Hercules and the Tyrants of Babylon
Original title: Ercole contro i tiranni di Babilonia
IMDb RATING
4.3/10
613
YOUR RATING
Hercules fights to free the people of Babylon from an evil sorceress.Hercules fights to free the people of Babylon from an evil sorceress.Hercules fights to free the people of Babylon from an evil sorceress.
- Director
- Writers
- Stars
Peter Lupus
- Hercules
- (as Rock Stevens)
Eugenio Bottari
- Assur's Escort
- (as Eugenio Bottai)
Gianni Baghino
- Prison Guard
- (uncredited)
Sal Borgese
- Wrestler with Club #2
- (uncredited)
Jeff Cameron
- Soldier
- (uncredited)
Aldo Canti
- Liberated Slave
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
4.3613
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Featured reviews
Peter Lupus as Hercules in Babylon circa 1000 b.c.; an entertaining peplum
Peter Lupus (aka Rock Stevens) stars as Hercules in this colorful Italian sword-and-sandal opus, one of four Lupus made in Italy in
1964-65, before rocketing to stardom in the Mission Impossible TV show. We don't really think of any particular manner of dress in Babylon-- at least I don't!--so the costumers came up with some outlandish fashions here, and the art design is also creative! The scenes of intrigue in the palace are dramatically well-done and feature peplum/swashbuckler regular Livio Lorenzon as the ruler of Babylon, dealing with both his queen, the King of Assyria, and Hercules, who has come to reclaim the Queen of the Hellenes, taken as a Babylonian slave. In some scenes in the film Hercules has a over-large club that he both swings at people and throws! It lends a comic-book flavor to those sequences that is not really in keeping with the serious nature of the rest of the film. Lupus has a powerful physique and is one of the best actors in the peplum genre--all four of his Italian films are worth watching and are distinctly different from each other. Domenico Paolella directed three of Lupus' four peplums and also worked with such Amercians as Guy Madison, Lex Barker, Ed Fury, Don Megowan, Richard Harrison, Mark Forest, Ken Clark, John Ericson and John Ireland. Whether a peplum, a pirate film, a spy film, or a western, he seemed to be able to put together a fast-moving and entertaining feature. Hercules and the Tyrants of Babylon is recommended to any serious peplum fan. The VHS copy I watched, while a pan-and-scan TV print, is crisp and clear and colorful.
1964-65, before rocketing to stardom in the Mission Impossible TV show. We don't really think of any particular manner of dress in Babylon-- at least I don't!--so the costumers came up with some outlandish fashions here, and the art design is also creative! The scenes of intrigue in the palace are dramatically well-done and feature peplum/swashbuckler regular Livio Lorenzon as the ruler of Babylon, dealing with both his queen, the King of Assyria, and Hercules, who has come to reclaim the Queen of the Hellenes, taken as a Babylonian slave. In some scenes in the film Hercules has a over-large club that he both swings at people and throws! It lends a comic-book flavor to those sequences that is not really in keeping with the serious nature of the rest of the film. Lupus has a powerful physique and is one of the best actors in the peplum genre--all four of his Italian films are worth watching and are distinctly different from each other. Domenico Paolella directed three of Lupus' four peplums and also worked with such Amercians as Guy Madison, Lex Barker, Ed Fury, Don Megowan, Richard Harrison, Mark Forest, Ken Clark, John Ericson and John Ireland. Whether a peplum, a pirate film, a spy film, or a western, he seemed to be able to put together a fast-moving and entertaining feature. Hercules and the Tyrants of Babylon is recommended to any serious peplum fan. The VHS copy I watched, while a pan-and-scan TV print, is crisp and clear and colorful.
I Thought That Guy Looked Familiar
So it was Peter Lupus from Mission Impossible. There is nothing much to recommend this film. It has a silly plot with Hercules attempting to rescue a Babylonian queen who has been enslaved with many others. There is an evil queen. There is a potential suitor for the queen who brings all kinds of gifts and money to the triumvirate which is in control. There is a ridiculous wheel which, when turned, will destroy an entire city. Only one guy can turn it (hint hint). There are some good actions scenes and the print isn't too bad. One thing that was concerting for me were the sound effects. When someone was hit with a club, it made the sound of one of those plastic whiffle ball bats. I'm sure they were made out of plastic, but couldn't they have disguised the sounds a bit better. I have to admit I fast forwarded through the riding and walking scenes which cut out about 15 minutes of the movie.
