القاهرة (فيلم 1963)
Cairo | |
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اخراج | Wolf Rilla |
انتاج | Ronald Kinnoch executive Lawrence Bachmann |
الحوار السينمائي | Joan LaCour Scott |
بطولة | George Sanders Richard Johnson Faten Hamama John Meillon Ahmed Mazhar Eric Pohlmann |
موسيقى | Kenneth V. Jones |
سينماتوگرافيا | Desmond Dickinson |
تحرير | Bernard Gribble |
شركــة الانتاج | Lawrence P. Bachmann Productions |
توزيع | Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer |
تواريخ العرض | أغسطس 21، 1963 |
طول الفيلم | 91 minutes |
البلد | United States |
اللغة | English |
Cairo is a 1963 American crime film directed by Wolf Rilla and written by Joan LaCour Scott. The film stars George Sanders, Richard Johnson, Faten Hamama, John Meillon, Ahmed Mazhar, Eric Pohlmann and the director's father Walter Rilla. The film was released on August 21, 1963, by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer.[1][2][3] The film is a nearly scene-by-scene remake of John Huston's The Asphalt Jungle.
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Plot
Mastermind Brit criminal Major Pickering arrives in Cairo by air from a Greek prison, on a phony passport. The Major has a foolproof scheme to rob King Tut's jewels, which are displayed in the secure Cairo Museum and worth a quarter of a million dollars.
Through his contact man Nicodemos, the shady casino operator brother of the Major's con artist passport illustrator Greek cellmate, he rounds up a disparate gang to execute the daring heist. The only gang member known to the Major is the reliable countryman and fellow soldier, an explosive expert safe-cracker, Willy (John Meillon), now a family man, marrying native and reluctant to go on the caper until persuaded by a fast $25,000 cut.
Nicodemos gets untrustworthy import-export businessman Kuchuk to finance the caper, while the Major hires lazy coffee shop owner Kerim as driver and his hashish smoking hot-headed gun-wielding small-time stick-up man Ali as his enforcer. Ali looks upon it as his last chance to buy a sugar cane farm in his country birthplace, and pretends to be indifferent to the unconditional love shown to him by the penniless hard-luck nice girl belly dancer Amina.
The boys go through the sewer as planned, but inside the museum an alarm is accidentally triggered and brings the police before they can make a clean escape. It results in Willy being fatally shot and dropped off at home. When the robbers that evening go to exchange the jewels for the money, Kuchuk and his gun wielding accomplice Ghattas pull a double-cross, and in an ensuing shoot-out Ghattas is dead and Ali seriously wounded, with Kuchuk now forced by the Major to make a deal with the police for $200,000 or they will melt down the invaluable jewels.
When the frightened Nicodemos is intimidated by the persistent police commandant and Kuchuk commits suicide, the rest of the gang is rounded up before they can escape from Cairo—with Ali dying in Amina's arms just as they reach by car his father's farm and the Major captured alive when staying too long to admire a belly dancer as the police raid the area.
Cast
- George Sanders as The Major
- Richard Johnson as Ali
- Faten Hamama as Amina
- John Meillon as Willy
- Ahmed Mazhar as Kerim
- Eric Pohlmann as Nicodemos
- Walter Rilla as Kuchuk
- Kamal el-Shennawi as Ghattas
- Salah Nazmi as Commandant
- Shwikar as Marie
- Mona Saxena as Bamba
- Abdel Khalek Saleh as Assistant Minister
- Said Abu Bakr as Osman
- Salah Mansour as Doctor
- Mohamed El Sayed as First Officer
- Yousuf Shaaban as Second Officer
- Ezzat El Alaili as Third Officer
- Mohamed Abdel Rahman as Fourth Officer
- Nahed Sabri as First Dancer
- Aziza Hassan as Second Dancer
Production
The film reunited the star, producer and director of Village of the Damned (1960).
Filming took place in mid 1962 and involved location shooting in Cairo.[4]
See also
References
- ^ "Cairo (1963) - Overview - TCM.com". Turner Classic Movies. Retrieved 1 December 2014.
- ^ "Cairo". TV Guide. Archived from the original on 4 December 2014. Retrieved 1 December 2014.
- ^ CAIRO Monthly Film Bulletin; London Vol. 30, Iss. 348, (Jan 1, 1963): 36.
- ^ Sultan and Worth Hit Comedy Jackpot: Brooklyn Boy Wonders Click: Van Johnson Booked in Grove Scheuer, Philip K. Los Angeles Times 28 Mar 1962: C13.