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IMDbPro

Caravan to Vaccarès

  • 1974
  • PG
  • 1h 38m
IMDb RATING
4.6/10
478
YOUR RATING
Caravan to Vaccarès (1974)
Neil Bowman is traveling through France when he meets British photographer Lila. They are hired by French land owner Duc de Croyter to escort a Hungarian scientist to New York. But they soon realize that the job is not a cushy number, and have to deal with a gang of kidnappers who will stop at nothing to get their hands on the scientist.
Play trailer2:32
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ActionMysteryThriller

Neil Bowman, meets Lila, a British photographer, in France. They're hired to escort a Hungarian scientist to New York by French landowner Duc de Croyter but face a gang of ruthless kidnapper... Read allNeil Bowman, meets Lila, a British photographer, in France. They're hired to escort a Hungarian scientist to New York by French landowner Duc de Croyter but face a gang of ruthless kidnappers after the scientist.Neil Bowman, meets Lila, a British photographer, in France. They're hired to escort a Hungarian scientist to New York by French landowner Duc de Croyter but face a gang of ruthless kidnappers after the scientist.

  • Director
    • Geoffrey Reeve
  • Writers
    • Alistair MacLean
    • Paul Wheeler
    • Joseph Forest
  • Stars
    • David Birney
    • Charlotte Rampling
    • Michael Lonsdale
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    4.6/10
    478
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Geoffrey Reeve
    • Writers
      • Alistair MacLean
      • Paul Wheeler
      • Joseph Forest
    • Stars
      • David Birney
      • Charlotte Rampling
      • Michael Lonsdale
    • 16User reviews
    • 7Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 2:32
    Trailer

    Photos42

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    Top cast18

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    David Birney
    David Birney
    • Bowman
    Charlotte Rampling
    Charlotte Rampling
    • Lila
    Michael Lonsdale
    Michael Lonsdale
    • Duc de Croyter
    • (as Michel Lonsdale)
    Marcel Bozzuffi
    Marcel Bozzuffi
    • Czerda
    Michael Bryant
    Michael Bryant
    • Zuger
    Serge Marquand
    • Ferenc
    Marianne Eggerickx
    • Cecile
    Françoise Brion
    Françoise Brion
    • Stella
    Vania Vilers
    Vania Vilers
    • Vania
    Manitas De Plata
    • Ricardo
    Jean-Pierre Cargol
    • Jules
    Jean-Pierre Castaldi
    Jean-Pierre Castaldi
    • Pierre
    Jean Michaux
    • Waiter
    Alan Scott
    Alan Scott
    • Receptionist
    Jean-Yves Gautier
    Jean-Yves Gautier
    • Gendarme
    • (as Jean-Yves Gauthier)
    Marcella Markham
    • American Guest
    Gordon Tanner
    Gordon Tanner
    • American Guest
    Graham Hill
    • Helicopter Pilot
    • Director
      • Geoffrey Reeve
    • Writers
      • Alistair MacLean
      • Paul Wheeler
      • Joseph Forest
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews16

    4.6478
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    Featured reviews

    4Red-Barracuda

    Caravan to Tedium

    The last time I saw this was in high school on the last day of term when you were allowed to watch a movie in class. We were looking forward to watching something like the Karate Kid when one of our classmates, Murphy, excitedly whipped out this tape THAT HE HAD BROUGHT IN SPECIALLY - this film, Caravan to Tedium. To our utter dismay our Geography teacher put it on and the class spent a double period thoroughly disenjoying themselves watching this Alastair Maclean snoozefest - all except Murphy that is, who was lapping it up big time. When our class wasn't collectively daydreaming about shoving Murphy's face into a vat of pig excrement we endured PG rated thrills and Wednesday afternoon level excitement as Charlotte Rampling and David 'personality' Birney run around dodging bullets while attempting to achieve something tiresome. I watched it again today, so the question is, was it better 34 years later? No, not really. Murphy if you're out there, this unfortunate event may have happened in 1986 but you're still a bell end for instigating it.
    5I_Ailurophile

