The Adventurers

Nothing has been left out of "The Adventurers".

4.2
19702h 57m

The wealthy playboy son of an assassinated South American diplomat discovers that his father was murdered on orders of the corrupt president of the country- a man who was his father's friend and who, in fact, his father had helped put into power. He returns from living a jet-set life in Europe to lead a revolution against the government, only to find out that things aren't quite as black and white as he'd assumed.

Production

Logo for Paramount Pictures
Logo for AVCO Embassy Pictures

Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: The Adventurers (1970) Trailer

The Adventurers (1970) Trailer

Cast

Photo of Charles Aznavour

Charles Aznavour

Marcel Campion

Photo of Alan Badel

Alan Badel

President Rojo

Photo of Candice Bergen

Candice Bergen

Sue Ann Daley

Photo of Thommy Berggren

Thommy Berggren

Sergei Nikovitch

Photo of Delia Boccardo

Delia Boccardo

Caroline de Coyne

Photo of Rossano Brazzi

Rossano Brazzi

Baron de Coyne

Photo of Olivia de Havilland

Olivia de Havilland

Deborah Hadley

Photo of Bekim Fehmiu

Bekim Fehmiu

Dax Xenos

Photo of Anna Moffo

Anna Moffo

Dania Leonardi

Photo of Fernando Rey

Fernando Rey

Jaime Xenos

Photo of Yolande Donlan

Yolande Donlan

Mrs. Erickson

Photo of John Ireland

John Ireland

Mr.James Hadley

Photo of Sydney Tafler

Sydney Tafler

Col. Gutierrez (as Sidney Tafler)

Photo of Milena Vukotić

Milena Vukotić

April Stavronis

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Reviews

W

Wuchak

5/10

Odd blending of Hollywoodized soap opera and Sam Peckinpah-ish nihilistic slaughter

RELEASED IN 1970 and directed by Lewis Gilbert, "The Adventurers" chronicles the life of Dax Xenos (Bekim Fehmiu) who, as a little boy in 1945, witnesses the violent deaths of his mother & sister during a revolution in the fictional South American country Corteguay. Much later, as an ambassador’s son in Rome, he’s an emotionally cold playboy who marries solely for wealth (Candice Bergen), but he’s haunted by Corteguay and maintains relations with the dubious dictator (Alan Badel). Ernest Borgnine plays Dax’ spiritual guardian, Fat Cat.

The movie’s based on Harold Robbins’ book of the same title, which was loosely based on the real-life Porfirio Rubirosa, an oft-married wealthy playboy, diplomat and polo player who had a relationship with the dictator of the Dominican Republic, Rafael Trujillo.

“The Adventurers” is a curious amalgamation of Hollywood soap opera (e.g. 1967’s “Valley of the Dolls”) and Italo-Western-like slaughter with a Euro-robot as the leading man. The movie vacillates between starving children in South America, disco-a-go-go fashion shows in Rome or New York, machine-gun massacres, hedonistic sex romps and the disingenuous courting of rich women. It’s basically a wannabe "Doctor Zhivago" (1965), but lacking that iconic picture’s surreal and compelling artistry.

The spectacularly engineered battle sequences were created by the James Bond stunt-genius Bob Simmons, featuring hundreds of real men (played by actual Columbian militants), real tanks, real trains and real planes, all getting blown to pieces before your very eyes with absolutely no CGI.

The above reveals many points of interest, but I was well into the second half of the almost-3-hour flick when I realized that none of the characters interested me, particularly the protagonist. I’m not sure if the problem was the script, the story or the actor (Fehmiu), but the drama came across consistently flat. Another problem is the women. While there are several notables besides Bergen (Olivia de Havilland, Leigh Taylor-Young, Delia Boccardo, Jaclyn Smith, etc.) the camera either never captures their beauty or they’re too anorexic to fascinate in the first place.

On the positive side, the action-packed conclusion is gripping and the message is timeless: Meet the new boss, same as the old boss.

THE FILM RUNS 2 hours, 57 minutes and was shot in Colombia (Cartagena & Bogota), Puerto Rico, Italy (Rome & Venice) and New York City.

GRADE: C

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