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Ten Tall Men

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Ten Tall Men (1951)

October. 26,1951
|
6
|
NR
| Adventure Action Comedy
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Sgt. Mike Kincaid of the French Foreign Legion learns, from a Riff prisoner, that an attack will soon be made by the villainous Hussin on the Legion's outpost of Tarfa. Kincaid volunteers to lead nine other Legionnaires on a mission to delay Hussin's attack till reinforcements arrive. When he discovers that Hussin plans to marry Mahla, a girl from a rival tribe, in order to build a coalition against the French, Kincaid kidnaps Mahla. Hussin forcefully takes her back, but by now his planned attack on Tarfa is crumbling and Mahla has begun to fall in love with Kincaid.

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Linbeymusol
1951/10/26

Wonderful character development!

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SunnyHello
1951/10/27

Nice effects though.

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SeeQuant
1951/10/28

Blending excellent reporting and strong storytelling, this is a disturbing film truly stranger than fiction

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Bluebell Alcock
1951/10/29

Ok... Let's be honest. It cannot be the best movie but is quite enjoyable. The movie has the potential to develop a great plot for future movies

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JohnHowardReid
1951/10/30

Director: WILLIS GOLDBECK. Screenplay by Roland Kibbee, Frank Davis. Story by James Warner Bellah, Willis Goldbeck. Assistant director: Earl Bellamy. Director of photography: William Snyder. Art director: Carl Anderson. Color by Technicolor. Technicolor Color Consultant: Francis Cugat. Film editor: William Lyon. Set decorator: Louis Diage. Make- up by Clay Campbell. Hair styles by Helen Hunt. Sound engineer: George Cooper. Gowns by Jean Louis. Music director: Morris Stoloff. Music score by David Buttolph. Assistant to the producers: Robert B. Aldrich. A Norman Production. A Columbia Picture. Producers: Harold Hecht, Burt Lancaster.Copyright 5 November 1951 by Halburt Productions, Inc. A Norma Production, released by Columbia Pictures Corp. New York opening at the Victoria: 26 October 1951. U.S. release: December 1951. U.K. release: 7 April 1952. Australian release: 24 October 1952. 97 minutes.SYNOPSIS: Foreign Legion Sergeant Mike Kincaid (Burt Lancaster) and nine comrades-in-arms undertake to stop a Riff attack on the desert city of Tarfa. His troop includes Delgado (Gilbert Roland), Molier (Kieron Moore) and Londos (George Tobias). Mike captures Mahla (Jody Lawrance), a Riff princess whose marriage to Hussin (Gerald Mohr) will ally two Riff tribes against the French.COMMENT: A Foreign Legion romp with Burt Lancaster and company pretending to be legionnaires, alternately incredibly brave or playfully skittish. The action is lively enough, the actual locations reasonably attractive, but it is Jody Lawrance who steals the show — without trying!OTHER VIEWS: Thin and light-hearted, if rather obvious and poorly scripted. Burt Lancaster makes an efficient looking sergeant, and Kieron Moore a somewhat less adequate corporal. — Monthly Film Bulletin.

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thinker1691
1951/10/31

Somewhere in the 1950's Hollywood discovered a simple formula for superior entertainment. Around that formula, any major star worth his salt could inspire a group of characters to create a magical memory. Thus this movie called " Ten Tall men " became a hit. Burt Lancaster, plays Sgt. Mike Kincaid, a French Foreign Legionnaire, who, while in a military stockade, learns of an impending attack on the city proper while the main garrison is away. Volunteering for what some consider a suicide mission, he and nine other prisoners ride into the desert to impede the attack for five days. During that time, the small group creates havoc among the gathering tribes to get their attention. Further they kidnap Mahla (Jody Lawrance) a tribal princess, which prevents the evil Khalif Hussein (Gerald Mohr) from caring out his attack. The entire film is fun to watch as great actors like Gilbert Roland, Kieron Moore, George Tobias, John Dehner and Mike Mazurki establish a wonderful and fun filled afternoon of creative enjoyment. A solid family offering for all ages. Easilly recommended. ****

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larryludwigpilot
1951/11/01

This is a great movie for just watching and enjoying. No overwhelming drama, no thought to guess the plot or who-done-it, just good old fashioned entertainment. Burt Lancaster shines in a way only he can. The jokes are funny, lines memorable (mamasita, what a rap she gave me... Khassein is a lump of evil smelling goat cheese) the girls are pretty and it rolls along as you "listen to the squeaking of the little mouse". Just enjoy yourself, if you miss a few minutes in the kitchen it won't throw you off the plot. It's great to see REAL actors displaying their craft in a time period when talent was more important than looks, bra size and CGI. If you want drama, go find Wuthering Heights and get your fill.

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bob the moo
1951/11/02

When in the brig on charges, Foreign Legion Sgt Mike Kincaid learns from a Riff prisoner of an impending attack on the outpost of Tarfa. In exchange for freedom, Kincaid and his men offer to run a series of distracting missions across the territory to keep the enemy busy until help can arrive. When he also learns that the leader of the Riffs, Caid Hussein, plans to marry Mahla, a girl from another tribe, in order to combine the two tribes against the French, Kincaid kidnaps her and flees into the desert – sparking anger and a chase from Hussein and a growing love for Kincaid in Mahla.Featuring the chest and jaw of Burt Lancaster, this is just one of many foreign legion films that were so popular at one time in Hollywood. The plot is fairly enjoyable despite not having any great development or depth to it; it provides movement and direction sufficient to keep the audience watching without ever requiring much of them and for this reason it works. Of course this is not to say it does anything special, because it doesn't but it does do what you would expect from a foreign legion picture of the period – sand storms, heroic sacrifice, bare chested heroes, torture, attacks on forts and so on. Sadly with this territory comes the usual problems – standard acting, poor characters, obvious plotting, clunky romances and a lack of real audience engagement; for me these did limit the effectiveness of the film and just made it blend with an average crowd.The acting is roundly average to match the material. Lancaster is sturdy and heroic with a good charisma and presence; hardly an interesting performance but appropriate for the genre I think. Support is not so good. Naturally Lawrence and Mohr are white actors in ethnic roles but the problem is that they don't perform that well on any level – Lawrence is unconvincing and Mohr is only acceptable as the bad guy. The rest of the cast provide some comic relief and generally give the film a rambling feel.Overall this is a standard genre film, nothing more nor nothing less. Those who like the matinée feel of the foreign legion film will enjoy it as such but just don't expect it to do anything above and beyond the call of duty as the characters, plot, action and delivery are all fairly average and prevent the film from standing out from the crowd.

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