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» » Trader Horn (1973)

Short summary

An African trader and big game guide is requested to escort some British troops and is threatened with arrest if he refuses. He runs off to hide out and joins a French trader and his women who are searching for the source of a native necklace made of platinum. On their trip they come across German troops who are enslaving natives and are chased by the British troops. They encounter hostile natives, leopards, and various groups of cheetahs and lions and endure a stampede, quicksand, crossing deserts and mountains. Horn is obviously interested in the Frenchman's women and saves her life a couple times and they eventually become involved. They continue on to the source of the platinum and an encounter with the Germans and finally the British troops. Lots of obvious inter-splicing of stock African wildlife footage with stage shots and sets.

User reviews


  • comment
    • Author: The Apotheoses of Lacspor
    When a film credits the novel and its writer but then gives a totally different writer a "Story by" credit (in this case co-scripter Edward Harper) you know the original source has been junked. Indeed, there is almost no correlation between this film and the 1931 original or the novel. In fact, the filmmakers have simply taken the title and its main character and grafted him onto the H. Rider Haggard story of 'King Solomon's Mines.' As for the film itself, it boasts in its end credits that plenty of African locations were used... but that's mostly, if not all, Second Unit material. The actors seem to have been filmed on stage sets or at Southern California locations (wild animal park/nearby desert dunes). Lots of process screen work and indoor settings, although the African footage is good. And Rod Taylor is perfect casting as Trader Horn. You can believe him as a rough-hewn, know-it-all, wheeler-dealer and reluctant guide. Less believable is his romance with Heywood. And Don Knight, as the British commander ceaselessly hunting for Horn, whom he's branded a "traitor to England in a time of war" (it's 1916), is almost buffoonish, as if channeling Malcolm McDowell through a 'Carry On' film. The African natives are a mix of obvious Hollywood actor types and real natives (many just stock footage or Second Unit). Much of the scenic stuff doesn't match up with the actors, and the plodding story never catches fire. Why MGM felt this would be a success at the box office is hard to fathom.
  • comment
    • Author: bass
    Trader Horn was first made in 1931. I haven't seen the original, but the critics and audiences seemed to like it, perhaps because it was one of the earliest talkies. This remake is an embarrassment, a 1970s production which feels like it was made before 1931, so simple and idiotic is its storyline. The back projection shots are pitifully obvious and make it all too clear that this production never got anywhere near Africa. There are plenty of cliches that you would associate with jungle adventures (a steamy love triangle, natural hazards, villainous colonial Germans, stampedes, quicksand, etc), but none of them count for very much since the performances are so indifferent and the script just ambles by in search of a moment of interest. I kept expecting Tarazan to leap out from behind a bush at any moment but he didn't..... he was the only thing missing from this jungle fiasco.
  • comment
    • Author: Granigrinn
    As it turned out, 1973 was destined to be a transitional year for Rod Taylor. Somewhat deceptively, it began on a comparatively high note in February when he opened in "The Train Robbers" , a lightweight but pleasant Western for Warner Bros. Co-starring opposite John Wayne and Ann-Margaret, it was Taylor's last hurrah as far as box office success was concerned. With his next release, the golden apple which he had been carrying on his journey through Movie Land for two decades suddenly turned into a lemon.

    The trouble began in June when he bobbed up in Metro's "Trader Horn", an ill-considered remake of the 1931 Harry Carey picture. As the famed explorer of darkest Africa, Taylor had to lead a safari of day workers from Central Casting through an obstacle course of every conceivable B- movie cliché. There were rampaging natives, tangled vines, quick- sand and assorted wildlife - all of which materialized via a disconcerting gaggle of all-too-obvious stock footage and back projection. It looked liked the former life saver from Sydney had accidentally walked in front of a home movie screen while his brother-in-law was running a bad 1940s travel documentary. All that was missing was a cup of coffee and a piece of cake. It was the beginning of the end for Taylor as far as his big career was concerned
  • comment
    • Author: Kata
    I couldn't even watch more than a half hour of it because it glorifies killing magnificent and endangered species like leopards and elephants. Rod Taylor could play sophisticates, rough guys, idealists, military types, anything but a song and dance man really. He was fine in comedy opposite Doris Day in THE GLASS BOTTOM BOAT for example. But here, he is a rugged, jaded antihero in a below average script (what I could stay long enough for anyway) with a dated theme or two: killing wild animals and profiting from selling to Germans in World War One. Danger in Africa it seemed would be the running motif....been done before and since. Rod Taylor should have stayed a movie star, movies like this may indeed explain why he later took smaller parts and often was seen on TV instead. Even after a half hour, I could tell this was not special.
  • comment
    • Author: Mataxe
    I suspect that this is one of those films which isn't very faithful to the original novel.