    "Action-adventure thrillers" don't get much more uninteresting than this

    It's not exactly encouraging at the outset; plot development, dialogue, and scene writing alike all feel very thin, and one simply has to accept it at face value or immediately give up outright. David Birney spends a lot of scenes looking like a deer in the headlights, and some supporting cast members similarly don't come off well; in fairness, there are no few times when I can only question Geoffrey Reeve's choices as director. I recognize plenty of swell ideas in every regard, which I assume follow from Alistair MacLean's novel, but even the adapted screenplay has issues with narrative flow, nevermind particular instances of editing or sequencing. There is a complete, cohesive story being told, but the simple fact of the matter is that with the way 'Caravan to Vaccarès' is made, sometimes it really doesn't feel like it.

    It all looks good, at least. There are many stunts and effects throughout, and they come off well; the filming locations and production design are excellent. The costume design, hair, and makeup are easy on the eyes; Stanley Myers' score isn't anything special, but it's enjoyable, and lends flavor. The narrative is actually fairly compelling, despite its weak cinematic treatment and the extraordinary leaps of faith it often requires as a viewer. Then again, even the heartiest suspension of disbelief can't withstand some of the storytelling decisions made here, and the Just So sensibilities that characterized the writing from the start collide with distinct dubious moments to place significant, low upper limits on one's engagement and entertainment. It would have taken astonishingly little to realize this as a satirical Euro-spy comedy, but no, it's an earnest action-adventure thriller. This poses a problem.

    I don't think 'Caravan to Vaccarès' is altogether bad. It is, however, sadly middling, and even its best ideas just don't amount to much of anything. Insofar as it's enjoyable, it's a title one is able to enjoy very passively, without actively watching. There are worse ways to spend one's time, sure, but even if you're a major fan of someone involved, nor is there any specific reason to watch; Charlotte Rampling and Michel Lonsdale are rather wasted. Oh well. Check it out if you want, I won't stop you. Just don't get your hopes up.
    4MetalMiike

    Like A Bunch of Film-Makers Went on Holiday to France and Made a Movie in their Spare Time.

    It's weird, this film; you get the impression that the makers of this snooze-fest spent more time in the local bars than on set. In fact, it's a surprise not to see Harry Alan Towers' name on the credits; it certainly has the flavour of one of his tax-shelter productions but here the motivation behind the project seems to be for all involved to enjoy a prolonged stay in Provence. Despite the fact that the film is supposed to take place all over the region, Les Baux and the area around it stands in for almost everything.

    David Birney makes for a spectacularly colourless hero - as Michael Lonsdale says at one point "you're a walking cliché". What Lonsdale is doing in this is anyone's guess. For some reason, the most interesting character, played by Rampling, is sidelined, whereas, regardless of the book, she should have been the central figure because she clearly has the skill to carry the movie (which would have been dull anyway, but at least we'd have got more of something pretty to look at).

    All in all a pointless affair that is only worth watching to see how action-less an action movie can be.
    4Popey-6

    Pretty, unexcitable stuff

    It's a shame that such a lame plot should be hung on such picturesque locations, with some documentary style reportage shoved in for extra length. A shorter film may have held the tension a little more, and a more charismatic lead may not have mangled his lines so much. The female lead also, was not allowed to do enough resulting in a pretty but boring affair. It builds towards the end but the lead actor's own redemption is too little too late and should have been revealed earlier in the film. Not awful, just a pity. Unexciting but nice enough to grace TV schedules of the early hours.
    Guy Grand

    A few recommendable moments but overall, pass the Nyquil

    Charlotte Rampling must have been so bored with her character in this production that she went full tilt the next year after this picture was released into one of cinema's most confusing epics, 1975's "Zardoz," just for the challenge. Well, at least she got a good tan on location in this movie, and photographs here better than in any other film she has starred in. Alas, poor Charlotte appears to be so much smarter than the material she is given in this hamhanded cat-and-mouse yarn, shot entirely in the quaint environs of Provence, France. She smiles alot, and behind that grin she seems to be saying "Please call it a wrap so I can drive over to Marseilles for a wild night on the town."

