Story of the power struggle between Egyptian queen Cleopatra and her brother Ptolemy, and how a common soldier risks his life to serve her.
Pascale Petit
Cleopatra
Gordon Scott
Julius Caesar
George Ardisson
Achillas
Rik Battaglia
Lucius
Corrado Pani
Ptolemy
Franco Volpi
Apollodorus
Ennio Balbo
Theodotus
Nerio Bernardi
Scaurus
Aurora de Alba
Rabis
Nando Angelini
Sextus Pompeius
Barbara Loy
Nino Marchetti
Pompey's Messenger
Barbara Nardi
Servant
Piero Palermini
Afranio
Akim Tamiroff
Pompey
Giovanni Cianfriglia
Commerciante #1 (uncredited)
Benito Stefanelli
Commerciante #2 (uncredited)
Director
Viktor Tourjansky
Director
Piero Pierotti
Screenplay
Fulvio Gicca Palli
Writer
Arrigo Montanari
May 29, 2023
6
I wonder if Elizabeth Taylor watched this before she took on the role played here by Pascale Petit one year later? I can't think she would have gained much from the rather wooden effort presented of this most enigmatic of women from history. Sharing the throne with her brother "Ptolemy" (an enthusiastic Corrado Pani) has proved just too awkward for all and so the scheming Theodotus (Ennio Balbo) plots a regime change. This forces our heroine and her protector Apollodorus (Franco Volpi) to take urgent action that sees her end up in the camp of Pompeii (Akim Tamiroff) who has some scheming of his own to do to outwit Caesar (Gordon Scott). Were the acting just a bit more natural and better, this wouldn't be half bad. Effort has been made on the look of the film. The sets and the costumes are effective and the combat scenes are pretty entertaining fayre. It's just that Petit and the even more static "Lucius" (Rik Battaglia) drive the fun and chemistry from the thing quickly and permanently. You don't expect Pulitzer prize writing but again, just a little more application with the typewriter could have made a big difference. Still, I did actually quite enjoy it and I like the genre. If you do, too, then it's certainly worth a gander.
Status:
Released
Original Language:
Italian
Budget:
$0.00
Revenue:
$0.00