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IMDbPro

In the Shadow of Kilimanjaro

  • 1985
  • R
  • 1h 37m
IMDb RATING
5.1/10
565
YOUR RATING
In the Shadow of Kilimanjaro (1985)
ActionAdventureDramaHorrorThriller

Because of a severe drought in Kenya in 1984, ninety thousand starving baboons go on a murderous rampage, killing humans and animals alike.Because of a severe drought in Kenya in 1984, ninety thousand starving baboons go on a murderous rampage, killing humans and animals alike.Because of a severe drought in Kenya in 1984, ninety thousand starving baboons go on a murderous rampage, killing humans and animals alike.

  • Director
    • Raju Patel
  • Writers
    • T. Michael Harry
    • Jeffrey M. Sneller
  • Stars
    • John Rhys-Davies
    • Timothy Bottoms
    • Irene Miracle
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.1/10
    565
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Raju Patel
    • Writers
      • T. Michael Harry
      • Jeffrey M. Sneller
    • Stars
      • John Rhys-Davies
      • Timothy Bottoms
      • Irene Miracle
    • 14User reviews
    • 18Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

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    Top cast13

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    John Rhys-Davies
    John Rhys-Davies
    • Chris Tucker
    Timothy Bottoms
    Timothy Bottoms
    • Jack Ringtree
    Irene Miracle
    Irene Miracle
    • Lee Ringtree
    Calvin Jung
    • Mitsuki Uto
    Michele Carey
    Michele Carey
    • Ginny Hansen
    Don Blakely
    Don Blakely
    • Julius X. Odom
    Leonard Trolley
    Leonard Trolley
    • Colonel Emerson Maitland
    Patty Foley
    • Lucille Gagnon
    Patrick Gorman
    Patrick Gorman
    • Eugene Kurtz
    Jim Boeke
    • Claud Gagnon
    Mark Watters
    • Carlysle Bandy
    Percy Edwards
    • Baboon voices
    • (voice)
    Carl Vundla
    • District Officer Tshombe
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Raju Patel
    • Writers
      • T. Michael Harry
      • Jeffrey M. Sneller
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews14

    5.1565
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    Featured reviews

    Wizard-8

    More like "In The Bottom Of The Barrel"

    If you've ever wondered why the Scotti Brothers music company didn't last long when they tried their hand in cinema, this movie would be a good place to start. It's hard to believe this actually got released widely enough that Siskel and Ebert took the time to review it on their show (both giving it thumbs down.) Poorly photographed, atrociously edited, and with a plot that's more of an idea than an actual story, given how little is done with anything that comes up. The gore sequences, while explicit, come off as a desperate attempt to entertain more than anything else. There is one eye-catching visual (during the flat tire sequence) that will get your attention and make you wonder how they did it. But unless you also happen to like seeing talented actors of some fame get humiliated, it's not worth the effort to see. Though afterwards you will be able to say truthfully, "I saw Timothy Bottoms' bottom!"
    barnabyrudge

    Fans of rampaging animal movies....don't bother!

    A ridiculous story of a drought in Africa which results in 90,000 baboons deciding to attack humans as their only way of getting food. Yes, that's right, 90,000 red-assed baboons munch their way through the cast during this silly 97 minute horror flick. There's a fair bit of needless gore, which doesn't help, and lots of build ups which peter out without delivering an exciting or frightening pay-off. The only decent thing about this movie is John Rhys-Davies (who was so great in Raiders of the Lost Ark), who injects a bit of interest in a somewhat underwritten role.
    lor_

    Hungry baboons attack

    My review was written in April 1986 after watching the film at a Times Square screening room.

    Filmed over two years ago in Kenya, "In the Shadow of Kilimanjaro" is an old-fashioned adventure thriller in the borderline horror genre of a last-stand-at-the-house against predators, previously essayed in such films as "Kingdom of the Spiders", "Savage Harvest" and "Roar". Box office outlook is weak.

    A famine has caused the 90,000 baboons on a Kenya wildlife reservation to begin banding together an preying on humans (film claims on-screen to be base on a true story, but the 1984 date given is impossible). Wildlife ranger John (Jack to his friends) Ringtree -played by Timothy Bottoms, wants to evacuate the area of about 200 people but the government and manager of the local mine Chris Tucker (John Rhys-Davies) view him as an alarmist and oppose his efforts. As usual in corny horror films like this one, the cast (especially female) is given to wandering alone in the bush long after word of animal attacks has been announced, making them easy prey.

    Eventually the danger comes close to home and all survivors huddle together in a hotel run by Michele Carey. The last stand against the marauding animals is successful and a convenient rainstorm spells the end of the drought and the problem.

