Hercules Against the Barbarians
Original title: Maciste nell'inferno di Gengis Khan
IMDb RATING
4.5/10
240
YOUR RATING
The 12th century... Failing to overrun Cracow, Genghis Khan kidnaps the beautiful heir to the throne. But Hercules saves her and defeats Khan's throne. In HD.The 12th century... Failing to overrun Cracow, Genghis Khan kidnaps the beautiful heir to the throne. But Hercules saves her and defeats Khan's throne. In HD.The 12th century... Failing to overrun Cracow, Genghis Khan kidnaps the beautiful heir to the throne. But Hercules saves her and defeats Khan's throne. In HD.
Howard Ross
- Gasan
- (as Renato Rossini)
Fortunato Arena
- Mongol Soldier
- (uncredited)
Salvatore Billa
- Mongol Courtier
- (uncredited)
Featured reviews
When the Mongols invade Europe, they are defeated at Krakow for the first time after many victories. Kubilai (Ken Clark), the responsible commander, asks his emperor Genghis Khan for a second chance. Kubilai has two ideas how to avoid another defeat. First, he wants to eliminate Maciste (aka Hercules in the American dubbed version), the hero of the Polish people, played by Mark Forest. And then, Kubilai holds a prisoner who reveals an important secret: the princess and future queen of Poland lives in a village under false identity. The Mongols want to capture her, but of course, Maciste is a guardian to any maiden in distress...
Maciste is wrestling with a giant snake and a crocodile (yes, in Poland!); there is also a fight in an arena with spikes (spears) similar to the famous scene in 'Flash Gordon' (1980). This is all smoothly directed and well photographed. People who liked similar movies of the genre shouldn't be disappointed.
Maciste is wrestling with a giant snake and a crocodile (yes, in Poland!); there is also a fight in an arena with spikes (spears) similar to the famous scene in 'Flash Gordon' (1980). This is all smoothly directed and well photographed. People who liked similar movies of the genre shouldn't be disappointed.
The setting and time is odd, It feels like Hercules is walking around nearly naked amid much later European armor wearing troops. Another thing that may or may not be true is that there are some beautiful shots of lots of extras storming the castle, but when we are usually with the principal actors we rarely see anything of this scope and or are on interior sets with poor fake skies. So I'm saying there may be stock footage being used here.
Regardless of this the sets are quite well made and the photography in 2:35 is also frequently impressive and the film has a good music score as well. The story is decent but it's not heavy on fighting or action for the most part. The 2 fight scenes with animals are pretty bad, with the pretty big snake, or really bad, with the floppy pillow they call an alligator. And yeah why is there an Alligator in Poland or did the Huns bring it from Mongolia with them? Wait there aren't any alligators there either.
But the basic story, more of a kind of romance amid the barbarians is good and the women sexy. Mark Forest gets to do some acting and doesn't do it too badly. Despite what may, or may not, be stock footage the outdoor photography is good as is the interior costuming and photography. The weak and distracting thing is those bad set built "exteriors."
Still this is a real movie, not a super cheap or shoddy entry in this genre, nor is it a kind of hidden treat for beefcake fans--be they men or women. Music score and production design is above average and there are a lot of well done sets.
Not typical in good ways but low on action overall. Most of the action is in the final third of the film. Above average acting and casting in this one--the Mongols actually look like Mongols not Italians.
Can't say this is great. Can't say it's terrible either.
Regardless of this the sets are quite well made and the photography in 2:35 is also frequently impressive and the film has a good music score as well. The story is decent but it's not heavy on fighting or action for the most part. The 2 fight scenes with animals are pretty bad, with the pretty big snake, or really bad, with the floppy pillow they call an alligator. And yeah why is there an Alligator in Poland or did the Huns bring it from Mongolia with them? Wait there aren't any alligators there either.
But the basic story, more of a kind of romance amid the barbarians is good and the women sexy. Mark Forest gets to do some acting and doesn't do it too badly. Despite what may, or may not, be stock footage the outdoor photography is good as is the interior costuming and photography. The weak and distracting thing is those bad set built "exteriors."
Still this is a real movie, not a super cheap or shoddy entry in this genre, nor is it a kind of hidden treat for beefcake fans--be they men or women. Music score and production design is above average and there are a lot of well done sets.