    Possible spoiler: There are some British soldiers and some German soldiers dotted about the place, which just seem like a half-hearted attempt to update the well-known tale of King Solomon's Mines - which is what this really is, down to the hairstyles of the mysterious natives familiar from the Granger/Kerr version.

    Taylor and Heywood creak through the motions with all the verve of wombats, intercut with stock footage of herds of wildebeest sweeping majestically across the plains - clumsily enough to remind one of the great Edward D Wood.

    Well worth missing.
  • comment
    • Author: Nargas
    I spotted Stewart Granger and Co, from "King Solomon Mines numerous times during this "movie".It was so obvious .I notice grasslands and rolling Los Angeles hills in background of this show.They the actors never went within 12 ,000 miles of Africa. A travesty of the original movie from 1931.MGM should hang its head in shame.Start of Rod Taylor's downfall in movies.
  • comment
    • Author: Dagdardana
    We watched Watusi (1959) and Trader Horn (1973) on the same afternoon and it was nearly a repeat. The story itself may be slightly different, but the native warriors were the same tribe (Watusi) and the scenery and actions were repeats. The stampede of zebras and others was the exact same footage, just cut into this movie, and the water hole where the female lead took a bath was the exact same water hole. So that hole must have been nearby the studio so they could just stick another female into it! There isn't any mention of King Solomon's Mines connected with Trader Horn but there might as well have been!
  • comment
    • Author: Mr.Bean
    This was just a waste. Remember catching a blooper. This was suppose to be in Late 1800s early 1900s but in one scene there was a 60something Chevy Impala you could see drive by just behind some trees and shrubs. Think there was another with jet con trails in it. Acting was so-so directing was bad and the story was just OK. They should have not made it if they could not do it right. The 1931 version was better. I was with family and they did not believe me when I told them about the car. So we sat through it again until that scene to prove I was right and they did see it. Hated watching it again but I was determined to show them I was right. Wish we had not wasted our money on it. Was brutal sitting through it to prove my point.
  • comment
    • Author: Arith
    Yes, it is a rehash of the 1950 King Solomon's Mines and it bears little resemblance to the 1931 Trader Horn nor to the book by Ethelreda Lewis Horn, but it does have Rod Taylor which, for me, outweighs all the negatives. Just as Stewart Granger 23 years before, Taylor is a convincing noble and steadfast hero, which sadly is an anachronism in today's films.
  • Cast overview, first billed only:
    Rod Taylor Rod Taylor - Trader Horn
    Anne Heywood Anne Heywood - Nicole Mercer
    Jean Sorel Jean Sorel - Emil DuMond
    Don Knight Don Knight - Colonel Sinclair
    Ed Bernard Ed Bernard - Apague
    Stack Pierce Stack Pierce - Malugi
    Erik Holland Erik Holland - Lt. Medford
    Robert Miller Driscoll Robert Miller Driscoll - Alfredo
    Solomon Karriem Solomon Karriem - Red Sun
    Ji-Tu Cumbuka Ji-Tu Cumbuka - Orange Stripe
    Willie Harris Willie Harris - Blue Star
    Caro Kenyatta Caro Kenyatta - Umbopa
    Oliver Givens Oliver Givens - Dancer
    Curt Lowens Curt Lowens - Schmidt
    John Siegfried John Siegfried - German Officer
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