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Tarfumes.com - King Solomon's Mines (1950)

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List Price: $14.98
Our Price: $9.97
Your Save: $ 5.01 ( 33% )
Availability: N/A
Manufacturer: MGM (Warner) Starring: Deborah Kerr, Stewart Granger, Richard Carlson, Hugo Haas, Lowell Gilmore Directed By: Andrew Marton, Compton Bennett
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Average Customer Rating:     

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Audience Rating: NR (Not Rated) Binding: VHS Tape EAN: 9786301971164 Format: Color ISBN: 6301971167 Label: MGM (Warner) Manufacturer: MGM (Warner) Number Of Items: 1 Publisher: MGM (Warner) Release Date: 1998-09-01 Studio: MGM (Warner) Theatrical Release Date: 1950-11-24
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Editorial Reviews:
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Adventure yarns don’t come more ripping than King Solomon’s Mines, the classic Great White Hunter tale. Novelist H. Rider Haggard’s hero, Allan Quatermain (Stewart Granger), reluctantly agrees to lead an Englishwoman (Deborah Kerr) and her brother (Richard Carlson) deep into uncharted territory in Africa, in search of the lady’s lost husband. What follows is a cavalcade of boys’ adventure stuff: charging rhinos, cannibals, an incredible wildlife stampede, and the back-of-the-neck-tingly thrill of venturing into unmapped lands. The location shooting, including tribal rituals, is marvelous throughout, and the movie manages to pack a great deal of material into 102 minutes without ever seeming rushed. A remake of a 1937 film, King Solomon’s Mines was itself remade badly, with Richard Chamberlain, in 1985, and Quatermain was essayed by Sean Connery in League of Extraordinary Gentlemen, but purists will prefer Stewart Granger’s stalwart-yet-sardonic hero--his career never quite got over the role. --Robert Horton
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Spotlight customer reviews:
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Customer Rating:      Summary: King Solomon's Mines Comment: King Solomon's Mines is truly one the best movies about Africa. The scenery is spectacular. The story seemed to be a never-ending confrontation with wild animals however it was interesting to see the
the variety. The native tribes were also interesting, especially the very tall Watusi and their dance. The actors portrayed believable roles and the movie deserved the two Oscars it received. I will watch it again and again.
Customer Rating:      Summary: More Hollywood than Haggard, but still a terrific yarn Comment: Written as a bet that he couldn't come up with a better adventure story than Treasure Island, H. Rider Haggard's King Solomon's Mines has proved itself a hardy perennial over the years without ever getting a particularly faithful screen adaptation. MGM's 1950 version more or less keeps to the bare bones of the story, but changes the reason for the quest and those on it - not a pure treasure hunt but a search for Deborah Kerr's missing husband who may or may not have met his end searching for the fabled mines. Stewart Granger's fine as her reluctant guide Allan Quatermain (a role originally intended for Errol Flynn, who wasn't physically up to the rigors of difficult location shooting), going purely for the money but gradually thawing enough to start hoping that Kerr really is a widow.
Most of the novel's action is missing, though the climax is still present and correct, but it's still a surprisingly entertaining star vehicle that holds up much better than its reputation might lead you to believe. The film's big selling point is that it was actually shot on remote African locations, quite an achievement with the unwieldy Technicolor cameras of the day. As a result there's a travelogue feel to much of the film as it goes out of its way to stress that they're not on the backlot even though there is a fair bit of back-projection in the big stampede sequence. (MGM had enough footage left over for another three films, with Watusi, the dire 1959 Tarzan the Apeman and the 1973 remake of Trader Horn all making much use of it to keep their costs down.) It may perhaps be a little tame for those raised on Indiana Jones, but if you're not expecting a cliffhanger every reel you'll find a lot to enjoy.
The only extra is a trailer, which boasts a score by Miklos Rozsa (the film has no score at all beyond local African chants).
Customer Rating:      Summary: King Solomon's Mines Comment: What can I say? It's a classic, and I love it. The stampede scene is worth the price all by itself.
Customer Rating:      Summary: A Vehicle For Its Stars Comment: Hollywood kept very little of author Sir H. Rider Haggard's plot in this version of his book. In actuality, so much is changed that the movie bears little resemblance to the original. For instance, Deborah Kerr's character is not in the original. It is Sir Henry Curtis' brother, along with a friend, Capt. Good, who convince Mr. Quatermain to conduct their safari. The love interest in Haggard's original involves an inter-racial affair between an indiginous girl, Faulata (who, unfortunately does not survive the adventure), and Capt. Good. Two other major differences - - in the original the party helps itself to pocketfuls of diamonds when departing the treasure chamber (more in keeping with the true colonial spirit that you take what you can), and Sir Henry's brother is found alive (but for a broken leg he might have walked out on his own)!
Obviously, you don't watch this movie to see a faithful adaptation of the novel. We watch it because of its two main stars, Kerr and Granger. Enough of the period, location and the rigors of the expedition is captured to provide context for the love story /adventure film this movie was engineered to be. As it is, it is an enjoyable, wonderfully filmed (in Technicolor) "matinee" movie, made interesting more by Kerr and Granger than by anything associated with the mission that obstensively brought them together in the first place. But be warned, kids! No one should ever write a book report based on what you see in this film!
Customer Rating:      Summary: One of Greatest Dance Sequences Ever on Film! Comment: I first saw this film when I was a boy and never, ever forget the Watusi warrior dances. It is one of the most beautiful dance sequences ever filmed. The drums, the outfits and the ecstatic joy of the dancers themselves a kind of male grace and a warrior's pride in lilting wonderful movement interspersed with those stunning leaps. One feels as though one were in the presence of a superior and lordly race!
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