    Dullness doesn't translate to ineptitude however. The production values for this co-British/French effort are as high as those found on the other Alistair MacLean knock-offs of the '70s, like "Puppet on a Chain," "When Eight Bells Toll," and "Fear Is The Key." Like Barry Newman in "Fear Is The Key," actor David Birney gets to show his limited emotional range as the stalwart MacLean hero thrown into the middle of a deadly game of international policies and kidnapping. As a wandering American playboy, disenchanted with the Vietnam War and America, he stumbles into the schemes of the Duc, played with continental charm by the wonderfully droll Michael Lonsdale. Birney is coerced into protecting a Hungarian scientist who holds the secret formula to converting solar energy into economical power in his head. Shadowy hitmen, presumably hired by someone who wants that formula, follow their every move. Birney is occasionally forced to wipe his lackluster smirk from his face and perform some chop-socky moves on the villains.

    Unlike the wartime MacLean novels like "Ice Station Zebra," "The Guns of Navarone," and "Where Eagles Dare," "Caravan To Vaccares" falls into the same trap as the majority of Alastair's later books displayed, that of simple chases, one curveball "twist," and a strong-chin, 2-dimensional hero always able to easily thwart the antagonists. The interesting tidbits to this picture come with the villains. Uncharacteristically (at least these days), this film's villains speak French, and yet their dialogue is not subtitled into English. Of course, you have no idea what they're saying if you don't parlez-vous, but in an interesting directorial choice, that's okay. Their actions and intensity translate their motives, and it's that decision to allow their every words to go unsubtitled that I applaud this element of the production. The producers knew their audience was intelligent enough to figure out what would be occurring on screen without spooning out translated dialogue. Thank you!

    As for the principals, well, as mentioned, David Birney isn't the most convincing of badasses around. He exuded more testosterone when he got into a tiff with Meredith Baxter on "Bridget Loves Bernie." Charlotte Rampling is given very little to do but play the sexy, compliant companion who lets Birney make all the decisions. Her looks, however, betray this simplitude. She has the presence to suggest she could easily outmaneuver Birney on a speed-chess match. Which leaves us with Michael Lonsdale. Here, he exudes more confidence than his put-upon inspector in "The Day of the Jackal." He has a comfortable, wise delivery, a sly way of sizing up his minions and adversaries, that is a pleasure to watch. It is a shame Bond producers did not use him to the fullest extent when they cast him as super villain Hugo Drax in "Moonraker."

    The plot neatly ties up most of its loose ends by the last reel, and you're rendered the satisfaction that David Birney didn't go on to reprise his role in any sequels. However, any movie that climaxes with him being attacked by rodeo clowns isn't all that bad. My rating: ** out of ****.

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    Related interests

    Bruce Willis in Die Hard (1988)
    Action
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    Thriller

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      First theatrical feature film of actor David Birney.
    • Goofs
      In the opening scene, the assassin kills the bird watcher sitting in his car with a suppressed revolver. Next, he stalks and shoots his young cohort, but this time with a suppressed automatic pistol. When the automatic fires, it produces an unsuppressed gunshot sound. Next, when the assassin is stopped helping the gypsies with their flat tire, he's carrying the silenced revolver tucked in the front of his pants.
    • Quotes

      Bowman: [speaking to the woman thumbing for a ride as she approaches his car] Voulez assistance?

      Lila: [suspiciously] You another French sex maniac?

      Bowman: No. Another American sex maniac.

      Lila: [as she starts to get into his car] That makes all the difference.

    • Alternate versions
      There are two known version of this film. The international cut is 98 minutes and a heavily cut US version is 84 minutes.
    • Soundtracks
      Rhumba
      (uncredited)

      Music by Manitas De Plata

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    FAQ14

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • 1976 (United States)
    • Countries of origin
      • United Kingdom
      • France
    • Languages
      • English
      • French
      • Romany
    • Also known as
      • Alistair Maclean's Caravan to Vaccarès
    • Filming locations
      • Arènes d'Arles - 1 Rond-Point des Arènes, Arles, Bouches-du-Rhône, France(bullfighting sequence)
    • Production companies
      • Geoffrey Reeve Productions
      • S.N. Prodis
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 38m(98 min)
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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