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Sirocco

 
Movies:

Sirocco

  • Director: Curtis Bernhardt
  • AMG Rating: starstar
  • Genre: Drama
  • Movie Type: Romantic Drama, Melodrama
  • Themes: Political Unrest
  • Main Cast: Humphrey Bogart, David Bond, Märta Torén, Peter Brocco, Lee J. Cobb, Everett Sloane, Edward Colmans, Gerald Mohr, Zero Mostel
  • Release Year: 1951
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 98 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: NR

Plot

In Sirocco Humphrey Bogart is cast as Harry Smith, a casino operator in 1925 Damascus. For a tidy profit, Smith runs guns to the Arab insurrectionists attempting to overthrow the French Protectorate. Chastised by French Colonel Feroud (Lee J. Cobb) for his lack of morals and political convictions, Smith merely sneers in agreement. Before long, he has become romantically involved with Feroud's mistress Violetta (Marta Toren), who hopes to use Harry as means of escape to Cairo. Only after being betrayed by the Arabs and roughed up by the French authorities does our "hero" begin to behave ethically -- but by then, it's too late. A weak attempt by Bogart's Santana Productions to duplicate the success of Casablanca. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

Cast

Nick Dennis - Nasir Aboud; Ludwig Donath - Flophouse Proprietor; Al Eben - Sergeant; Jay Novello - Hamal; Peter Ortiz - Maj. Robbinet; Leonard Penn - Rifat; Vincent Renno - Arthur; Onslow Stevens - Emil Hassan; Martin Wilkins - Omar; Harry Guardino - Lieutenant Collet

Credit

Robert A. Peterson - Art Director, Henry S. Kesler - Associate Producer, Earl Bellamy - First Assistant Director, Curtis Bernhardt - Director, Viola Lawrence - Editor, George Antheil - Composer (Music Score), Morris W. Stoloff - Musical Direction/Supervision, Clay Campbell - Makeup, Burnett Guffey - Cinematographer, Robert Lord - Producer, Robert Priestley - Set Designer, A.I. Bezzerides - Screenwriter, Hans Jacoby - Screenwriter, Joseph Kessel - Book Author

Similar Movies

Casablanca; Key Largo; Cabo Blanco; Havana; Passage to Marseille
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Sirocco

DVD Cover
Directed by Curtis Bernhardt
Produced by Robert Lord
Written by Screenplay:
A.I. Bezzerides
Hans Jacoby
Story:
Joseph Kessel
Starring Humphrey Bogart
Märta Torén
Lee J. Cobb
Music by George Antheil
Cinematography Burnett Guffey
Editing by Viola Lawrence
Distributed by Columbia Pictures
Release date(s) June 1, 1951
(U.K.)
June 12, 1951
(U.S.A.)
Running time 98 minutes
Country United States
Language English

Sirocco (1951) is an American film noir directed by Curtis Bernhardt and written by A.I. Bezzerides and Hans Jacoby. It is based on the novel Coup de Grace written by Joseph Kessel. The drama features Humphrey Bogart, Märta Torén, Lee J. Cobb, among others.

Contents

Plot

In 1925 Damascus, the natives engage in a guerrilla war against the French rule of Syria. Harry Smith (Humphrey Bogart) is an amoral American black marketeer secretly selling them weapons. As the situation deteriorates, French General LaSalle (Everett Sloane) orders that civilians be executed each time his soldiers are killed, but allows his head of military intelligence, Colonel Feroud (Lee J. Cobb), to persuade him to rescind the plan. Feroud presses for negotiations with rebel leader Emir Hassan (Onslow Stevens) instead. LaSalle reluctantly lets him try to arrange a meeting, but refuses to let Feroud make contact directly. The young officer sent in his place is later found with his throat cut.

To complicate matters, Harry makes a pass at Feroud's unhappy mistress, Violetta (Märta Torén), but she rejects him. Later, she informs Feroud she wants to leave him, but he refuses to let her go.

By applying pressure to Balukjian (Zero Mostel), one of Harry's friendly rivals, Feroud finds out about Harry's gun running. Harry is tipped off, just as Violetta shows up and begs him to take her back to Cairo. Needing to flee himself, he agrees to take her along. However, a French patrol nearly captures Harry. He barely gets away, but has to leave behind his money, and without that, he is soon betrayed to the French.

Facing execution, Harry agrees to help Feroud meet with Hassan. Hassan calls the colonel a fool and dismisses his plea for negotiations, but decides to spare his life when Harry and Feroud's aide Major Leon (Gerald Mohr) show up offering a 10,000 pound ransom. The officers are allowed to leave; Harry is not so lucky. The rebels are angered that he has revealed the location of their headquarters to the French and fear he has sold them out, so they kill him. As Feroud and Leon walk back, they notice that the incessant gunfire and explosions have stopped. Feroud wonders if he has convinced Hassan to be as big a fool.

Cast

Critical reception

Film critic Bosley Crowther lambasted the film and wrote, "Except for a few moody moments in a plaster night-club, yclept the Moulin Rouge, and some shadowy shots of sloppy Syrians lying around in dingy catacombs, the scene is no more suggestive of Damascus than a Shriners' convention in New Orleans, on which occasion you would see more fezzes than ever show up in this film. For the most part—indeed, for the sole part—Sirocco wafts a torpid tale of a slick, sneering gun-runner proving a painful thorn in a nice French colonel's side."[1]

Critic Leonard Maltin gave the film a mixed review, writing, "I’d always read that it was a half-baked attempt to rekindle some of the ingredients that made Casablanca such a success, and that’s true. The setting is Damascus in 1926, when the French Army is battling Syrian insurgents...Sirocco is strictly formula stuff, but it’s a perfect example of how Hollywood could take ordinary material and still make it entertaining, through sheer professional polish in the writing, staging, art direction, and casting. Zero Mostel, Gerald Mohr, and Nick Dennis head the colorful supporting cast, who perform well under Curtis Bernhardt’s direction."[2]

See also

References

  1. ^ Crowther, Bosley. The New York Times, film review, June 14, 1951. Last accessed: January 23, 2008.
  2. ^ Maltin, Leonard. Leonard Maltin Movie Crazy film reviews, 2008. Last accessed: January 23, 2008.

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