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IMDbPro

The Brigand of Kandahar

  • 1965
  • Approved
  • 1h 21m
IMDb RATING
5.4/10
696
YOUR RATING
The Brigand of Kandahar (1965)
Official Trailer
Play trailer2:39
1 Video
15 Photos
AdventureHistory

The British army fights off rampaging locals in 1850s India.The British army fights off rampaging locals in 1850s India.The British army fights off rampaging locals in 1850s India.

  • Director
    • John Gilling
  • Writer
    • John Gilling
  • Stars
    • Ronald Lewis
    • Oliver Reed
    • Duncan Lamont
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.4/10
    696
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • John Gilling
    • Writer
      • John Gilling
    • Stars
      • Ronald Lewis
      • Oliver Reed
      • Duncan Lamont
    • 15User reviews
    • 17Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    The Brigand of Kandahar
    Trailer 2:39
    The Brigand of Kandahar

    Photos15

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    Top cast16

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    Ronald Lewis
    Ronald Lewis
    • Robert Case
    Oliver Reed
    Oliver Reed
    • Eli Khan
    Duncan Lamont
    Duncan Lamont
    • Colonel Drewe
    Yvonne Romain
    Yvonne Romain
    • Ratina
    Katherine Woodville
    Katherine Woodville
    • Elsa Connelly
    • (as Catherine Woodville)
    Glyn Houston
    Glyn Houston
    • Jed Marriot
    Sean Lynch
    Sean Lynch
    • Rattu
    Walter Brown
    • Hitala
    Inigo Jackson
    • Captain Boyd
    Jeremy Burnham
    Jeremy Burnham
    • Captain Connelly
    Joe Powell
    Joe Powell
    • Color Sergeant
    Henry Davies
    • Second Lt. Crowe
    John Southworth
    • Second Lt. Barlow
    Caron Gardner
    Caron Gardner
    • Serving Maid
    John Maxim
    • Nasty Jailer
    • (uncredited)
    James Payne
    James Payne
    • Soldier in Shoot-out
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • John Gilling
    • Writer
      • John Gilling
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews15

    5.4696
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    Featured reviews

    searchanddestroy-1

    Best example of British colonialist period film

    Now, in 2024, we often forget that the UK film industry gave us many adventure movies in the fifties and sixties, at the scale of many Hollywood films, with as much budget, actors, directing skills. It was during an era when UK still had many colonies around the world; it was the opposite to the social tendancies that this movie industry will show us during the same period. And which begun in the forties, just after WW2 and for instance London after the Blitz,, among ruins. The roots of the kitchen sink tradition of the British cinema. Now,, concerning this John Gilling's film, I was so amazed by the quality. I often counfound this film with BANDIT OF ZHOBE, same director, also an adventure film, but with Victor Mature instead of Ron Lewis. We have here the proof that director John Gilling was not only an excellent thriller and crime director and also a terrific horrorr provider - SHADOW OF THE CAT, PLAGUE OF THE ZOMBIES - but also a little genius in terms of adventure flicks: FURY AT SMUGGLER'S BAY, PIRATES OF BLOOD RIVER...Do not miss them because they are "just" British.
    6EdgarST

    Hammer India

    Hammer Film returned to India (at Elstree Studios) with this production, but this time the project lacked the punch "The Stranglers of Bombay" (1959) had. It is a moral tale about ethnic pride, patriotism, military honor and love, but surprisingly it lacks passion. While John Gilling handled the story with vivid action scenes, as he did in previous adventure films he made for Hammer, his rather literate script proved too ambitious to be fully developed in 78 minutes. The previous Hammer attempt to describe India under British rule was a darker story by American scriptwriter David Zelag Goodman, dealing with evil followers of goddess Khali, but in this occasion Gilling directly entered the political field and added an adultery subplot with passable results. On the acting side, while Ronald Lewis is at his usual adequate efficiency level as hero, Oliver Reed is bland and noisy in the role of a ruthless rebel chief, easily overshadowed by Yvonne Romain as his wicked sister. (As she had left for Hollywood to work with Samuel Fuller, beautiful "Stranglers" actress Marie Devereux is sorely missed here). Gilling would turn out his best works for Hammer a year later, when the remarkable "The Plague of the Zombies" and "The Reptile" were released.
    6Marlburian

    Good enough

    After watching TBoK for some thirty minutes, this started to remind me of a Hammer film, my having missed the reference to Hammer in the opening credits.

    Other reviewers have noted its shortcomings, such as uniforms that would not have kept their brightness for very long, artificial-looking studio sets and Ronald Lewis's unremarkable performance - certainly he's no Tyrone Power, who played a similar role - of a mixed-race officer - in "King of the Khyber Rifles".

