As Alexander the Great prepares for his battle against his great rival, King Darius III, he must also face down his own war weary army and internal rivals.As Alexander the Great prepares for his battle against his great rival, King Darius III, he must also face down his own war weary army and internal rivals.As Alexander the Great prepares for his battle against his great rival, King Darius III, he must also face down his own war weary army and internal rivals.
Jeff Pomerantz
- Young Greek Soldier
- (as Jeff Palmer)
William Arvin
- The Four Guardsmen
- (as Bill Arvin)
Tanya Lemani
- Slave Girl - Dancer
- (uncredited)
Featured reviews
If I remember correctly, I only saw this flick once, and that was many years ago. Therefore I don't remember much about it except that it was so bad, it was hilarious. First of all was William Shatner in his usual hammy, overacting mode (did he have any other?). As a horse lover, I could not help but notice that Alexander's famous horse, Bucephalus, was played by an American Saddle Horse, which breed was not developed for many centuries after Alexander's time. However, I must recommend "Alexander the Great" mainly because it contains probably my favorite line in motion picture history. Alexander says of Bucephalus, "Did I not tell you that among horses he too is a God?" This stinker is worth seeing for that alone!
I have not seen this film, but I truly would like to, as I was the main Belly dancer in it. Can anyone tell me where I can get a copy of it. I didn't even know who William Shatner or Adam West was at that time. The only person I knew was Joseph Cotton. Carey Leverette was the choreographer (may he rest in peace). Yes, even for the 60's it came across quite corny on the set, but it was a lot of fun. Please, Please, tell me where I can obtain a copy. I have been searching and searching for this for many years. I even got on Shatner's web sight and asked where I could get a copy. I never received the information. Thank you so much. Antoinette
This is a pilot episode about a failed series concerning Alexander the Great . It is a brief biopic about the famous conqueror of the Fourth Century, his doubts, betrayals and relentless challenges. As Alexander : William Shatner, crossed to Asia on his eleven years of conquest to an unknown world. The picture deals with his taking on Persian King Darius III and especially his General Memnon : Cliff Osmond . Finally, Darius III to be defeated in three bloody battles : Granico, Issos, Gaugamela.
Fimmaker offers a medium budget film with a few fresh and insightful ideas about Alexander. There is plenty of globe-trotting horse going along here, along with one or two battle sequences and they are made in scale enough but no much, and, being rather effective. Willam Shatner is an acceptable choice as the Macedonian hero, I was surprised to find he really fits his character pretty well . He brings a high level to the part, doing us focus on his bravery, obstinacy, and integrity. However, the picture is more focused on the discussion, debates, arguments, and confrontation with his Generals. These commanders are well played by a fine plethora of secondaries as Joseph Cotten, Adam West, Simon Oakland, John Doucette , and Alexander's main contender nicely performed by John Cassevetes. While Alexander's love interest being acted by the beautiful Ziva Rodann. In the film stands out a rousing and epic musical score by Leonard Rosenman. The motion picture was professionally directed by Phil Karlson, though with no much enthusiasm.
The picture is partially based on historical events. As Alexander was born in Pella and died in Babylon (356-323 BC), he was disciple to great philosopher Aristoteles and conquering most of the then known world, creating a Greek empire that spanned all the way from the Balkans to India . Son of the great king Philip II of Macedonya who vanquished in Queronea and united the Greek cities in the league of Corintho. Alexander conquested all of the ancient Greek tribes and led the Macedonian army against Persians. From his conquest of Egypt founding Alexandria as capital, he took Phenician coast cities, Byblos, Sidon, Tiro and subsequently Babylon and Persepolis that he fired. In spite of his gay orientation and loving relationship with his childhood friend, Hephastion, he married a Persian princess called Roxanne. Later on, he continued his unstoppable conquests arriving in Afghanistan and Khiver Pass and pushing all the way to India where he reigned unchallenged. In India he was infected by fevers , dying a bit later on. Then his vast empire to be divided amongst his Generals : Seleuco, Antioco, Ptolomy.
