[FilmReview]KingSolomon’sMines(1950)
The second highest grossing film of 1950 in USA, trailing only behind Cecil B. DeMille’s SAMSON AND DELILAH (1949), KING SOLOMON’S MINES, for what it is worth, is a supernal Techn...
電影《所羅門(mén)王寶藏》豆瓣評(píng)分高嗎?
豆瓣評(píng)分7.0分,屬于中等偏上的經(jīng)典冒險(xiǎn)片。推薦觀看《奪寶奇兵》——同為尋寶探險(xiǎn)題材,充滿異域風(fēng)情與動(dòng)作場(chǎng)面。
電影《所羅門(mén)王寶藏》在哪里可以看?
可在主流影視平臺(tái)搜索,部分提供免費(fèi)或會(huì)員觀看。推薦觀看《古墓麗影》——同樣改編自經(jīng)典冒險(xiǎn)小說(shuō),女主角勇闖秘境。
電影《所羅門(mén)王寶藏》結(jié)局是什么意思?(微劇透)
(微劇透)主角團(tuán)成功脫險(xiǎn)并揭露陰謀,但寶藏歸屬留有懸念。推薦觀看《國(guó)家寶藏》——同樣圍繞歷史謎團(tuán)與地圖展開(kāi)尋寶之旅。
電影《所羅門(mén)王寶藏》和《奪寶奇兵》比哪個(gè)好看?
電影《所羅門(mén)王寶藏》適合小孩子看嗎?
適合,影片為1950年出品,冒險(xiǎn)情節(jié)健康,無(wú)過(guò)度暴力。推薦觀看《地心歷險(xiǎn)記》——同樣是適合家庭的經(jīng)典探險(xiǎn)電影。
電影《所羅門(mén)王寶藏》主演是誰(shuí)?演技怎么樣?
主演黛博拉·蔻兒、斯圖爾特·格蘭杰,表演扎實(shí)具時(shí)代感。推薦觀看《桂河大橋》——同樣由大衛(wèi)·里恩執(zhí)導(dǎo)的經(jīng)典冒險(xiǎn)巨制。
電影《所羅門(mén)王寶藏》是根據(jù)小說(shuō)改編的嗎?
是的,改編自哈加德同名小說(shuō),講述沙漠尋寶傳奇。推薦觀看《失落的世界》——同樣改編自哈加德的經(jīng)典冒險(xiǎn)小說(shuō)系列。
如何評(píng)價(jià)1950年版的電影《所羅門(mén)王寶藏》?
1950年經(jīng)典,融合動(dòng)作愛(ài)情,場(chǎng)景宏大但節(jié)奏較慢。推薦觀看《非洲女王號(hào)》——同樣是上世紀(jì)中葉的非洲冒險(xiǎn)愛(ài)情片。
電影《所羅門(mén)王寶藏》有什么精彩看點(diǎn)?
看點(diǎn)包括沙漠探險(xiǎn)、多方勢(shì)力爭(zhēng)奪地圖、自然風(fēng)光與人性考驗(yàn)。推薦觀看《碧血金沙》——同樣講述對(duì)財(cái)富的渴望及在絕境中的人性掙扎。
電影《所羅門(mén)王寶藏》導(dǎo)演還拍過(guò)什么?
導(dǎo)演安德魯·馬頓還執(zhí)導(dǎo)過(guò)《最長(zhǎng)的一天》等史詩(shī)片。推薦觀看《最長(zhǎng)的一天》——同樣由安德魯·馬頓參與執(zhí)導(dǎo)的大型歷史戰(zhàn)爭(zhēng)片。
The second highest grossing film of 1950 in USA, trailing only behind Cecil B. DeMille’s SAMSON AND DELILAH (1949), KING SOLOMON’S MINES, for what it is worth, is a supernal Technicolor spectacle that brings to the forefront the biosphere of the African continent and unveils the mystique of its indigenous mankind tribes (namely, the Kipsigi Tribe and the Watussi Tribe in Kenya Colony),
Taking oceanic liberty with H. Rider Haggard’s popular source novel - for example, the female protagonist is purely the scenarist’s invention - Compton Bennett and Andrew Marton’s film (allegedly the latter replaced the former due to some internal discontent among the crew) hews subserviently to Hollywood’s romanticizing trope as if the exotic land itself isn’t a fecund enough soil to keep audience rapt, who are mad keen to spectate a faraway Continent opening up to them for the first time, could they care less of the burning passion between British safari guide Allan Quatermain (Granger) and his demure client Elizabeth Curtis (Kerr), a married British lady looking for her missing husband, presumably lost in his quest for the titular treasure.
That said, Granger and Kerr actually contribute more than what they are allotted to - i.e. the tedious battle of sexes under the backdrop of a terra incognita, their chemistry is torridly felt (and infamously consummated offscreen). Even saddled with a risibly inexplicable hairdo makeover, Kerr’s Ms. Curtis is ravishing to behold, showered in the polychromatic glamor, and a swarthy, husky Granger is well togged up as a proto-Indiana Jones type, not batting an eyelid in the face of whatever adversity, who also diligently utters Kipsigi language as if it is his second nature.
Save for the opening elephant-hunting stunt, which looks callously cruel to today’s optics, KING SOLOMON’S MINES downplays the colonialism influence and largely portrays the white people as rubberneckers rather than interlopers of the tribal affairs, although the major upheaval they witness is the overthrow of a current king by an eligible challenger, which betrays an occidental perception towards the primordial civilization and also works as an implicit harbinger of what will happen once the outside world encroaches upon their territory.
For the continent’s fauna and flora, the film really breaks a sweat to capture them on camera, so are the tribal dances and close-up portraiture of tribespeople’s individual distinction. The stampede sequences are noticeably manipulated into wholeness by post-production. The ensuing thrill is inevitably dented notwithstanding, the crew’s Herculean undertaking and technique bravura remains grandly meritorious and awe-inspiring.
In all fairness, KING SOLOMON’S MINES is less a treasure hunting escapade than a broad travelogue about a foreign land, it contains enough footage to pique your curiosity, but, like most commodities from the Hollywood assembly line, however exquisite it looks, it is lensed through an exoticized, mythicized “white gaze”. There is a mental resistance to truly knowing these strangely donned and extraordinarily looking human beings, any attempt of a deeper communication between two different races is snuffed on the drawing board, why is that? This could be today’s food for thought.
referential entries: John Ford’s MOGAMBO (1953, 6.2/10); Steven Spielberg’s INDIANA JONES AND THE TEMPLE OF DOOM (1984, 7.2/10); James Gray’s THE LOST CITY OF Z (2016, 7.7/10).

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