An assortment of international criminals plans to steal priceless Egyptian artifacts from a Cairo museum.An assortment of international criminals plans to steal priceless Egyptian artifacts from a Cairo museum.An assortment of international criminals plans to steal priceless Egyptian artifacts from a Cairo museum.
Ahmad Mazhar
- Kerim
- (as Ahmed Mazhar)
Kamal El-Shinnawi
- Ghattas
- (as Kamal El Shennawy)
Mona Saxena
- Bamba
- (as Mona)
Youssef Shabaan
- 2nd Officer
- (as Youssef Shaaban)
Mohamed Abdel Rahman
- 4th Officer
- (as Capt. Mohamed Abdel Rahman)
- Director
- Writers
- Joan Scott(originally as Joanne Court)
- W.R. Burnett
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaOnly English-language film of Faten Hamamah, who was, at the time, Egypt's most popular female film star. She may have hoped for an international career to rival that of her then husband, Omar Sharif, but none eventuated.
- GoofsAli returns to his flat and Amina is unexpectedly there. He lays down on a bed wearing a coat and tie. In a subsequent shot his coat and tie are gone. Then a shot or two later, he's wearing his coat and tie again, still laying on the bed.
- ConnectionsRemake of The Asphalt Jungle (1950)
Featured review
Inferior remake of The Asphalt Jungle'
One of the greatest strengths of filmmaker John Huston was that he knew great source material when he read it and, just as importantly, not to change anything for the sake of change alone. This is a virtue also shared by the makers of Cairo' a very faithful adaptation of W. R. Burnett's wonderful novel The Asphalt Jungle'. The only problem, of course, is that Huston got there thirteen years earlier.
The switch of locale from the brooding, empty streets of downtown America to the teeming bazaars and markets of Egypt's capital works surprisingly well but in every other department the film is vastly inferior to the Huston version. There is a slight switch of emphasis from the role of the hired gun (Richard Johnson instead of Sterling Hayden) to the criminal mastermind (played with typical cool detachment by George Sanders) and the object of the robbery this time is nothing less than Cleopatra's jewels in the Cairo Museum! Beyond that, however, it's almost a scene for scene remake of the earlier film.
Sanders and Johnson do surprisingly well, even though Johnson is hopelessly miscast as an Arab. The supporting cast is poor at best. Cairo' compares favourably against the other two versions of the tale, Cool Breeze' (1972) & The Badlanders' (1958) a western with Alan Ladd! but that's not really saying too much.
Stick with the Huston version or, better still, find a copy of the novel it's one of the outstanding works of 20th Century American literature.
The switch of locale from the brooding, empty streets of downtown America to the teeming bazaars and markets of Egypt's capital works surprisingly well but in every other department the film is vastly inferior to the Huston version. There is a slight switch of emphasis from the role of the hired gun (Richard Johnson instead of Sterling Hayden) to the criminal mastermind (played with typical cool detachment by George Sanders) and the object of the robbery this time is nothing less than Cleopatra's jewels in the Cairo Museum! Beyond that, however, it's almost a scene for scene remake of the earlier film.
Sanders and Johnson do surprisingly well, even though Johnson is hopelessly miscast as an Arab. The supporting cast is poor at best. Cairo' compares favourably against the other two versions of the tale, Cool Breeze' (1972) & The Badlanders' (1958) a western with Alan Ladd! but that's not really saying too much.
Stick with the Huston version or, better still, find a copy of the novel it's one of the outstanding works of 20th Century American literature.
helpful•135
- Ale fish
- Aug 6, 2000
Details
- Runtime1 hour 31 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content