HD Cinema (103): The Man Who Would Be King 6pm & 10pm EST

Sean Mota

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Original poster
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Sep 8, 2003
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Summary: A grandly entertaining, old-fashioned adventure based on the Rudyard Kipling short story, The Man Who Would Be King is the kind of rousing epic about which people said, even in 1975, "Wow! They don't make 'em like that anymore!" When director John Huston (The Maltese Falcon, The Treasure of the Sierra Madre, The African Queen) first started trying to make the film, with Gable and Bogart, the project was derailed by the latter's death. It was a few decades before Huston was able to finally realize his dream movie--and with an unimprovable cast. Sean Connery and Michael Caine are, respectively, Daniel Dravot and Peachy Carnahan, a pair of lovably roguish British soldiers who set out to make their fortunes by conning the priests of remote Kafiristan into making them kings. It's a rollicking tale, an epic satire of imperialism, and the good-natured repartee shared by Caine and Connery is pure gold. In today's screen adventures, humor is usually imposed on the material by a writer or director trying to make some kind of cleverly self-aware comment ("Hey, we know it's a movie!"), but that sort of jokiness can create so much ironic distance that it pushes the audience right out of the picture. Huston lets the humor emerge naturally from the characters, for whom we wind up caring more deeply than we ever expected. The digital video disc includes a wonderful documentary on the making of the film. --Jim Emers
 
from IMDB

unquestioned masterpiece

Four things combine to ensure this movie's greatness - the literary craftsmanship of Rudyard Kipling, the directorial stature of John Huston, and the incandescent chemistry of acting greats Sean Connery and Michael Caine. The broad, sweeping vistas of south central Asia, magically photographed, add to the allure. This is a morality tale of human greed and ambition run amock, but Kipling's light touch keeps it at the level of a black comedy, not a tragedy. Huston did not change the dramatic viewpoint, and he includes ample touches of comedy. Though the movie is a grand lark, a gripping adventure, and a rollicking good yarn, at the end we feel both emotionally drained and wiser than we were. Largely overlooked, this movie aspires to level of some of David Lean's masterpieces, and, if not quite entirely making it, comes damn near close enough. A must-see.
 
This was just on HDNET, I hope Voom does a better job, the PQ was awful on HDNET, I think it was during the time period Dish was mucking with 3 channels/transponder.
 
I agree -- a very good film.

But VOOM really misleads its viewers into thinking their programming is all "original aspect ratio." This film's OAR was 2.35:1, not VOOM's 16x9.

Nothing wrong with showing it in 16x9, as long as you don't imply that that's its OAR.
 
One of my top 10 favorites of all time,it was a VERY wide screen presentation,and one of john hustons last but better ones..Caine and Connery in a "great buddy "movie..That was Caine's wife Chakira as roxanne
 
Trivia
John Huston tried to launch the film version of "The Man Who Would Be King" many times before completing it . It was originally conceived as a vehicle for Clark Gable and Humphrey Bogart in the fifties, and later as a vehicle for Burt Lancaster and Kirk Douglas. When it was considered as a vehicle for Robert Redford and Paul Newman , Newman suggested Sean Connery and Michael Caine .


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Director 'Huston, John' had failed to cast the role of Roxanne before shooting started. During filming, at a small dinner party for some cast and crew Huston was asked if he had yet filled the part. When he answered no, all heads turned toward Shakira Caine, star 'Caine, Michael' 's wife. Huston cast her on the spot.
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Karroom Ben Bouih, who played the high priest Kafu-Selim, was 103 years old when he made his first and only film appearance. When he saw some of the footage he declared that now he would live on forever.
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Sean Connery stood on the bridge while the first (nonstructural) ropes were cut. However, for the actual fall, he was replaced by stuntman Joe Powell.
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The main theme of the movie is an old Irish air "The Moreen" to which Thomas Moore wrote the lyrics "The minstrel boy to the war is gone." However the words sung by Daniel and Peachie are from the Christian Hymn "The Son of God goes forth to war" by Reginald Heber.
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Albert Whitlock completed the matte painting of the fortress in only six hours.
 
i must say the presentation was great on voom. this has always been my favorite unknown "best movie", anyone can say godfather or termanator etc and loved watching it in HD..many siad it was robbed for the acadamy award that year..by the way now you know what it's like looking for OBL (those are the areas or supposed to be) on the n.e border area afghan-pakistan etc..

MAN WHO WOULD BE KING, THE
John Huston, 1975

Our rating:













This was writer-director John Huston's dream project for decades. He originally wanted to film the Rudyard Kipling short story in the 1940s with Clark Gable and Humphrey Bogart. Later he envisioned Richard Burton and Peter O'Toole. However the long wait paid off: Michael Caine, Sean Connery, and Christopher Plummer deliver outstanding performances in a classic adventure that delivers thrills even as it meditates on issues of power and imperialism.
Kipling (Plummer) is working in his office in Lahore, India when an aged beggar enters and begins to spin an amazing tale that fascinates the writer. We flashback to Kipling's office many years earlier when a young, vibrant, if somewhat boorish Peachy Carnehan (Caine) and his dashing friend Daniel Dravot (Connery) ask the writer to witness some "official" document. Stationed in India, these British army officers have been supplementing their salaries with various scams. Down on their luck after squandering their money on vice, they have concocted a new scheme: they will sojourn into the hills of Kafiristan (a province in eastern Afghanistan now called Nuristan) where they will set themselves up as rulers. Intrigued by these brazen soldiers-of-fortune, Kipling secures them an appointment with the District Commissioner (May). However the official sees their true colors and sends them packing. Dravot and Carnehan endure assorted hardships as they trek through the storied Khyber Pass, and although Dravot gets mistaken for a god at one point, things don't quite work out as planned.

This is a grand adventure tale that does not stint on characterization. Connery and Caine join the ranks of Huston's classic overachievers, most notably Bogart's Fred C. Dobbs in THE TREASURE OF SIERRA MADRE. Caine may have gone a wee bit over-the-top but that helped the audience distinguish between the the natures of the two men. The film was shot on location in Morocco because of the costs and dangers of working in Afghanistan. Unfortunately, the score by the celebrated Jarre (LAWRENCE OF ARABIA) failed to match the evocative power of the setting. However these are minor flaws in a delightful and memorable film.



C--cinebooks
 
It is maybe my second favorite after The Wind & the Lion.

This IS an epic.

Watching now. I HATE to admit the HDnet showings were in OAR and this mnovie is much better in OAR.
 
I just don't get Voom not showing this in OAR. Or all the other stuff they've butchered.
 

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