8/10
Sanders of the river updated thirty years
19 April 2021
This is not as good as the great Sanders film of 1935 with Leslie Banks and Paul Robeson, but it is a better story. There is no singing here, no Paul Robeson or any great coloured personality like him, and, above all, there is no Hitchcock here to assist in the direction and add some horror scenes. Instead it's all the righteous Sanders, not as a commissioner here but as a police man hunting diamond smugglers, and a few women around him and some hospital personnel, headed by the veteran Albert Lieven, who used to play many villains and is an expert on guns and firing them also here. The action is not very stressful, although it gets speeded up towards the end when there are too many murders, but the story is nevertheless interesting: an old ailing doctor writing his will and intending to give his hospital grounds back to the natives, while others have greedy reasons to stop him. Although there are many casualties, he is not one of them. It's fairly good and exciting, and there are some great panoramic sweeps over the wildlife of Africa, including gorgeous crocodiles, but not at all as impressing as the earlier version, although here everything is in brilliant colours.
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