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poster of Nine Hours to Rama
Rating: 6.1/10 by 8 users

Nine Hours to Rama (1963)

José Ferrer and Horst Buchholz star in this fictionalised account of events leading up to the assassination of Indian spiritual leader and independence campaigner Mahatma Gandhi.

Directing:
  • Mark Robson
Writing:
  • Stanley Wolpert
  • Nelson Gidding
Stars:
Release Date: Tue, Apr 30, 1963

Rating: 6.1/10 by 8 users

Alternative Title:
9 hours to Rama - US
Nove ore per Rama - IT

Country:
United Kingdom
United States of America
Language:
English
Runtime: 01 hour 59 minutes
Budget: $0
Revenue: $0

Plot Keyword: assassination, history of india

Horst Buchholz
Naturam Godse
José Ferrer
Superintendent Das
Don Borisenko
Naryan Apte
Robert Morley
P.K. Mussardi
Harry Andrews
General Singh
P. Jairaj
G.D. Birla

CinemaSerf

In theory, this ought to have been an interesting look at just what drove Nathuram Gohdse (Horst Buchholtz) to plan and assassinate Mahatma Gandhi (J.S. Casshyap). Instead, what we get is a rather ploddingly miscast historical affair that though it does try, and try quite hard, simply doesn't really work. We are told by retrospective just why this Hindu held Gandhi responsible for the murders of many thousand Hindus by Muslims - acts for which he is determined to seek vengeance, and how he is prepared to travel the length and breadth of his country to achieve his goal. The casting of Horst Buccholz, an attractive man who is a master at illustrating fear and panic - he has a wonderful face for conveying these emotions - is bizarre, but not so odd as Robert Morley, Harry Andrews (Gen. Singh) and a really wooden José Ferrer as Gopal Das - the policeman determined to try and thwart the myriad of ongoing plots. Though beautifully shot and with some considerable attention paid to the look of the film, the story lacks pace, the characters depth and but for an almost doppelgänger performance from an eerily familiar looking Casshyap, this struggles above the parapet of a procedural melodrama. There is certainly an intensity to Buchholz's performance at the end, but otherwise I found this all took way too long to get anywhere...


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