Difference between revisions of "Dark of the Sun"

From The Grindhouse Cinema Database

m
 
(6 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
<div class="row"><div class="large-6 columns">'''Dark of the Sun''' is a men-on-a-mission adventure movie starring Rod Taylor and Jim Brown, directed by renowned cinematographer Jack Cardiff (Rambo: First Blood Pt. II) and featuring a great score. Over the years, the movie has gained a cult following due to its exciting, violent, entertaining and daring interpretation of the genre and bending of its conventions. It is cited as an influence, for example on Quentin Tarantino's Inglourious Basterds.
<div class="row"><div class="large-6 columns">'''Dark of the Sun''' (1968, USA/UK) is a men-on-a-mission adventure movie starring Rod Taylor and Jim Brown, directed by renowned cinematographer Jack Cardiff (The Red Shoes, Rambo: First Blood Pt. II) and featuring a great score. Over the years, the movie has gained a cult following due to its exciting, violent, entertaining and daring interpretation of the genre and bending of its conventions. It is cited as an influence, for example on Quentin Tarantino's Inglourious Basterds.
* '''Contents:''' [[/DVD|DVD Releases]] | [[/BluRay|BluRay releases]] | [https://amzn.to/309uuHD Amazon Prime Video (USA)]
* '''Contents:''' [[/DVD|DVD Releases]] | [[/BluRay|BluRay releases]] | [https://amzn.to/309uuHD Amazon Prime Video (USA)] | [[/Posters|Poster Artwork]]
* ''External links:'' [https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0062863/reference IMDb]
* '''More by Jack Cardiff''': [[The Freakmaker]] | [[The Girl on a Motorcycle]]
* ''External links:'' [https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0062863/reference IMDb] | [https://www.furiouscinema.com/blu-releases-jack-cardiffs-men-on-a-mission-classic-dark-of-the-sun/ BluRay announcement at FuriousCinema.com] | [https://www.furiouscinema.com/dark-of-the-sun/ Review at FuriousCinema.com]
[[File:Mercenaries.jpg|Dark of the Sun]]
[[File:Mercenaries.jpg|Dark of the Sun]]
</div><div class="large-6 columns">
</div><div class="large-6 columns">
===Main Details===
====Main Details====
* Released in 1968
*Color
* Director: Jack Cardiff
* Director: Jack Cardiff
* Written by: Ranald MacDougall, Adrian Spies, Wilbur Smith  
* Written by: Ranald MacDougall, Adrian Spies, Wilbur Smith  
* Starring: Rod Taylor, Yvette Mimieux, Peter Carsten, Jim Brown
* Starring: Rod Taylor, Yvette Mimieux, Peter Carsten, Jim Brown
* Music: Jacques Loussier
* Music: Jacques Loussier
===Tag lines===
====Taglines====
Brutes! Savages! Heroes! ...Paid to fight in the fury of the Congo!
* You Dont Kill For Women. You Dont Kill For Diamonds. You Kill Because You're Paid For It!
===Censorship===
*Brutes! Savages! Heroes...Paid to fight in the fury of the Congo!
====Censorship====
The movie is of a very violent nature. In fact, many scenes were cut and never made it into the theatrical version in the first place, and the ratings board required even more cuts. There are scenes of rape (including involving main characters), humans being fed to animals, massacres and people burned alive, and extended fight sequences and killings, among other things. Viewers familiar with the movie will notice that as a result, the editing of the film is noticeably bad in some parts and the omissions thus apparent, e.g. parts of the village massacre or the death scenes of two main characters.
The movie is of a very violent nature. In fact, many scenes were cut and never made it into the theatrical version in the first place, and the ratings board required even more cuts. There are scenes of rape (including involving main characters), humans being fed to animals, massacres and people burned alive, and extended fight sequences and killings, among other things. Viewers familiar with the movie will notice that as a result, the editing of the film is noticeably bad in some parts and the omissions thus apparent, e.g. parts of the village massacre or the death scenes of two main characters.


Line 21: Line 25:
* Le dernier train du Katanga (France)
* Le dernier train du Katanga (France)
</div></div>
</div></div>
[[Category:Films]][[Category:War]][[Category:1968]]
[[Category:Films]][[Category:War]][[Category:1968]][[Category:Jim Brown]][[Category:USA]][[Category:UK]]
__NOTOC__
__NOTOC__

Latest revision as of 22:12, 18 September 2019

Dark of the Sun (1968, USA/UK) is a men-on-a-mission adventure movie starring Rod Taylor and Jim Brown, directed by renowned cinematographer Jack Cardiff (The Red Shoes, Rambo: First Blood Pt. II) and featuring a great score. Over the years, the movie has gained a cult following due to its exciting, violent, entertaining and daring interpretation of the genre and bending of its conventions. It is cited as an influence, for example on Quentin Tarantino's Inglourious Basterds.

Dark of the Sun

Main Details

  • Released in 1968
  • Color
  • Director: Jack Cardiff
  • Written by: Ranald MacDougall, Adrian Spies, Wilbur Smith
  • Starring: Rod Taylor, Yvette Mimieux, Peter Carsten, Jim Brown
  • Music: Jacques Loussier

Taglines

  • You Dont Kill For Women. You Dont Kill For Diamonds. You Kill Because You're Paid For It!
  • Brutes! Savages! Heroes...Paid to fight in the fury of the Congo!

Censorship

The movie is of a very violent nature. In fact, many scenes were cut and never made it into the theatrical version in the first place, and the ratings board required even more cuts. There are scenes of rape (including involving main characters), humans being fed to animals, massacres and people burned alive, and extended fight sequences and killings, among other things. Viewers familiar with the movie will notice that as a result, the editing of the film is noticeably bad in some parts and the omissions thus apparent, e.g. parts of the village massacre or the death scenes of two main characters.

Also known as

  • The Dark of the Sun
  • The Mercenaries (original title)
  • Último tren a Katanga (Spain)
  • Katanga (Germany)
  • Le dernier train du Katanga (France)
Newsletter
  • Grindhouse Database Newsletter
  • Exploitation books
  • Kung fu movies
  • Giallo BluRay