Sundown (1941)

Sundown (1941)
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Adapted by Barre Lyndon from his own Saturday Evening Post short story, Sundown takes place in Africa during WW2. British army major Coombes (George Sanders) cannot abide the local Arab population, and he has even less time for district commissioner Crawford (Bruce Cabot), who has befriended the natives. Crawford is particularly fond of the beautiful Zia (Gene Tierney), whom Coombes suspects of being a Nazi sympathizer. But when the British troops must make their way through treacherous uncharted territory, they are forced to rely upon the guidance of the enigmatic Zia. Cedric Hardwycke spouts reams and reams of symbolic dialogue as the local British bishop, while among the native extras is a very young Dorothy Dandridge. Impressively photographed (by Charles Lang) and directed (by Henry Hathaway), Sundown just misses being as profound as it obviously wants to be. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

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Starring:
Bruce CabotGene Tierney, (more)
Director(s):
Henry Hathaway
Format(s):
DVD
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Synopsis of Sundown

Adapted by Barre Lyndon from his own Saturday Evening Post short story, Sundown takes place in Africa during WW2. British army major Coombes (George Sanders) cannot abide the local Arab population, and he has even less time for district commissioner Crawford (Bruce Cabot), who has befriended the natives. Crawford is particularly fond of the beautiful Zia (Gene Tierney), whom Coombes suspects of being a Nazi sympathizer. But when the British troops must make their way through treacherous uncharted territory, they are forced to rely upon the guidance of the enigmatic Zia. Cedric Hardwycke spouts reams and reams of symbolic dialogue as the local British bishop, while among the native extras is a very young Dorothy Dandridge. Impressively photographed (by Charles Lang) and directed (by Henry Hathaway), Sundown just misses being as profound as it obviously wants to be. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

Theatrical Feature Running Time:
91 mins

Complete Cast of Sundown


Director(s):
Henry Hathaway
Writer(s):
Barré LyndonCharles G. Booth
Producer(s):
Walter Wanger
Categories:
War
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    Agim and Meg Z.

    In 1941 Great Britain was fighting to save not only its empire but its very independence. Some Britons still realized both were worth the effort and this movie reflects that view. A bit preachy but less so than I expected. The Italian POW preaches a sermon (of admittedly dubious strategic or geographical value) about fascist war plans to take over the world by conquering Africa. A dying soldier preaches about society’s need for church, army, and idealists. And the movie ends with an Anglican Bishop preaching an actual real, live sermon concerning British colonial officers in far-flung places. Seeing Gene Tierney’s bare midriff throughout the entire film was a bonus. The sound quality was poor but lots of old movies have that trouble, at least in this reviewer’s low-tech living room. The action scenes are dated (though the tracer rounds during the night action are startling and realistic-seeming). All in all, an enjoyable movie.

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