Not typical in good ways but low on action overall. Most of the action is in the final third of the film. Above average acting and casting in this one--the Mongols actually look like Mongols not Italians.
Can't say this is great. Can't say it's terrible either.
Sword and sandal film with Mark Forest as Maciste
In the German dub of this film by Domenico Paolella he is called Marko, but Mark Forest (1933-2022) actually plays Maciste, who has been haunting the Italian peplum genre since the monumental film "Cabiria" (1913) and helps out wherever a a very strong man is needed.
This time Marko/Maciste supports the Poles against the superior power of the Mongol ruler Genghis Khan (Roldano Lupi). In particular, it's about Maciste's love interest Arminia (Jose Greci (1941-2017), who played Jesus' mother Mary in "Ben Hur"), who turns out to be the Polish crown princess. The positive thing about this rather poorly made film is that Maciste has opponents on equal terms. Ken Clark (1927-2009), who was soon to start as Agent 077 alias Dick Malloy, spreads fear and terror as the nasty muscle man Kubilai. Howard Ross/Renato Rossini, born in 1941, is in no way inferior as Gason. Maciste has to face a really nasty fight to the death with a dark-skinned slave (the former football player Harold Bradley (1929-2021), who still had a long acting career ahead of him). And then there is the mysterious Arias (Gloria Milland/Maria Fie), who also causes surprises...
A not-so-well-done sword and sandal film from the late phase of the genre, which is interesting simply because the main actor Mark Forest (who trained as an opera singer during his time in Rome!) has to deal with three equal powerhouses.
In the German dub of this film by Domenico Paolella he is called Marko, but Mark Forest (1933-2022) actually plays Maciste, who has been haunting the Italian peplum genre since the monumental film "Cabiria" (1913) and helps out wherever a a very strong man is needed.
This time Marko/Maciste supports the Poles against the superior power of the Mongol ruler Genghis Khan (Roldano Lupi). In particular, it's about Maciste's love interest Arminia (Jose Greci (1941-2017), who played Jesus' mother Mary in "Ben Hur"), who turns out to be the Polish crown princess. The positive thing about this rather poorly made film is that Maciste has opponents on equal terms. Ken Clark (1927-2009), who was soon to start as Agent 077 alias Dick Malloy, spreads fear and terror as the nasty muscle man Kubilai. Howard Ross/Renato Rossini, born in 1941, is in no way inferior as Gason. Maciste has to face a really nasty fight to the death with a dark-skinned slave (the former football player Harold Bradley (1929-2021), who still had a long acting career ahead of him). And then there is the mysterious Arias (Gloria Milland/Maria Fie), who also causes surprises...
A not-so-well-done sword and sandal film from the late phase of the genre, which is interesting simply because the main actor Mark Forest (who trained as an opera singer during his time in Rome!) has to deal with three equal powerhouses.
This is a good movie. It is kind of scarier. It has a great story line. It also has great acting.See this movie. 4.7 is just underrating it. I give it 8 out of 10. See this movie. It is a great movies
OK, so here's another Italian muscle-man Sword & Sandal Pelplum cheapie. It's a bit different in that it has an oriental setting and intrigue involving Gengis Kahn, the Mongols, a midget (err, little person) in a Harlequin costume -- very creepy -- and this weird story arc about a hero (called Maciste, Son of Hercules) who happens upon a wretched kingdom under the domination of Gengis Kahn, that is actually a group of warlords at each other's throat, under the domination of a very sinister & worldly Kahn who develops a sort of grudging respect for Maciste and allows him to fight fairly for his life against his finest warrior in some kind of gauntlet of knives, then locks Maciste up in a jail cell but allows the smoking red-hot Mongol babe to visit him with her secret ally the doctor, who plot to free Maciste so he can overthrow Kahn. Maciste runs around in a golden collared costume with a cape, there are sword fights galore, a Mongol princess with the hots for Maciste in addition to the Saracen queen whom Maciste falls in love with and is chosen by Kahn to be his wife, a renegade swordsman upstart challenging Kahn for the throne who is in cahoots with the foxy Mongol princess, lost of heroic jumps, back-flips and missions of derring-do, armies of thousands facing off on the battle plain to decide their fate, then turning heel on Kahn to try and wipe him out with Maciste as their star warrior, hoping to save the day and keep Kahn from marrying the sexy queen or killing her, whichever comes first.
