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Sorcerer (1977)

Sorcerer (1977)
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The plot of William Friedkin's suspense thriller originated with the same Georges Arnaud novel that inspired Henri-Georges Clouzot's French suspense classic The Wages of Fear (1953). Roy Scheider, Bruno Cremer, Francisco Rabal, and Amidou play four men who, for various reasons, cannot return to their own countries. They end up in a dismal South American town where an American oil company is seeking out courageous drivers willing to haul nitroglycerin over 200 miles of treacherous terrain. The four stateless men have nothing to lose -- and, besides, they'll be paid 10,000 dollars apiece, and be granted legal citizenship, if they survive. The suspense is almost unbearable at times, even outdistancing the tension level of The Wages of Fear in certain scenes. Sorcerer had all the earmarks of a moneymaker, but this picture bombed for a rather odd and silly reason: its glaringly inappropriate title. Fans of Friedkin's The Exorcist may have gone home disappointed that not one sorcerer ever rears its ugly head. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

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Starring:
Roy ScheiderBruno Cremer, (more)
Director(s):
William Friedkin
Theatrical MPAA Rating:
PG
Format(s):
DVD
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Synopsis of Sorcerer

The plot of William Friedkin's suspense thriller originated with the same Georges Arnaud novel that inspired Henri-Georges Clouzot's French suspense classic The Wages of Fear (1953). Roy Scheider, Bruno Cremer, Francisco Rabal, and Amidou play four men who, for various reasons, cannot return to their own countries. They end up in a dismal South American town where an American oil company is seeking out courageous drivers willing to haul nitroglycerin over 200 miles of treacherous terrain. The four stateless men have nothing to lose -- and, besides, they'll be paid 10,000 dollars apiece, and be granted legal citizenship, if they survive. The suspense is almost unbearable at times, even outdistancing the tension level of The Wages of Fear in certain scenes. Sorcerer had all the earmarks of a moneymaker, but this picture bombed for a rather odd and silly reason: its glaringly inappropriate title. Fans of Friedkin's The Exorcist may have gone home disappointed that not one sorcerer ever rears its ugly head. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

Theatrical Feature Running Time:
122 mins

Complete Cast of Sorcerer


Director(s):
William Friedkin
Writer(s):
Walon Green
Producer(s):
William Friedkin
Theatrical MPAA Rating:
PG(Adult Situations, Questionable for Children, Violence, Adult Language)
Categories:
Action / Adventure
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James W.

Caught between ROCKY and STAR WARS, released amidst a cloud of confusion ("Sorcerer"? Is it supernatural thriller like Exorcist? Then what's the deal with the truck on the poster?") is there any way this film could have succeeded? And a remake of a French film to boot, it's absolutely doomed. .. Think again! SORCERER presents a gritty, believable living hell and how our 4 main characters happen to fall into it, thus setting up their desperate attempt to escape it. Everything looks believable about the film, and the subtle but ominous Tangerine Dream soundtrack gives this action film the feeling of being trapped in a nightmare. 30 years later, why hasn't this film been given a better DVD treatment??!!

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Paul M.

A poorly audienced film, to be sure, as most viewers probably expected, and still expect, a sequel to Friedkin's Exorcist. This is not; there's no sorceror, insofar as black magic goes. Plot is the same as the French Wages of Fear film. However, the similarity ends there. It is thoroughly modern, combining Palestinian terrorists, New Jersey hoods, French upper class embezzlers, and the mysterious assassin, Pancho. More questions are asked than answered in this amazingly silent movie: there's not much dialogue. But color abounds in this visual display of Friedkin's abilities. The brutality of life at the end, when the other options are nonexistent is ferociously depicted. The recognition that corruption is its own reward shows in each pale, dead corner of Scheider's face. A must-see.

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ROBERT W.

This was a fabulous, taut thriller. We were on the edges of our seats, which is no mean praise from our jaded movie-watching house. We don't need no steenking sorcerers to enjoy a good film. VERY highly recommended.

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