The Adventurers | |
---|---|
Directed by | David MacDonald |
Written by | Robert Westerby |
Produced by | Aubrey Baring Maxwell Setton (uncredited) |
Starring | Dennis Price Jack Hawkins Siobhan McKenna |
Cinematography | Oswald Morris |
Edited by | Vladimir Sagovsky |
Music by | Cedric Thorpe Davie |
Production company | |
Distributed by | General Film Distributors |
Release date | 7 March 1951 (London) |
Running time | 86 minutes |
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
The Adventurers is a 1951 British adventure film directed by David MacDonald and starring Dennis Price, Jack Hawkins, Peter Hammond.[1] In the wake of the Boer War several men journey into the South African veldt in search of diamonds.
It was also known as Fortune in Diamonds, The Great Adventure and The South African Story.
It was one of a series of movies made by the British film industry after World War Two which were set (and filmed) in the dominions.[2]
In 1902 as the Boer War finalises a South African soldier hides a cache of diamonds he finds on a body. He returns to the town he left three years earlier where his girl has married a disgraced English officer. Needing funds to get back to pick up the diamonds the Boer enlists the help of a fellow soldier as well as the Englishman and a local hotel keeper.[3]
The film was based on an original story by the novelist and screenwriter Robert Westerby, one of several he wrote for the independent production company Mayflower Pictures.
Jack Hawkins was borrowed from British Lion.
It was made at Pinewood Studios, with some location filming in South Africa beforehand near Johannesburg. Production was completed by September 1950[4], but the film wasn't released until the following March by General Film Distributors.
The film was originally known as The South Africa Story. It had its world premiere aboard the Queen Mary liner.[5] The film was cut by 12 minutes for its U.S. release, and was twice retitled, as Fortune in Diamonds and The Great Adventure.[6]
Allmovie noted "an African variation of Treasure of the Sierra Madre, The Adventurers is buoyed by an unusually vicious performance by Jack Hawkins" ;[7] while the Radio Times wrote, "this could have been quite stirring if it hadn't been morbidly under-directed at a snail's pace by David MacDonald" ;[6] and TV Guide found that, despite its borrowings from Sierra Madre and from von Stroheim's Greed, "it is nevertheless an often-gripping film."[8]