+

poster of The Long Ships
Rating: 6/10 by 53 users

The Long Ships (1964)

Moorish ruler El Mansuh is determined to locate a massive bell made of gold known as the "Mother of Voices." Viking explorer Rolfe also becomes intent on finding the mythical treasure, and sails with his crew from Scandinavia to Africa to track it down. Reluctantly working together, El Mansuh and Rolfe, along with their men, embark on a quest for the prized object, but only one leader will be able to claim the bell as his own — if it even exists at all.

Directing:
  • Jack Cardiff
Writing:
  • Berkely Mather
  • Frans G. Bengtsson
  • Beverley Cross
Stars:
Release Date: Wed, Apr 22, 1964

Rating: 6/10 by 53 users

Alternative Title:

Country:
United Kingdom
Yugoslavia
Language:
العربية
English
Runtime: 02 hour 06 minutes
Budget: $3,000,000
Revenue: $0

Plot Keyword: ship, vikings (norsemen), bell, 10th century

CinemaSerf

Sidney Poitier just about carries his role off, as a Moorish prince obsessed with a mythical great golden bell ("The Mother of All Voices") - reputedly made by monks many years ago. The rest of the cast, however, are fish out of water - Richard Widmark and Russ Tamblyn are not at all plausible as Viking raiders/explorers and the ebbs and flows of the storyline and the pretty verbose dialogue stretch the imagination well beyond the point when it stops being fun and starts being dull. Oskar Homolka gets up to some mischief as the only potentially realistic Viking "Krok" but then Lionel Jeffries and Gordon Jackson show up and it is laughable again. The film does have a good, lavish, look about it and the attention to detail (costumes etc.) are suitably sumptuous but it is way too long and wastes a good adventure story.


My Favorite

Welcome back!

Support Us

Like Movienade?

Please buy us a coffee

scan qr code