    To which might be added: easily-reloadable rifles used by both sides that were not produced in 1850 and the risible scenes of key characters bouncing along, ostensibly on horses, against back projection as they led their men into battle.

    The English countryside served well enough for India for most, if not all, of the film, and, dare I say it in 2022, so did the blacked-up "Indians".

    At least the ending was a bit of a surprise, not least because of the hundreds of men that suddenly appeared in a film that up to then had only featured a score or so at any one time. Now I know that scenes were lifted from "Zarak", I plan to watch that film to see how many.

    Worth a little more than the 5.4 average rating. I thought.
    5dinky-4

    A weak central character, poorly cast

    Even those with a fondness for those "Northwest Frontier" movies set in the British Raj of the 1800's will probably be disappointed by this minor, unpersuasive, and somewhat uncharacteristic entry from Hammer Films. The costumes have that clean, new look -- as if they just came from a rental shop -- and the handful of sets are too tidy and well-lit to be anything other than studio creations. Even the rocks have a fiberglass look.

    More troubling than the film's skimpy budget, however, is the casting of its main character. He's supposed to be half-English, half-Indian -- one of those chaps who's worked his way up in the ranks of the British Army but who feels he's still regarded with hostility and suspicion by his colleagues. Not only does Ronald Lewis lack the face for this part, (there's nothing at all Indian about him), but he's also short of the darkly-compelling charisma which might make this character "work." He comes across as a provincial English actor who's dressed up in left-over garb from a production of "Kismet." In his defense, however, it must be said that the script gives him little to work with since his character is poorly developed and too often seems simply like the victim of events going on around him.

    Oliver Reed might have been a better choice for the lead but here he plays the villain -- a rebellious chieftain who's said to be "half-mad." Unfortunately, this gives him license to indulge in some theatrical behavior which is more embarrassing than enlivening.

    At one point a captured British soldier is whipped by the rebels but even this sure-fire scene is too poorly staged to arouse much interest. (Why didn't the rebels tear the soldier's shirt all the way off? Didn't they take Flogging 101?)
    6CinemaSerf

    The Brigand of Kandahar

    Straight out of Rudyard Kipling's standard book of Raj adventures, this sees the disgraced "Lt. Case" (Ronald Lewis) dragooned from his regiment only to take up with their mountain-dwelling nemesis "Eli Khan" (Oliver Reed) swearing vengeance on the colonel (Duncan Lamont) who was responsible for his harsh treatment. The arrival of journalist "Marriot" (Glen Houston) upsets not just the army's applecart a little, but also sends a man high up into the mountains in whom the former soldier can confide. It's also becoming quite clear that though there's a degree of working trust between the khan and the deserter, it's highly likely that "Case" hasn't completely abandoned his loyalties to Queen and Country - and his boss suspects as much, too. Reed isn't really a natural here bedecked in his flowing garb, but there are still quite an entertaining series of flag-waving escapades with plenty of gunfire and menace amidst the polystyrene rocks and industrial scale cheese plants. Yvonne Romain pops up now and again as the selfish "Ratina" and does her best Caroline Munro impersonation, but luckily that element doesn't clog up the boy's own elements of derring-do with sharp knives. Nope, you will never remember it, but I like the genre and this is perfectly watchable.

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    Related interests

    Still frame
    Adventure
    Liam Neeson in Schindler's List (1993)
    History

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Glyn Houston says in his memoirs, whilst shooting a fight scene, he was injured by a stuntman who hit him over the head with a rifle.
    • Goofs
      During a skirmish at the 40-min mark, a brigand signals a British soldier to jump back before attacking him.
    • Quotes

      Captain Boyd: Nearly a week ago, I presented you with an ultimatum. I'm still waiting for your answer.

      Elsa: I've thought about your ultimatum, Captain Boyd. I intend to convey it to Robert Case on his return.

      Captain Boyd: That should be at any moment. You've made a wise decision.

      Elsa: You leave me with no alternative, of course. Why are you so vindictive?

      Elsa: I don't like wives who cheat. Especially with half-castes. And I don't like half-castes who masquerade as officers.

      Elsa: I suggest you complain to the War Office who appoint them.

      Captain Boyd: Your behaviour has made that quite unnecessary - in this instance, at any rate.

      Captain Boyd: It's ironical that your husband should volunteer for special mission with your lover, don't you think?

    • Crazy credits
      Opening credits prologue: FORT KANDAHAR A British outpost on the North West frontier of India 1850.
    • Connections
      Features Zarak (1956)

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • November 1965 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Languages
      • English
      • Bengali
    • Also known as
      • Die Letzten von Fort Kandahar
    • Filming locations
      • Elstree Studios, Borehamwood, Hertfordshire, England, UK(studiod)
    • Production company
      • Hammer Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 21m(81 min)
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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