While traveling through the kingdom of Sulom, Samson is arrested and finds that the queen no longer reigns and that a power-mad warlord and his army of mercenaries now controls the kingdom. ... Read allWhile traveling through the kingdom of Sulom, Samson is arrested and finds that the queen no longer reigns and that a power-mad warlord and his army of mercenaries now controls the kingdom. Samson teams up with some of his one-time adversaries to battle the usurper and restore th... Read allWhile traveling through the kingdom of Sulom, Samson is arrested and finds that the queen no longer reigns and that a power-mad warlord and his army of mercenaries now controls the kingdom. Samson teams up with some of his one-time adversaries to battle the usurper and restore the rightful queen to power.
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There's two muscle heroes in the form of Brad Harris and Alan Steel, though Harris is more the lead, as after all he's the title character, but his Samson isn't of the biblical variety. Nor is the story. There's no Delilah but there's one evil imposter Queen- the real Queen is in prison - played by Marla Berni. Aiding her in wickedness is Serge Gainsborg who keeps this standard yet fun peplum simmering. It's a better than average peplum with a plot firing challenges for our heroes and enough action.
This kind of film was a dime a dozen during this period in Italian cinema and, even if some quality product did emerge during its almost 10 year tenure, unfortunately, this isn't one of them. Perhaps its worst element is the unfunny comic relief provided by the hero's fat sidekick particularly since this was hardly necessary, given that the film was already an unintentional laugh riot on its own! An indication of the film's haphazard quality is the fact that another pal of Samson's is sent on a secret mission around the middle section but we forget all about him, till he mysteriously reappears at the end to cheer the victorious Samson!! Most surprising of all here, however, is the presence of French crooner Serge Gainsbourg as the chief villain (not that his acting career ever went anywhere after this)!
Did you know
- TriviaMysteriously, the actor playing Samson's comical sidekick Terrabentus is not credited in either the main title or reference sources. Vladimir Leib played the part of Terrabentus, as well as sizeable credited roles in two other Parolini epics Les derniers jours d'Herculanum (1962) and La Lutte pour Jérusalem (1963). Italian reference works and the Monthly Film Bulletin match the pseudonym "Walter Reeves" against the character Millstone (Macigno in Italian). However, easy-to-recognize "Alan Steel" (aka Sergio Ciani) was the one playing Millstone. It sounds more phonetic that "Walter Reeves" was a pseudonym lined up for Vladimir Leib who maybe decided he didn't like it.
- ConnectionsReferenced in Conversazione con Gianfranco Parolini (2006)
Details
- Runtime1 hour 40 minutes
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1