Give me those old time Sunday movies...
Ah! Another rainy day,Sunday Sword and Sandal affair..these movies always bring back such joy and regarded youth...if you don't dig "bad" flicks or just plain goofy ones,this isn't yer cup of meat.On the other hand,this isn't too retched-Peter Lupus as the man in charge,a decent plot,the usual foolishness= a good way to waste a Sunday afternoon...what happened to those days,anyhoo...??
Saturday matinée
Okay sword & sandal epic. Lupus isn't really that bad; this film portrays the strong man as smarter than usual, which is a plus.
The hero of the film is really the Biblical Samson (the slaves are quite obviously Hebrew, the promised land obvious Isreal). God knows why they bothered to reference Hercules on release - maybe they were afraid of being accused of blasphemy for making a cheap B-movie about the Old Testament hero.
As noted by others, the best scenes in the film are actually borrowed from other films. But the action sequences filmed for this movie itself are pretty much par for the course, but nothing special.
Dull in spots, but not without its occasional flashes of Saturday matinée fun.
The hero of the film is really the Biblical Samson (the slaves are quite obviously Hebrew, the promised land obvious Isreal). God knows why they bothered to reference Hercules on release - maybe they were afraid of being accused of blasphemy for making a cheap B-movie about the Old Testament hero.
As noted by others, the best scenes in the film are actually borrowed from other films. But the action sequences filmed for this movie itself are pretty much par for the course, but nothing special.
Dull in spots, but not without its occasional flashes of Saturday matinée fun.
Run-of-the-mill muscleman movie in which Hercules battles enemies and rescues a princess in Babylon.
Shalmaneser (Livio Lorenzon), Assur (Tullio Altamura) , and their sister Tanit (Helga Liné), tyrants of Babylon, have taken several Hellenic women prisoner, including Hesperia (Anna Maria Polani) , queen of Greece, and her betrothed, Phaleg, king of Assyria (Mario Petri). Hercules (Rock Stevens) intervenes to save the monarchs and punish the cruel tyrants. To do this, Hercules uses a huge club with which he defeats his enemies.
Peters Lupus, or Rock Stevens (from the 1960s TV series Mission: Impossible), was one of the many bodybuilders who followed in the footsteps of Steve Reeves and dedicated himself to the peplum genre in the 1960s. Here he plays the famous character from Greek mythology. As Hercules/Rock Stevens fights to free the people of Babylon from an evil sorceress and other villains. Of course, the best scenes are those in which Hercules, pushing a winch with chains, brings down the city of Babylon, although several of its photographs are taken from Robert Aldrich's film Sodom and Gomorrah.
It stars the stiff and expressionless Rock Stevens, whose real name was Peter Lupus.was one of the many actors and -not one of the best-who played this kind of bulky hero that was all the rage in the 1960s. Other actors of the same style worthy of consideration were the following: Steve Reeves, Gordon Scott, Richard Harrison, Dan Vadis, Reg Park, Sergio Ciani, Samson Burke, Brad Harris, and several others. However, none of them surpassed the great Steve Reeves in popularity and impact, followed by the also notable Gordon Scott, who also starred in some Tarzan films. On numerous occasions Peter Lupus was asked to play the legendary Greek hero, as well as the equally well-built demigods Samson and Ursus, even though the film titles often fused or confused them in their titles. Peter Lupus was born in 1932, Indianapolis, Indiana, USA. He is an actor and producer, known for Challenge of the Gladiator (1965), Mission: Impossible (1966) and Goliath at the Conquest of Damascus (1965). At his beginnings he was hired by the US Army to appear in a series of commercials playing the role of Superman with the permission of "Detective Comics". He did so for many months until the Playgirl pictorial was published. He then subsequently was terminated and the Army for many years later did no longer produce recruitment commercials for broadcast television. With his height, bodybuilder physique and handsome good looks, he was a natural for the starring roles in the sword and sandal/mythological muscle man movies. He went to Europe and got the lead roles and top billing, under the name "Rock Stevens," in four such films in the final years (1964-1965) of that genre's popularity.
