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The Wind and the Lion By Robert Horton
The up-and-down career of director John Milius had no finer moment than
The Wind and the Lion, a dandy adventure tale. It's based on fact:
An American (played by Candice Bergen) and her two children were kidnapped
in 1904 Morocco by a Berber tribe, an international incident settled by
President Theodore Roosevelt's "big stick" military muscle. The
film's sweep and swagger are unabashedly old-fashioned, even as Milius
occasionally pokes fun at the grand characters. Some of the peripheral
material is sloppy, but as long as Milius keeps his sights locked on the
two powerful protagonists, he's dead-on: Brian Keith makes a gutsy
Roosevelt, and Sean Connery is in splendid form (with Scots accent in
place--got a problem with that?) as the dashing Berber chieftain. Perhaps
overshadowed by John Huston's The
Man Who Would be King the same
year (Huston plays advisor John Hay in this one), Wind makes a
marvelous companion piece.
Academy Awards
The Wind and the Lion received Academy Awards
nominations for Music Scoring Awards (Best Original Score; Jerry
Goldsmith) and Sound (Harry W. Tetrick, Aaron Rochin, William McCaughey,
Roy Charman). |
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FILM
FACTS |
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|  | Director: John Milius
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|  | Stars: Sean Connery, Candice Bergen, John Huston, Brian Keith, Geoffrey Lewis
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|  | Released: May 22, 1975
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|  | Availability: DVD VHS CD | | |
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