhamun's tomb and the undiscovered tomb of Seti I, with approximately 900 recreated artifacts. A negative, containing approximately 30 minutes of footage featuring a boat sequence in Luxor, disappeared in transit to Cairo, Egypt. But due to "international tensions," the incident was kept quiet.
- GoofsThe heroine takes a taxi from the Nile Hilton hotel to the Cairo Museum--those two buildings are more or less next door to each other (e.g. online guides for tourists say it is a five-minute walk). Taking a taxi instead of walking is not a goof. Maybe she was tired.
- How long is Sphinx?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Der Fluch der Sphinx
- Filming locations
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- $14,000,000 (estimated)
- Gross US & Canada
- $2,022,771
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $439,564
- Feb 16, 1981
- Gross worldwide
- $2,022,771
- Runtime1 hour 58 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content