Genghis Khan (1965 film)

For other uses, see Genghis Khan (disambiguation).
Genghis Khan
Directed by Henry Levin
Produced by Irving Allen
Written by Beverley Cross (screenplay)
Berkely Mather (story)
Clarke Reynolds (screenplay)
Starring Omar Sharif
Stephen Boyd
James Mason
Music by Dušan Radić
Cinematography Geoffrey Unsworth
Edited by Geoffrey Foot
Distributed by Columbia Pictures
Release dates
April 15, 1965 (Germany)
June 23, 1965 (U.S.)
July 31, 1965 (Japan)
August 30, 1965 (Sweden)
August 30, 1965 (UK)
September 22, 1965 (France)
October 2, 1965 (Italy)
October 14, 1965 (Hong Kong)
November 5, 1965 (Finland)
December 10, 1965 (Australia)
May 23, 1966 (Denmark)
Running time
127 min.
Country United Kingdom
Yugoslavia
Language English
Box office $2,250,000[1]

Genghis Khan is a 1965 Technicolor film depicting the life and conquests of the Mongol emperor Genghis Khan in Panavision. It was released in the United Kingdom and the United States in 1965 by Columbia Pictures, it was directed by Henry Levin and featured Omar Sharif, who that same year starred in another epic, Doctor Zhivago. The film also included James Mason, Stephen Boyd, Eli Wallach, Françoise Dorléac and Telly Savalas.

A 70 mm version of the film was released by CCC Film in West Germany. It was filmed in Yugoslavia.

Plot

The young Temujin sees his father tortured and killed by a rival tribe, led by Stephen Boyd's Jamuga. Held prisoner, he's yoked into a large wooden wheel around his neck and tormented by the tribal children. He meets the young Bortai after an act of kindness to her, but is punished by Jamuga. Temujin then escapes and hides in the hills. He's followed by Geen and Sengal, who pledge their allegiance to the man vowing to unite all the Mongol tribes.

Raids along caravan routes gradually increase the size of his army, and then Temujin decides to capture as his wife the young Bortai. He gets her, but then she's captured back by Jamuga, who rapes her before Temujin can steal her back.

A stranded Chinese ambassador is helped out by Temujin, who accompanies the diplomat into China, where he is proclaimed "Genghis Khan, the Prince of Conquerors". His Mongol army stays in Peking for a long period, training, learning, and getting complacent. The imprisoned Jamuga escapes at one point. Finally, feeling trapped, the Mongols break out of their "captivity" and begin their conquest of Asia.

After laying waste to everything from Manchuria to Moscow, the Mongol army finally battles the Shah of Khwarezm, defeating him and capturing Jamuga one last time. Temujin and Jamuga fight one last battle, mano-a-mano, and although victorious, Temujin succumbs to his wounds soon after.

Critical Reaction

Derided as wildly inaccurate and stereotypically foolish, the movie is exceeded in its' complete lack of historical basis only by the decade-earlier "The Conqueror", starring the improbable John Wayne as Genghis Khan.

Fresh from the role of Ali in Lawrence of Arabia, and just before his turn as Dr. Zhivago, Omar Sharif is mildly interesting as the title character, and Boyd brings a slight menace to Jamuga, but James Mason is horribly miscast, if not uncomfortably hilarious, as Kam Ling, as is the rotund Robert Morley as the Chinese emperor. Ill-fated Dorleac lends beauty to the cast, but this sword and sandal epic is not a showcase for feminine charm. Telly Savalas plays a 12th Century Kojak, and Eli Wallach appears all to briefly towards the end of the film as the Shah.

The battle scenes are suitably large and fairly well staged, but occupy a surprisingly small part of the entire movie.

Cast

References

  1. Anticipated rentals accruing distributors in North America. See "Top Grossers of 1965", Variety, 5 January 1966 p 36

External links


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