The film features the evocative score of Angelo Lavagnino, a prolific Italian composer responsible for the soundtracks of Orson Welles' films: Othello and Chimes at Midnight, among many others. The motion picture was middlingly directed by Domenico Paolella, as it has some gaps and failures . It includes various roles arrive and depart regularly with no regard to logic or the plot, many scenes are suddenly chopped short leaving wild flaws in logic and some principals change sides for seemingly no reason at all. Domenico Paolella was a musical filmmaker who, in the 1960s, became a director of films based on classical mythologies. Domenico was a craftman, an acceptable director and writer, known for filming all kind of genres such as Nunexploitation : ¨The nun and the devil¨, ¨Unholy Convent¨ , Peplum : ¨Maciste Nell'inferno Di Gengis Khan¨, ¨Il Gladiatore Che Sfidò L'Impero¨ , ¨Golia Conquista Di Bagdad¨ , ¨Ercole Contro Tiranni , ¨Maciste against Mongols¨, among others . Rating : 4.5/10 , very mediocre Peplum movie .
Peters Lupus, or Rock Stevens (from the 1960s TV series Mission: Impossible), was one of the many bodybuilders who followed in the footsteps of Steve Reeves and dedicated himself to the peplum genre in the 1960s. Here he plays the famous character from Greek mythology. As Hercules/Rock Stevens fights to free the people of Babylon from an evil sorceress and other villains. Of course, the best scenes are those in which Hercules, pushing a winch with chains, brings down the city of Babylon, although several of its photographs are taken from Robert Aldrich's film Sodom and Gomorrah.
It stars the stiff and expressionless Rock Stevens, whose real name was Peter Lupus.was one of the many actors and -not one of the best-who played this kind of bulky hero that was all the rage in the 1960s. Other actors of the same style worthy of consideration were the following: Steve Reeves, Gordon Scott, Richard Harrison, Dan Vadis, Reg Park, Sergio Ciani, Samson Burke, Brad Harris, and several others. However, none of them surpassed the great Steve Reeves in popularity and impact, followed by the also notable Gordon Scott, who also starred in some Tarzan films. On numerous occasions Peter Lupus was asked to play the legendary Greek hero, as well as the equally well-built demigods Samson and Ursus, even though the film titles often fused or confused them in their titles. Peter Lupus was born in 1932, Indianapolis, Indiana, USA. He is an actor and producer, known for Challenge of the Gladiator (1965), Mission: Impossible (1966) and Goliath at the Conquest of Damascus (1965). At his beginnings he was hired by the US Army to appear in a series of commercials playing the role of Superman with the permission of "Detective Comics". He did so for many months until the Playgirl pictorial was published. He then subsequently was terminated and the Army for many years later did no longer produce recruitment commercials for broadcast television. With his height, bodybuilder physique and handsome good looks, he was a natural for the starring roles in the sword and sandal/mythological muscle man movies. He went to Europe and got the lead roles and top billing, under the name "Rock Stevens," in four such films in the final years (1964-1965) of that genre's popularity.
The film features the evocative score of Angelo Lavagnino, a prolific Italian composer responsible for the soundtracks of Orson Welles' films: Othello and Chimes at Midnight, among many others. The motion picture was middlingly directed by Domenico Paolella, as it has some gaps and failures . It includes various roles arrive and depart regularly with no regard to logic or the plot, many scenes are suddenly chopped short leaving wild flaws in logic and some principals change sides for seemingly no reason at all. Domenico Paolella was a musical filmmaker who, in the 1960s, became a director of films based on classical mythologies. Domenico was a craftman, an acceptable director and writer, known for filming all kind of genres such as Nunexploitation : ¨The nun and the devil¨, ¨Unholy Convent¨ , Peplum : ¨Maciste Nell'inferno Di Gengis Khan¨, ¨Il Gladiatore Che Sfidò L'Impero¨ , ¨Golia Conquista Di Bagdad¨ , ¨Ercole Contro Tiranni , ¨Maciste against Mongols¨, among others . Rating : 4.5/10 , very mediocre Peplum movie .
Did you know
- TriviaPeter Lupus (a.k.a. Rock Stevens) shaved his chest for this movie in order to achieve the expected "Hercules" look.
- GoofsAt ~6:00 Hercules, Rock Stevens, lifts two rocks to throw them at the enemy soldiers. Both of them, likely the same rock twice, have an obvious straight parting line seam where the two halves of the hollow "rock" are joined.
- Quotes
King Phaleg: [to Taneal] Never have I seen the splendour of the moon in the day light!
- ConnectionsEdited into Cynful Movies: Hercules and the Tyrants of Babylon (2019)
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Herkules gegen die Tyrannen von Babylon
- Filming locations
- Morocco(desert location)
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 1h 26m(86 min)
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1
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