There are various versions about Alexander, these are the following ones : Alexander the Great 1956 by Robert Rossen with Richard Burton, Danielle Darrieux as his mother Olympias , Claire Bloom, Gustavo Rojo, Ruben Rojo, Marisa de Leza, Fredric March as Philipo, Peter Cushing, Barry Jones, Michael Hordern. Alexander 2004 by Oliver Stone with Colin Farrell, Angela Jolie as Olympias , Jared Leto, Anthony Hopkins as Aristoteles , Rosario Dawson, Christopher Plummer, Val Kilmer as Philipo. And Young Alexander 2010 by Jalal Mehri with Sam Heugham, Lauren Cohen.
Fimmaker offers a medium budget film with a few fresh and insightful ideas about Alexander. There is plenty of globe-trotting horse going along here, along with one or two battle sequences and they are made in scale enough but no much, and, being rather effective. Willam Shatner is an acceptable choice as the Macedonian hero, I was surprised to find he really fits his character pretty well . He brings a high level to the part, doing us focus on his bravery, obstinacy, and integrity. However, the picture is more focused on the discussion, debates, arguments, and confrontation with his Generals. These commanders are well played by a fine plethora of secondaries as Joseph Cotten, Adam West, Simon Oakland, John Doucette , and Alexander's main contender nicely performed by John Cassevetes. While Alexander's love interest being acted by the beautiful Ziva Rodann. In the film stands out a rousing and epic musical score by Leonard Rosenman. The motion picture was professionally directed by Phil Karlson, though with no much enthusiasm.
The picture is partially based on historical events. As Alexander was born in Pella and died in Babylon (356-323 BC), he was disciple to great philosopher Aristoteles and conquering most of the then known world, creating a Greek empire that spanned all the way from the Balkans to India . Son of the great king Philip II of Macedonya who vanquished in Queronea and united the Greek cities in the league of Corintho. Alexander conquested all of the ancient Greek tribes and led the Macedonian army against Persians. From his conquest of Egypt founding Alexandria as capital, he took Phenician coast cities, Byblos, Sidon, Tiro and subsequently Babylon and Persepolis that he fired. In spite of his gay orientation and loving relationship with his childhood friend, Hephastion, he married a Persian princess called Roxanne. Later on, he continued his unstoppable conquests arriving in Afghanistan and Khiver Pass and pushing all the way to India where he reigned unchallenged. In India he was infected by fevers , dying a bit later on. Then his vast empire to be divided amongst his Generals : Seleuco, Antioco, Ptolomy.
There are various versions about Alexander, these are the following ones : Alexander the Great 1956 by Robert Rossen with Richard Burton, Danielle Darrieux as his mother Olympias , Claire Bloom, Gustavo Rojo, Ruben Rojo, Marisa de Leza, Fredric March as Philipo, Peter Cushing, Barry Jones, Michael Hordern. Alexander 2004 by Oliver Stone with Colin Farrell, Angela Jolie as Olympias , Jared Leto, Anthony Hopkins as Aristoteles , Rosario Dawson, Christopher Plummer, Val Kilmer as Philipo. And Young Alexander 2010 by Jalal Mehri with Sam Heugham, Lauren Cohen.
Not a whole lot of plot, but fun to watch for Shatner's performance. Adam West had surprisingly few lines for a second-billed role.
As I write this, the pilot is available to watch for free on YouTube. Just search for "Shatner Alexander the Great."
As I write this, the pilot is available to watch for free on YouTube. Just search for "Shatner Alexander the Great."
If it wasn't for the really terrible dialogue, this would make for quite a passable sword and sandals adventure, William Shatner is in full theatrical ham mode as the eponymous character who must combat the maniacal King Darius of Persia as well as a few of his more independently minded generals. It can only really be described as a very loose interpretation of history - there is oodles of creative licence going on - but it is still quite a good fun little drama that lets our hero roll around in the dirt, without his shirt coming off, and we've even got some belly dancing too! It's rubbish, really - but I still, perversely perhaps, I rather enjoyed it.
Did you know
- TriviaThis was actually shot as a pilot for a prospective TV show, but it was passed on and shelved. Four years later, when stars Adam West and William Shatner had each reached a certain level of fame to get respectable ratings for the show - West was in the throes of Batman-mania from the success of his Batman (1966) series and Shatner was the star of Star Trek (1966) - it was released as a made-for-TV movie.
- GoofsAt the start when Alexander is attacking Persians there is no blood on his sword despite killing a number of them.
- ConnectionsEdited from The Giant of Marathon (1959)
Details
- Runtime
- 52m
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1
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