    Hokey film benefits from atmospheric location photography, but suffers from sometimes inaudible dialog recorded in direct sound. Rhys-Davies uses a prop-cigar and a new accent in a fun job as a villain, but by the final reels he has become a true-blue good guy, with only the baboons as hissable targets. Bottoms is merely okay as the bland hero, Irene Miracle is extremely glamorous as his "please come home with met to America" nagging wife (in a role reserved decades ago in these films for Elsa Martinelli) and it's fun to see 1960s starlet Michele Carey again, as the friendly neighborhood hotelier. Leonard Trolley is so hammy as an old British colonial type recalling the good old days that one wishes he had been fed to the baboons early on.

    Director Raju Patel substitutes gore effects for suspense in an episodic presentation that fails to knit individual scenes together. Unconvincing matte shots are used to show hundreds of baboons storming down from the hills, while more manageable stagings of a dozen or o animals are used to enact the attacks on humans. Situation inevitably conjures up memories of Cy Endfield's minor 1965 classic "Sands of the Kalahari", but instead of that film's genuinely chilling climax of the baboons descending in long shot on the surviving protagonist (which left the horror to one's imagination), we now get severed limbs, half-eaten faces and torsos and other ineffective gimmicks.
    8squirrel_burst

    A cool twist on a zombie movie... with monkeys! Also based on true events.

    "In The Shadow of Kilimanjaro" has a lot of good things going for it. The story, like every script that is based on true events, has some facts embellished but is convincing and flows well. The basic premise is that in Kenya in 1984, there was this "perfect storm" of events that lead to a terrifying spectacle. A severe drought killed off much of the vegetation and small animals in the country. What it didn't kill were thousands of baboons, which eventually turned into hungry mobs, devouring anything in their path, including humans.

    The animal training and the shots of wildlife are really amazing, lending a lot of credibility to the story. There are literally hundreds of animals on the screen and you think to yourself that the shots of these apes all running in one direction must have been stock footage or computer effects but no. There was extensive work when the film was made to train all of these animals to perform for some key scenes in the movie that are quite impressive.

    The film almost plays like a zombie film, with hordes of man-eating creatures who can't be reasoned with just waiting for the time to strike and in that aspect the film can be quite effective. Where it doesn't quite work is that the film doesn't go far enough into the horror genre, with many shots of potentially shocking attacks being abruptly cut. This might have been done for budgetary reasons, but nonetheless they leave you wanting so much more than they deliver. The ending also comes very abruptly and isn't quite as satisfying as it should be. The film is nevertheless quite good and if you're a fan of zombie films, this is one of those stories that didn't want to be a variation on the genre, but ended up being on. If you've ever wanted to see a good animal-based horror story, look no further. (On VHS, October 5, 2012)
    dasiren

    Brilliant Film,Scared me as a kid-

    Having spent a large part of my life in Kenya, this film made me afraid to set out into the Tsavo for years. Based on Events that I remember the old people talking about

    the film integrates those stories with just the right amount

    of fright!! The fear that the drought brought was displayed truthfully in this film. It captures the rugged beauty of the Kenyan countryside and people such as no other films made in Kenya have. If you have a fear of animals, this heightens it!

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      [Postscript] The film you have just seen is a fictionalized account of a true incident which took place in Africa during the serious drought in 1984. The producers wish to make it known that not a single animal was mistreated during the making of this motion picture. On completion of filming the Baboons were rehabilitated to their natural surroundings. The Baboons were captured under the supervision of the Kenyan Ministry of Tourism and Wildlife from the areas where they had been a nuisance to the local population.
    • Crazy credits
      [Postscript] The film you have just seen is a fictionalized account of a true incident which took place in Africa during the serious drought in 1984. The producers wish to make it known that not a single animal was mistreated during the making of this motion picture. On completion of filming, the Baboons were rehabilitated to their natural surroundings. The Baboons were captured under the supervision of the Kenyan Ministry of Tourism and Wildlife from the areas where they had been a nuisance to the local population.
    • Connections
      Featured in Trailer Trauma 3: 80s Horrorthon (2017)
    • Soundtracks
      In the Shadow of the Kilimanjaro
      Words and Music by Chieli Minucci & Allan Smallwood

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • May 9, 1986 (United States)
    • Countries of origin
      • United Kingdom
      • Kenya
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Im Schatten des Kilimandscharo
    • Filming locations
      • Kenya
    • Production companies
      • Film Corporation of Kenya
      • Intermedia Films
      • Mansfield Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $181,410
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $181,410
      • May 11, 1986
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 37m(97 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby

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