If this sounds somewhat familiar, bingo: Mike Hodges and Dino DeLaurentis *PLUNDERED* this film for the script to their 1980 updating of FLASH GORDON, featuring music by Queen and Sam J. Jones as Flash Gordon, Quarterback, New York Jets, and the gosh-darned nicest guy to ever save the universe. All we need is a Brian May guitar solo during the heroic cavalry charge and we are talking deja vu all over again. Not that this is a bad thing, mind you, it's just that at about the scene where Flash -- I mean Maciste -- spares the Mongol warrior sentenced to kill him in the knife gauntlet or die himself and Kahn reacts with bemusement to his adviser ("Klytus I'm bored ...") I started saying to myself: "I've seen this somewhere before." Curious that the more familiar version of the form is the one that came after it.
But then again it makes sense, since FLASH GORDON is essentially a Peplum anyway, based on dime novella cartoons, made & produced by mostly Italians and essentially a fast paced, disposable little cartoon. FLASH GORDON even has a variation on the Veil Dance (here shown by oriental dancers spinning plates on sticks -- weird), the obligatory trial of strength whereby the hero shows his prowess by knocking down all the evil emperor's forces with little or no effort, the offbeat amusing friend/warrior whom Flash forms a sort of convenient alliance with, and of course the Standing Ovation ending where everyone gets to applaud Flash and thank him for saving the day. That scene is missing from the English version of HERCULES AGAINST THE BARBARIANS that I found, but all things being equal I think we can cut them some slack -- This is a fabulous, exciting, colorful, atypical and very rewarding little costumer, with a sort of unique agenda amongst the Peplum sub-genre in that it tells of a conflict which the hero gets caught up in rather than just providing set pieces for Gordon Mitchell to tear buildings apart using his bare hands. Again, nothing wrong with that mind you, but the sense of variety is refreshing, and the film has an interesting feel for using color, interior spaces and characterization beyond the muscle-man & his groupies that you don't see in a lot of these things.
8/10: Highly recommended.
If this sounds somewhat familiar, bingo: Mike Hodges and Dino DeLaurentis *PLUNDERED* this film for the script to their 1980 updating of FLASH GORDON, featuring music by Queen and Sam J. Jones as Flash Gordon, Quarterback, New York Jets, and the gosh-darned nicest guy to ever save the universe. All we need is a Brian May guitar solo during the heroic cavalry charge and we are talking deja vu all over again. Not that this is a bad thing, mind you, it's just that at about the scene where Flash -- I mean Maciste -- spares the Mongol warrior sentenced to kill him in the knife gauntlet or die himself and Kahn reacts with bemusement to his adviser ("Klytus I'm bored ...") I started saying to myself: "I've seen this somewhere before." Curious that the more familiar version of the form is the one that came after it.
But then again it makes sense, since FLASH GORDON is essentially a Peplum anyway, based on dime novella cartoons, made & produced by mostly Italians and essentially a fast paced, disposable little cartoon. FLASH GORDON even has a variation on the Veil Dance (here shown by oriental dancers spinning plates on sticks -- weird), the obligatory trial of strength whereby the hero shows his prowess by knocking down all the evil emperor's forces with little or no effort, the offbeat amusing friend/warrior whom Flash forms a sort of convenient alliance with, and of course the Standing Ovation ending where everyone gets to applaud Flash and thank him for saving the day. That scene is missing from the English version of HERCULES AGAINST THE BARBARIANS that I found, but all things being equal I think we can cut them some slack -- This is a fabulous, exciting, colorful, atypical and very rewarding little costumer, with a sort of unique agenda amongst the Peplum sub-genre in that it tells of a conflict which the hero gets caught up in rather than just providing set pieces for Gordon Mitchell to tear buildings apart using his bare hands. Again, nothing wrong with that mind you, but the sense of variety is refreshing, and the film has an interesting feel for using color, interior spaces and characterization beyond the muscle-man & his groupies that you don't see in a lot of these things.
8/10: Highly recommended.
Did you know
- TriviaItalian censorship visa #42711 issued April 10, 1964.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Best in Action: 1964 (2020)
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Die letzte Schlacht des Dschingis Khan
- Filming locations
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Gross worldwide
- $284,756
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