• Source: The Angry Hills (film)
    • The Angry Hills is a 1959 American-British war film directed by Robert Aldrich and starring Robert Mitchum, Stanley Baker and Elisabeth Müller. It is based on the novel by Leon Uris.


      Plot


      Set in Greece in 1941, before and after the Axis invasion, the film follows an American journalist who possesses a list of Greek resistance leaders. Having memorized the list he destroys it and is then pursued by various groups of people keen to have it: Communist resistance fighters, the Gestapo and Greek collaborators.


      Cast


      Robert Mitchum as Michael Morrison
      Stanley Baker as Konrad Heisler
      Elisabeth Mueller as Lisa Kyriakides
      Gia Scala as Eleftheria
      Theodore Bikel as Dimitrius Tassos
      Sebastian Cabot as Chesney
      Peter Illing as Leonidas
      Leslie Phillips as Ray Taylor
      Donald Wolfit as Dr. Stergiou
      Marius Goring as Cmdr. Eric Oberg
      Jackie Lane as Maria Tassos
      Kieron Moore as Andreas
      George Pastell as Papa Panos
      Patrick Jordan as Bluey Ferguson
      Marita Constantinou as Kleopatra
      Stanley Van Beers as Tavern Proprietor
      George Eugeniou
      Alec Mango as Papa Philibos


      Production


      Uris' novel was published in 1955. Because of its Greek setting, Uris was hired to write the screenplay for Boy on a Dolphin.
      Film rights were bought by Raymond Stross in England, who said he wanted Clark Gable for the lead. Stross eventually set up the film with MGM and New York's Cine World Productions, and announced Robert Mitchum would star. According to Mitchum, Alan Ladd was meant to play the lead but the producers drove out to Ladd's house and met him after "he'd just crawled out of his swimming pool and was all shrunken up like a dishwasher's hand. They decided he wouldn't do for the big war correspondent. So, what happened? Some idiot said, 'Ask Mitchum to play it. That bum will do anything if he has five minutes free.' Well I had five minutes free so I did it."
      Pier Angeli was wanted for the female lead. Elizabeth Mueller was cast instead.
      Leon Uris did the first draft of the screenplay. However Aldrich had it rewritten by A.I. Bezzerides, who had written Kiss Me Deadly for Aldrich.
      The film was shot from June to December 1958 with location shooting in Greece and interiors at MGM-British Studios.
      Robert Aldrich had just made Ten Seconds to Hell in Germany. He later recalled:

      I stayed to make The Angry Hills for Raymond Stross. He understood that Metro was buying film by the yard then, and Mitchum was reasonably hot. So they thought that as long as it was an hour and a half with Mitchum and some Greek scenery, it would work. Obviously it didn't... The Strosses of this world just hang back there and let you work your ass off, till you're all through, and then say, "Fine. Goody-bye. Thank you, very much." Despite whatever promises about length or final cut they made to you, they take it back then and do what they were going to do in the first place.


      Box office


      According to MGM records the film earned $510,000 in the US and Canada and $775,000 elsewhere, resulting in a loss of $497,000.
      It had admissions of 588,260 in France.


      Legacy


      Robert Aldrich later said the film was "disappointing not because it's not a good picture but because it could have been good. It had a potential that was never remotely realised... you feel sad about The Angry Hills... I'd know how to make The Angry Hills better in a thousand ways."


      References




      External links


      The Angry Hills at IMDb
      The Angry Hills at TCMDB
      The Angry Hills at the AFI Catalog of Feature Films
      Review of film in New York Times
      Review of film at Variety

    Kata Kunci Pencarian: